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A visit to Biotopia: genre, genetics and gardening in the early twentieth century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 June 2018

JIM ENDERSBY*
Affiliation:
Reader in the History of Science, School of History, Art History and Philosophy, University of Sussex, Arts Road, University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9RH, UK. Email: J.J.Endersby@sussex.ac.uk.

Abstract

The early decades of the twentieth century were marked by widespread optimism about biology and its ability to improve the world. A major catalyst for this enthusiasm was new theories about inheritance and evolution (particularly Hugo de Vries's mutation theory and Mendel's newly rediscovered ideas). In Britain and the USA particularly, an astonishingly diverse variety of writers (from elite scientists to journalists and writers of fiction) took up the task of interpreting these new biological ideas, using a wide range of genres to help their fellow citizens make sense of biology's promise. From these miscellaneous writings a new and distinctive kind of utopianism emerged – the biotopia. Biotopias offered the dream of a perfect, post-natural world, or the nightmare of violated nature (often in the same text), but above all they conveyed a sense that biology was – for the first time – offering humanity unprecedented control over life. Biotopias often visualized the world as a garden perfected for human use, but this vision was tinged with gendered violence, as it became clear that realizing it entailed dispossessing, or even killing, ‘Mother Nature’. Biotopian themes are apparent in journalism, scientific reports and even textbooks, and these non-fiction sources shared many characteristics with intentionally prophetic or utopian fictions. Biotopian themes can be traced back and forth across the porous boundaries between popular and elite writing, showing how biology came to function as public culture. This analysis reveals not only how the historical significance of science is invariably determined outside the scientific world, but also that the ways in which biology was debated during this period continue to characterize today's debates over new biological breakthroughs.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British Society for the History of Science 2018 

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Footnotes

Many thanks to the British Academy (for a mid-career fellowship, which funded this research). Also to Luis Campos, Helen Curry, Lynne Murphy, Katherine Pandora, Charlotte Sleigh, Kory Stamper, Charlotte Thurschwell and Pamela Thurschwell.

References

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2 Brewster, op. cit. (1), 121.

3 Although the term ‘biology’ dated back to around 1800, it was really the rise of laboratory and experimental biology in the late nineteenth century that caught the public's imagination. See Allen, Garland E., Life Science in the Twentieth Century, reprint of 1st edn, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1978Google Scholar; Endersby, Jim, A Guinea Pig's History of Biology: The Plants and Animals Who Taught Us the Facts of Life, London: William Heinemann, 2007Google Scholar.

4 For the reception of Mendelism see Olby, Robert, ‘Mendel no Mendelian?’, History of Science (1979) 17, pp. 5372CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Olby, , Origins of Mendelism, 2nd edn, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1985Google Scholar; Palladino, Paolo, ‘Wizards and devotees: on the Mendelian theory of inheritance and the professionalization of agricultural science in Great Britain and the United States, 1880–1930’, History of Science (1994) 32(3), pp. 409444CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Paul, Diane B. and Kimmelman, Barbara A., ‘Mendel in America: theory and practice, 1900–1919’, in Rainger, Ronald, Benson, Keith R. and Maienschein, Jane (eds.), The American Development of Biology, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1988, pp. 281310Google Scholar; Richmond, Marsha L., ‘The 1909 Darwin celebration: reexamining evolution in the light of Mendel, mutation, and meiosis’, Isis (2006) 97, pp. 5971CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed; Rushton, Alan R., ‘Bateson and the doctors: the introduction of Mendelian genetics to the British medical community 1900–1910’, in Petermann, Heike I., Harper, Peter S. and Chamonix, Susanne Doetz (eds.), History of Human Genetics: Aspects of Its Development and Global Perspectives, Cham: Springer, 2004, pp. 5971Google Scholar.

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8 In this review, Brewster used the term ‘bionomics’ to describe the novel approach, as did other writers. However, ‘bionomics’ was only used occasionally and has since acquired a much narrower, technical meaning (referring to the ecology of a particular species of organism), so I have preferred the broader and more widely used term ‘experimental evolution’.

