Eugenics: A Feminist Analysis

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“Woman is indeed man's equivalent, but they each have their own particular task to perform in the world. The woman's main duty always has been and always will be the family. The university woman must know, understand, feel that marriage and children represent, after all is said and done, the highest ideal. This can be so only if women accept the task which nature has imposed upon them—the care of their offspring,” Dr. J Sanders, Third International Congress of Eugenics, New York Herald Tribune (August 8, 1932). The feminist women of the early 20th century, sought freedom and equality in her education. Only recently had Catherine Brewer become the first American women to earn a bachelor’s degree in 1840 and Helen Magill become the first women to earn a Ph.D. in 1877. Paul Popenoe, a leading eugenicist who …show more content…
Feminists, he broadly labels, seek to minimize the differences between the sexes and demand to be recognized as the biological, political and economical equal

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