Reviews
Sweeping in scope and method, Generating Difference reveals how the early modern study of human reproduction—especially the female body—became the key site where race and slavery were theorized, contested, and ultimately enforced. An original and bold study demonstrating how biology was made to serve empire.
Few other historians have so convincingly shown that categories of belonging–race and species–were founded on beliefs about sex and reproduction. Wells's work is impeccably researched, vast ranging, deeply learned, and stunningly persuasive.
Book Details
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: (Re)producing Bodies and Identities
1. "The King's Honor": Population and Pronatalism in Greater Britain
2. The Limits of Pronatalism: Slavery and
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: (Re)producing Bodies and Identities
1. "The King's Honor": Population and Pronatalism in Greater Britain
2. The Limits of Pronatalism: Slavery and Population in the British Caribbean
3. Gentes and Genitals: Sex in Enlightenment Racial Theory
4. Ex Ovo Omnia: Embryology, Sex, and Race
5. "This race benign": Race and Reproduction in the Pacific, 1760-1820
6. Colonial Ethnogenesis and the Sexual Making of Race
7. Conclusion