9 Elie Metchnikoff, The Prolongation of Life: Optimistic Studies (1908), quoted in Brewster, op. cit. (1), p. 124.

10 Brewster, op. cit. (1), p. 124.

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16 Space prohibits an exploration of these themes in other countries, but – for reasons I will explore – I suspect that these were particularly Anglo-American concerns.

17 Shinn, Charles Howard, ‘A wizard of the garden’ (reprinted as Intensive Horticulture in California), Land of Sunshine: The Magazine of California and the West (1901) 14(2), pp. 35Google Scholar.

18 Stack, op. cit. (15).

19 Harwood, William Sumner, The New Earth: A Recital of the Triumphs of Modern Agriculture in America, New York and London: Macmillan, 1906, pp. 49, 12Google Scholar.

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21 Watkins, John Elfreth Jr, ‘New species to order’, Evening Star (Washington, DC), 23 February 1907Google Scholar. The story was reprinted in other papers, e.g. Watkins, ‘Creation of species: work done at station of experimental evolution’, New-York Daily Tribune, 24 February 1907.

22 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, Herland, New York: Pantheon Books, 1979 (first published 1915), pp. 94, 7172Google Scholar.

23 Wells, Herbert George, Men Like Gods, Thirsk: House of Stratus, 2002 (first published 1923), pp. 32, 8586Google Scholar.

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25 The term ‘biotopia’ has been used occasionally by ecologists and as the name of a couple of contemporary natural history/ecology museums (e.g. in Uppsala), but not (to the best of my knowledge) in the sense that I am using it here.

26 The Forerunner got a few reviews, in the Chicago Evening Post, the Chicago Dial and the Vegetarian Magazine. And the leading US socialists Eugene Debs and Upton Sinclair both quoted from it in public. Scharnhorst, Gary, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, 1st edn, Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1985, p. 85Google Scholar.

27 Shinn, Charles Howard, ‘Men like Gods: Well's utopian novel of earthlings who find a new world’, Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine (1923) 81(5), pp. 4445Google Scholar.

28 Henry James Forman, ‘H.G. Wells skids into utopia [review of] Men like Gods’, New York Times, 27 May 1923, p. 1.

29 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, ‘Comment and review’, The Forerunner (1910) 1(3), p. 28Google Scholar.

30 Ferns, op. cit. (13), pp. 13–14.

31 Gilman, op. cit. (22), pp. 68, 78–80, 94.

32 Wells, op. cit. (23), pp. 17, 36, 85–86.

33 Wells, op. cit. (23), p. 155.

34 Wells based the character on Eddie Marsh, secretary to Winston Churchill (who is also caricatured in the novel). Toye, Richard, ‘H.G. Wells and Winston Churchill: a reassessment’, in McLean, Steven (ed.), H.G. Wells: Interdisciplinary Essays, Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, 2008, pp. 147161, 150Google Scholar. Marsh (1872–1953) was an art collector and patron of painters and poets, particularly Rupert Brooke. Hassall, C.V., ‘Marsh, Sir Edward Howard (1872–1953)’ (rev. Pottle, Mark), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004Google Scholar, at www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/34892, accessed 27 November 2017.

35 Wells, op. cit. (23), pp. 84–85, 87, emphasis added. Interestingly, in Wells's The Time Machine (1895), the Time Traveller discovers a future in which people had created ‘air free from gnats, the earth from weeds or fungi; everywhere were fruits and sweet and delightful flowers; brilliant butterflies flew hither and thither. The ideal of preventive medicine was attained. Diseases had been stamped out’. Wells, H.G., The Time Machine, London: Everyman, 1995, p. 28Google Scholar. However, in 1895 the resulting absence of adversity had led to humanity's degeneration; by 1923, Wells – like the other biotopians – had become more optimistic.

