Man's World
By (Author) Charlotte Haldane
By (author) Philippa Levine
MIT Press Ltd
MIT Press
12th March 2024
United States
General
Fiction
823.912
Paperback
296
Width 127mm, Height 203mm
369g
In a eugenics-driven future society, will one young woman's defiance make a difference In the not-too-distant future, England's population quality and quantity are under scientific control- Only those deemed the fittest are permitted to procreate. Women are groomed to be "vocational mothers"-or else sterilized and put to other uses. Written by an author married to one of the world's most prominent eugenics advocates, this ambivalent adventure anticipates both Brave New World and The Handmaid's Tale. When a young woman rebels against her conditioning, can she break free
Charlotte Haldane (1894-1969) was a journalist who advocated for divorce reform and married women's employment . . . while also idealizing motherhood. In 1926, the year that Man's World was published, she married the eminent biologist J. B. S. Haldane. Her 1927 book, Motherhood and Its Enemies, made a progressive argument for easier access to contraceptives for women . . . while enraging feminists by arguing that only after having borne children could a woman be regarded as "normal." She went on to found the Science News Service, and reported on World War II from the Russian Front. Philippa Levine is Walter Prescott Webb Chair in History and Ideas, and Director of British, Irish, and Empire Studies at the University of Texas at Austin. She is the author of, among other books, Eugenics- A Very Short Introduction (2017), The British Empire- Sunrise to Sunset (3rd edition, 2019), and the forthcoming The Tree of Knowledge- Science, Art and the Naked Form. With Alison Bashford, she is coeditor of The Oxford Handbook of the History of Eugenics (2010).