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Three Generations, No Imbeciles: Eugenics, the Supreme Court, and Buck V. Bell
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Bibliographic Detail
Publisher Johns Hopkins Univ Pr
Publication date August 31, 2010
Pages 365
Binding Paperback
Edition 1
Book category Adult Non-Fiction
ISBN-13 9780801898242
ISBN-10 0801898242
Dimensions 1 by 6 by 9 in.
Weight 1.10 lbs.
Original list price $25.00
Other format details university press
Summaries and Reviews
Amazon.com description: Product Description:

Winner, 2009 Georgia Author of the Year Award for Creative Nonfiction History

Honorable Mention, Nonfiction. Library of Virginia Literary Awards

"Three generations of imbeciles are enough." Few lines from Supreme Court opinions are as memorable as this declaration by Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. in the landmark 1927 case Buck v. Bell. The ruling allowed states to forcibly sterilize residents in order to prevent "feebleminded and socially inadequate" people from having children. It is the only time the Supreme Court endorsed surgery as a tool of government policy. Paul Lombardo’s startling narrative exposes the Buck case’s fraudulent roots.

In 1924 Carrie Buck―involuntarily institutionalized by the State of Virginia after she was raped and impregnated―challenged the state’s plan to sterilize her. Having already judged her mother and daughter mentally deficient, Virginia wanted to make Buck the first person sterilized under a new law designed to prevent hereditarily "defective" people from reproducing. Lombardo’s more than twenty-five years of research and his own interview with Buck before she died demonstrate conclusively that she was destined to lose the case before it had even begun. Neither Carrie Buck nor her mother and daughter were the "imbeciles" condemned in the Holmes opinion. Her lawyer―a founder of the institution where she was held―never challenged Virginia’s arguments and called no witnesses on Buck’s behalf. And judges who heard her case, from state courts up to the U.S. Supreme Court, sympathized with the eugenics movement. Virginia had Carrie Buck sterilized shortly after the 1927 decision.

Though Buck set the stage for more than sixty thousand involuntary sterilizations in the United States and was cited at the Nuremberg trials in defense of Nazi sterilization experiments, it has never been overturned. Three Generations, No Imbeciles tracks the notorious case through its history, revealing that it remains a potent symbol of government control of reproduction and a troubling precedent for the human genome era.



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