36 Wells, op. cit. (23), p. 98.

37 For a fuller discussion see Merchant, Carolyn, The Death of Nature: Women, Ecology, and the Scientific Revolution, London: Wildwood House, 1982Google Scholar; Pesic, Peter, ‘Proteus rebound: reconsidering the “torture of nature”’, Isis (2008) 99(2), pp. 304317CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

38 Gilman, op. cit. (22), pp. 100–101. Some scholars have even described Herland as an ecological utopia, but recent criticism has challenged this interpretation. See Knittel, Janna, ‘Environmental history and Charlotte Perkins Gilman’, Foundation: International Review of Science Fiction (2006) 35(96), pp. 4967Google Scholar; Christensen, Andrew G., ‘Charlotte Perkins Gilman's Herland and the tradition of the scientific utopia’, Utopian Studies (2017) 28(2), pp. 4967CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

39 Gilman, op. cit. (22), pp. 95, 103.

40 My thinking on this point is indebted to Philip J. Pauly's discussion of ‘culture’, which – he notes – meant ‘tillage’ before it meant art and literature. Both meanings retain a sense of improvement through the activity of cultivating; plants and people are similarly improved by careful cultivation. Pauly, Philip J., Biologists and the Promise of American Life: From Merriweather Lewis to Alfred Kinsey, 1st edn, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2000, pp. 89Google Scholar. See also Ortner, Sherry B., ‘Is female to male as nature is to culture?’, Feminist Studies (1972) 1(2), pp. 531CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Haraway, Donna, ‘A cyborg manifesto’, in Haraway, Simians, Cyborgs and Women, London: Routledge, 1991, pp. 149182Google Scholar.

41 See Pauly, Philip J., Controlling Life: Jacques Loeb and the Engineering Ideal in Biology, New York: Oxford University Press, 1987Google Scholar; Turney, Jon, Frankenstein's Footsteps: Science, Genetics and Popular Culture, 1st edn, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 1998Google Scholar.

42 See, for example, Smith, David C., H.G. Wells: Desperately Mortal, 1st edn, New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 1986, pp. 325Google Scholar; Kemp, Peter, H.G. Wells and the Culminating Ape: Biological Imperatives and Imaginative Obsessions, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1996CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

43 For Gilman and biology see Pittenger, op. cit. (15), pp. 9–10; Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, Charlotte Perkins Gilman: A Nonfiction Reader (ed. Ceplair, Larry), 1st edn, New York: Columbia University Press, 1991Google Scholar.

44 For Loeb see Reingold, Nathan, ‘Jacques Loeb, the scientist: his papers and his era’, Quarterly Journal of Current Acquisitions (1962) 19(3), pp. 119130Google Scholar; Pauly, op. cit. (40); Turney, op. cit. (41), pp. 67–72.

45 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, ‘As to parthenogenesis and humanity’, The Forerunner (1916), 7(3), p. 83Google Scholar. She may have derived the information from Geddes, Patrick and Thomson, J. Arthur, The Evolution of Sex, 2nd revised edn, London: Walter Scott, 1901, pp. 192193CrossRefGoogle Scholar, a book she mentioned as one she found most important. Ceplair, op. cit. (43), pp. 88–89.

46 Gilman, op. cit. (45), p. 83.

47 Gilman, op. cit. (22), p. 77. Given the date, ‘law of mutation’ is a reference to de Vries, not Mendelism. The biologist Ernst Mayr recalled that as a young student in the 1920s he and his fellow students still thought of mutation only in the de Vriesian sense. Mayr, Ernst, ‘Prologue: some thoughts on the history of the evolutionary synthesis’, in Mayr, Ernst and Provine, William B. (eds.), The Evolutionary Synthesis: Perspectives on the Unification of Biology, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1998, pp. 148, 20Google Scholar.

48 E.T. Brewster, ‘Significant books of science’, Atlantic Monthly, November 1905, pp. 681–690, 684. For Gilman and the Atlantic Monthly see Rich, Charlotte, ‘From near-dystopia to utopia: a source for Herland in Inez Haynes Gillmore's Angel Island’, in Davis, Cynthia J. and Knight, Denise D. (eds.), Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Her Contemporaries, Tuscaloosa: The University of Alabama Press, 2004, pp. 155170, 155Google Scholar. See also E.T. Brewster, ‘Some recent aspects of Darwinism’, Atlantic Monthly, April 1904, pp. 513–521.

