Bad Blood: You've got good genes
Discovery
BBC
4.3 • 1.2K Ratings
🗓️ 16 January 2023
⏱️ 28 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
We follow the story of eugenics from its origins in the middle-class salons of Victorian Britain, through the Fitter Family competitions and sterilisation laws of Gilded Age USA, to the full genocidal horrors of Nazi Germany.
Eugenics is born in Victorian Britain, christened by the eccentric gentleman-scientist Sir Francis Galton. It’s a movement to breed better humans, fusing new biological ideas with the politics of empire, and the inflexible snobbery of the middle-classes.
The movement swiftly gains momentum - taken up by scientists, social reformers, and even novelists as a moral and political quest to address urgent social problems. By encouraging the right people to have babies, eugenicists believed we could breed ourselves to a brighter future; a future free from disease, disability, crime, even poverty. What, its proponents wondered, could be more noble?
The story culminates in the First International Eugenics Congress of 1912, where a delegation of eminent public figures from around the world gather in South Kensington to advocate and develop the science – and ideology – of better breeding. Among them Winston Churchill, Arthur Balfour, the Dean of St Pauls, Charles Darwin's son, American professors and the ambassadors from Norway, Greece, and France.
But amidst the sweeping utopian rhetoric, the darker implications of eugenic ideas emerge: what of those deemed 'unfit'? What should happen to them?
Contributors: Professor Joe Cain, Daniel Maier, Professor Philippa Levine, Professor Angelique Richardson
Featuring the voices of David Hounslow, Joanna Monro and Hughie O'Donnell
(Photo: Francis Galton (1822-1911), British man of science born in Sparkbrook (England). Ca. 1890. Credit: adoc-photos/Corbis/Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Before you listen to this BBC podcast, I'd like to introduce myself. |
| 0:03.6 | My name's Stevie Middleton and I'm a BBC Commissioner for a load of sport podcasts. |
| 0:08.1 | I'm lucky to do that at the BBC because I get to work with a leading journalist, experienced |
| 0:12.2 | pundits and the biggest sport stars. |
| 0:14.3 | Together we bring you untold stories and fascinating insights straight from the players' |
| 0:18.5 | mouths. |
| 0:19.5 | But the best thing about doing this at the BBC is our unique access to the sport world. |
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| 0:28.8 | dedicated sports fans across the UK. |
| 0:31.3 | So if you like this podcast, head over to BBC Sounds where you'll find plenty more. |
| 0:36.0 | The Coom is the podcast that seeks out stories and voices from across Africa, but otherwise |
| 0:41.6 | might go unheard. |
| 0:42.6 | The Coom. |
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| 0:47.9 | Find out more at the end of this podcast. |
| 0:52.4 | This is Discovery from the BBC World Service. |
| 0:54.8 | I'm Adam Rutherford and you're listening to Bad Blood, The Story of Eugenics. |
| 1:05.2 | This is the story of an idea, a powerful and troubling idea which is born in a Victorian |
| 1:11.1 | quest for a better society that reaches a horrifying climax in the death camps of Nazi Germany. |
| 1:18.6 | This is the story of Eugenics, its dark history and its troubling present. |
| 1:24.7 | You have good genes, you know that, right? |
... |
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