Commentary: Jewish Genetic Origins in the Context of Past Historical and Anthropological Inquiries

The contemporary study of Jewish genetics has a long prehistory dating to the eighteenth century. Prior to the era of genetics, studies of the physical makeup of Jews were undertaken by comparative anatomists and physical anthropologists. In the nineteenth century the field was referred to as “race...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human biology 2013-12, Vol.85 (6), p.901-918
1. Verfasser: Efron, John M
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description The contemporary study of Jewish genetics has a long prehistory dating to the eighteenth century. Prior to the era of genetics, studies of the physical makeup of Jews were undertaken by comparative anatomists and physical anthropologists. In the nineteenth century the field was referred to as “race science.” Believed by many race scientists to be a homogeneous and pure race, Jews occupied a central position in the discourse of race science because they were seen as the control group par excellence to determine the relative primacy of nature or nurture in the development of racial characteristics. In the nineteenth century, claims of Jewish homogeneity prompted research that sought to explain morphological differences among Jews, chief among them the difference between Sephardim and Ashkenazim. I examine some of these original debates here with a view to placing them in their historical and cultural contexts.
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subjects Anthropology - history
Anthropology - methods
Anthropometry - history
Anthropometry - methods
Ashkenazi Jews
Continental Population Groups - ethnology
Continental Population Groups - genetics
Genetics, Population - history
Genetics, Population - methods
History, 18th Century
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
Human genetics
Humans
Jewish culture
Jewish emancipation
Jewish history
Jewish peoples
Jews - ethnology
Jews - genetics
Jews - history
Physical anthropology
Population genetics
Racism - ethnology
Sephardic Jews
Skull
Skull - anatomy & histology
title Commentary: Jewish Genetic Origins in the Context of Past Historical and Anthropological Inquiries
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