49 For Gilman and PSM see Pittenger, op. cit. (15), p. 73. Articles on mutation included de Vries, Hugo, ‘On the origin of species’, Popular Science Monthly (1903) 62(6), pp. 481496Google Scholar; Hubrecht, Ambrosius Arnold Willem, ‘Hugo de Vries's theory of mutations’, Popular Science Monthly (1904) 65, pp. 205223Google Scholar; White, Charles Abiathar, ‘The mutations of Lycopersicum’, Popular Science Monthly (1905) 66(7), pp. 150160Google Scholar; MacDougal, Daniel Trembly, ‘Discontinuous variation in pedigree cultures’, Popular Science Monthly (1906) 69(3), pp. 207225Google Scholar.

50 For example, anon., Some books on evolution’, The Nation (1912) 95(2475), pp. 543545Google Scholar; de Vries, Hugo, ‘A new conception concerning the origin of species’, Harper's Monthly Magazine (1905) 110(656), pp. 209213Google Scholar.

51 Slichter, Charles S., ‘Industrialism’, Popular Science Monthly (1912) 81(22), pp. 355363, 363Google Scholar. I discuss the reception of the mutation theory more fully in Endersby, op. cit. (5).

52 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, ‘Having faith in evolution’, The Forerunner (November 1915) 6(11), pp. 299300Google Scholar; Sutton-Ramspeck, Beth and Gilman, Charlotte Perkins (eds.), Herland and Related Writings, Peterborough, ON: Broadview Press, 2013, pp. 234235Google Scholar.

53 Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, ‘Assisted evolution’, The Forerunner (1916) 7(1), p. 5Google Scholar.

54 Gilman, op. cit. (22), pp. 49–51.

55 Gilman, op. cit. (22), pp. 91–93.

56 As noted, Herland does not appear to have been reviewed, but Gilman was publicly pilloried as ‘unnatural’ for relinquishing the care of her daughter to her husband and his second wife following their divorce. Tuttle, Jennifer S., ‘“New England innocent” in the land of sunshine: Charlotte Perkins Gilman and California’, Western American Literature (2013) 48(3), pp. 284311, 300–311CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

57 My thinking on Burbank is greatly indebted to Pandora's lucid and original analysis of his public significance. See Pandora, Katherine, ‘Knowledge held in common: tales of Luther Burbank and science in the American vernacular’, Isis (2001) 92(3), pp. 484516CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed. For the picket fence see Bailey, Liberty Hyde, ‘A maker of new fruits and flowers’, World's Work (1901) 2, pp. 12091210Google Scholar.

58 Smith, Jane S., The Garden of Invention: Luther Burbank and the Business of Breeding Plants, New York: The Penguin Press, 2009, pp. 108112Google Scholar.

59 Various, Complimentary Banquet in Honor of Luther Burbank. Given by the California State Board of Trade, Palace Hotel, San Francisco, 14 September 1905, San Francisco: California State Board of Trade, 1905, pp. 67, 18, 40Google Scholar.

60 Serviss, Garrett P., ‘Transforming the world of plants: the wonder-work of Luther Burbank, which shows how Man can govern evolution’, The Cosmopolitan: A Monthly Illustrated Magazine (1905) 40(1), p. 65Google Scholar.

61 Howard, Norman, ‘Dr. Luther Burbank, the magician of plants: the life-story of an explorer into the infinite’, The Quiver: An Illustrated Magazine for Sunday and General Reading (1906) 220, pp. 451457, 451Google Scholar.

62 ‘Evolved’ was regularly used transitively at this time, e.g. The World To-day described Burbank's Shasta daisy as a plant ‘which he evolved’. Walsh, George Ethelbert, ‘Prizes in plants (the making of to-morrow)’, The World To-day: A Monthly Record of Human Progress (February 1911) 20(2), p. 232Google Scholar.

