Generation to Reproduction
Description
Cambridge historians of medicine and biology used Wellcome enhancement and strategic awards (2004–10 and 2010–18) to develop the concerted approach to the history of reproduction that is showcased in the book Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day. The cross-disciplinary group of researchers continues to offer new perspectives on issues ranging from ancient fertility rites to in-vitro fertilisation.
The group includes historians of medicine and biology from across the University of Cambridge. They have expertise in every major historical period and in approaches from quantifying parish records to interviewing scientists. Building on a lively field of historical investigation, members aim to provide a fresh basis for policy and public debate. They participate in the University-wide Strategic Research Initiative on Reproduction that began in October 2018.
From contraception to cloning and from pregnancy to populations, reproduction presents urgent challenges today. History enables long views. It is possible to look back like a biologist or demographer and find reproduction in every century, but for historians 'reproduction' also means a set of ideas and practices that are specifically modern. Before the nineteenth century, most educated people wrote not of 'reproduction', but of 'generation', a larger, looser framework for discussing procreation and descent. 'Generation' was an active making, and commentators likened the genesis of new beings to artisanal processes such as brewing, baking and moulding clay. Generation encompassed not just animals and plants, but minerals too, though the human soul received special attention. Only in the mid-eighteenth century did the word 'reproduction', literally 'producing again', begin to gain any currency as the common property of all living organisms (and only them) to beget others of their own kind. Used most influentially in this sense by the director of the King's Garden in Paris, Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon, in 1749, the concept meant a more abstract process of perpetuating species, which were then increasingly defined as 'populations'. Yet there was no sudden switch to a regime of 'reproduction', not least because that word caught on slowly, while 'generation' acquired a new lease of life in the sense of a cohort born at the same time. Only in the mid-twentieth century did reproduction move centre stage.
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Department Of History & Philosophy Of Science
Free School Lane
Cambridge
CB2 3RH
United Kingdom
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University of Cambridge
The Old Schools
Trinity Ln
Cambridge
CB2 1TN
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Strategic Research Initiative on Reproduction
Cambridge Reproduction is a strategic research intiative that explores the urgent challenges posed by reproduction today. The initiative facilitates close engagement between the arts, humanities and s… read more about Strategic Research Initiative on Reproduction
University Of Cambridge
The Registry
The Old School, Trinity Lane
Cambridge
CB2 1TN
United Kingdom
Last modified:
2023-09-20 14:59:48