63 Pandora, op. cit. (57), p. 497. Jane Smith has made the same point, that the excitement around what she calls Burbank's garden of invention was ‘the possibility, for a time, that anyone could enter and see what might take root’. Smith, op. cit. (58), p. 9.

64 Endersby, op. cit. (5), pp. 476, 84, 87–92.

65 Smocovitis has argued that the later anti-Darwinian backlash in the 1950s was also in part a reaction against the perceived arrogance of biologists, flushed with their success in creating what they called the modern evolutionary synthesis. See Smocovitis, Vassiliki Betty, ‘The 1959 Darwin centennial celebration in America’, Osiris (1999) 14, pp. 274323CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

66 Burbank did not appear at the trial, but wrote a strong letter in support of the teaching of evolution. Smith, op. cit. (58), pp. 263–264.

67 Burbank referred to ‘teaching these old dogs of the vegetable world the new tricks’ in his autobiography, Burbank, Luther and Hall, Wilbur, The Harvest of the Years: An Autobiography, Edited, with a Biographical Sketch, by W. Hall, Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1927, p. 88Google Scholar.

68 Brewster, op. cit. (1), p. 123. An entry for ‘burbank’ (lower-case) as a verb was included in the second edition of Webster's, where it was defined as meaning both to ‘modify and improve (plants or animals)’ and ‘figuratively, to improve (anything, as a process or institution) by selecting good features and rejecting bad’. There was also an entry for burbankian … Produced by burbanking; resembling the act or product of burbanking’, Webster's New International Dictionary, Springfield, MA: Merriam-Webster, 1934, p. 357Google Scholar.

69 For an overview of Burbank and the press see Howard, Walter L., ‘Luther Burbank: a victim of hero worship’, Chronica Botanica (1945) 9(5–6), pp. 299506Google Scholar; and Pandora, op. cit. (57).

70 Harwood, William Sumner, New Creations in Plant Life: An Authoritative Account of the Life and Work of Luther Burbank, New York and London: Macmillan, 1905CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Harwood, op. cit. (19). For Century Magazine see Cairns, William B., ‘Later magazines’, in Ward, Adolphus William, Trent, W.P., Erskine, J., Sherman, S.P. and Van Doren, C. (eds.), The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes (1907–21), New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2000Google Scholar (first published 1907–1921), at www.bartleby.com/227/1201.html; LaFollette, Marcel C., Making Science Our Own: Public Images of Science, 1910–1955, 1st edn, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 1990, p. 33Google Scholar.

71 For Burbank's relationship with de Vries see Endersby, op. cit. (5).

72 Harwood, William Sumner, ‘A wonder-worker of science: an authoritative account of Luther Burbank's unique work in creating new forms of plant life (first paper)’, Century Magazine (1905) 69(5), pp. 656657Google Scholar.

73 Harwood, op. cit. (72), p. 657.

74 Harwood, op. cit. (70), p. 336.

75 Harwood, op. cit. (72), p. 669.

76 Bailey, op. cit. (57), p. 1213.

77 Jordan, David Starr and Kellogg, Vernon L., eds., The Scientific Aspects of Luther Burbank's Work, San Francisco: A.M. Robertson, 1909, p. xCrossRefGoogle Scholar.

78 Serviss, op. cit. (60), p. 68, emphasis added.

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80 Serviss, op. cit. (60), p. 68.

81 ‘Plant freaks to be shown: wizard Burbank will exhibit some queer ones’, Los Angeles Times, 16 March 1911, 1907.

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83 My thinking on this is much indebted to Luis Campos, particularly Mutant sexuality: the private life of a plant’, in Campos, Luis and von Schwerin, Alexander (eds.), Making Mutations: Objects, Practices, Contexts, Berlin: Max-Planck-Institut für Wissenschaftsgeschichte, 2010, pp. 4970Google Scholar. In the light of Campos's analysis of the ‘queerness’ of Oenothera, it is intriguing that the OED records the earliest uses of ‘queer’ as an adjective to mean homosexual in the LA Times (where this report on Burbank appeared) just three years later: ‘He said that the Ninety-six Club was the best; that it was composed of the “queer” people. He said that the members sometimes spent hundreds of dollars on silk gowns, hosiery, etc. At these “drags” the “queer” people have a good time’. Los Angeles Times, 19 Nov. 1914, ii. 10/5. The word was used as a noun in Britain slightly earlier.

84 Pandora, op. cit. (57), pp. 498–499.

85 Burbank, Luther, ‘How to produce new trees, fruits and flowers’, in Horticultural Society of New York (ed.), Proceedings of the 24th Session of the American Pomological Society, Sacramento, Ca., 16–18 January 1895, Topeka, KS: American Pomological Society, 1895, pp. 5966, 59Google Scholar. The paper was read on Burbank's behalf.

86 One context for the emergence of Biotopia would be the US ‘country-life movement’, to which Liberty Hyde Bailey was an important contributor. See Bailey, Liberty Hyde, The Country-Life Movement in the United States, New York and London: Macmillan, 1911Google Scholar; Jeffrey Brian Motter, ‘Tending the garden: the country life movement between productivity and sustainability’, PhD thesis, Indiana University, 2009. My thanks to Helen Curry for drawing this to my attention.

87 Harwood, op. cit. (72), pp. 672, 61.

88 Various, op. cit. (59), p. 16.

89 Brown, Enos, ‘Luther Burbank and plant breeding’, Scientific American (1905) 93(2), pp. 220221, 220CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

90 Harwood, op. cit. (70), pp. 167–168.

91 Harwood, op. cit. (72), p. 669.

92 Serviss, op. cit. (79), p. 415.

93 Serviss, Garrett P., ‘How Burbank produces new flowers and fruit: the illimitable field of plant-production opened by crossing and selection’, The Cosmopolitan: A Monthly Illustrated Magazine (1905) 40(2), pp. 164165Google Scholar.

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96 Harwood, op. cit. (70), p. 39.

97 Shinn, op. cit. (17), p. 10.

98 J.B.S. Haldane's confidence in the liberating possibilities of contraception would be challenged by his wife, Charlotte Haldane, in a biotopian novel that emphasized the oppressive misogyny that could result from ‘man’ controlling nature. Haldane, Charlotte, Man's World, New York: George H. Doran Company, 1927Google Scholar.

99 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 42–45.

100 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 46–47, 77.

101 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 9–10.

102 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 24, 59–62.

103 Haldane also conveys a faint hint of contempt for the ‘aesthetically minded’, just as there was in Wells's description of Freddy Mush.

104 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 66–67, 40–41.

105 Haldane, op. cit. (24), p. 69.

106 E.g. Brittain, Vera, Halcyon; Or, the Future of Monogamy, 1st edn, London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trubner & Co., Ltd, 1929Google Scholar; Firestone, Shulamith, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution, London: Women's Press, 1979Google Scholar. See Squier, Susan Merrill, Babies in Bottles: Twentieth-Century Visions of Reproductive Technology, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 1994Google Scholar. Ectogenesis and the end of traditional familes are also discussed by Charlotte Haldane, op. cit. (98), but in much more sceptical terms.

107 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 71–77, 82, 89.

108 Haldane, op. cit. (24), p. 90.

109 Huxley, Thomas Henry, ‘Evolution and ethics’ (1894), in Paradis, James G. and Williams, George C. (eds.), Evolution and Ethics: T.H. Huxley's ‘Evolution and Ethics’ with New Essays on Its Victorian and Sociobiological Context, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1989, pp. 59174, 138–139, 141Google Scholar.

110 Haldane, op. cit. (24), pp. 90, 2.

111 For a brief overview of the naturalistic fallacy and its historical use see Daston, Lorraine, ‘The naturalistic fallacy is modern’, Isis (2014) 105(3), pp. 579587CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed.

112 Haldane, op. cit. (24), p. 93.

113 Antoine-Clair Thibaudeau, 1795. Quoted in Spary, Emma C., Utopia's Garden: French Natural History from Old Regime to Revolution, 1st edn, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2000, p. 10CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

114 James G. Paradis, ‘“Evolution and ethics” in its Victorian context’, in Paradis and Williams, op. cit. (109), pp. 3–56, 10–11.

115 Huxley, op. cit. (109), pp. 102, 85.

116 I am indebted to Staffan Müller-Wille and Christina Brandt, whose work first made me recognize this point. However, they suggest that the ‘view that sees (cultural as well as biological) inheritance as a common stock of dispositions seems to lie in the association of heredity with the future rather than the past’; they associate its twentieth-century meaning with the broad idea of progress, but don't offer a specific causal account of the shift. Müller-Wille, Staffan and Brandt, Christina, ‘From heredity to genetics: political, medical, and agro-industrial contexts’, in Müller-Wille and Brandt (eds.), Heredity Explored: Between Public Domain and Experimental Science, 1850–1930, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2016 pp. 325, 17Google Scholar.

117 Wells, op. cit. (23), pp. 31, 110.

118 William T. Ellis, ‘Today's tremendous testing (international Sunday school lesson)’, Washington Post, 31 January 1925.

119 Eugene S. Bagger, ‘Haldane looks into the future: what marvels science will achieve for human life – impending urbanization of the world’, New York Times, 6 April 1924, 1, 27.

120 Anon. ‘Science and the future’, Nature (24 May 1924) 113(2847), pp. 740741Google Scholar.

121 Dronamraju, Krishna R. (ed.), Haldane's Daedalus Revisited, Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press, 1995, p. 1Google Scholar.

122 Brown, Andrew, J.D. Bernal: The Sage of Science, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005, pp. 7273Google Scholar.

123 Muller, Hermann Joseph, Out of the Night: A Biologist's View of the Future, 1st edn, London: Victor Gollancz Ltd, 1936Google Scholar. Although Muller's book was not published until 1936, it was mostly written much earlier (as Muller makes clear in its text).

124 Shinn, op. cit. (27), p. 45.

125 The literature on degeneration is immense, and growing constantly, but for an overview see Lankester, Edwin Ray, ‘Degeneration: a chapter in Darwinism’, in Lankester, The Advancement of Science: Occasional Essays & Addresses, London: Macmillan and Co., 1879, pp. 359Google Scholar; Nordau, Max Simon, Degeneration, 9th edn, London: Heinemann, 1896Google Scholar; Pick, Daniel, Faces of Degeneration: A European Disorder, c.1848–1918, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Soloway, Richard A., Demography and Degeneration: Eugenics and the Declining Birth Rate in Twentieth-Century Britain, 2nd edn, Chapel Hill and London: University of North Carolina Press, 1995Google Scholar; Ledger, Sally and Luckhurst, Roger, eds., The Fin de Siècle: A Reader in Cultural History, c.1880–1900, 1st edn, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000Google Scholar.

126 Burbank, Luther, ‘The training of the human plant’, Century Magazine (1906) 72(1), pp. 127137Google Scholar.

127 Smith, op. cit. (42), pp. 262–263.

128 Wells, H.G., Huxley, Julian and Wells, G.P., The Science of Life: A Summary of Contemporary Knowledge about Life and Its Possibilities, 3 vols., London: Amalgamated Press (Waverley Book Company Ltd), 1929–1930, pp. 973, 6Google Scholar. I will be analysing textbooks in more detail in the book I am currently completing.

129 Endersby, op. cit. (5).

130 Campos, op. cit. (24); Curry, Helen Anne, Evolution Made to Order: Plant Breeding and Technological Innovation in Twentieth-Century America, Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2016CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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132 Lord Roseberry, quoted in Trotter, David, ‘Modernism and empire: reading The Waste Land’, in MacCabe, Colin (ed.), Futures for English, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1988, pp. 143153, 150Google Scholar.

133 Agar, Jon, ‘What happened in the sixties?’, BJHS (2008) 41(4), pp. 567600CrossRefGoogle Scholar.