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NCJRS Abstract


The document referenced below is part of the NCJRS Library collection.
To conduct further searches of the collection, visit the NCJRS Abstracts Database.

How to Obtain Documents
 
NCJ Number: NCJ 121130  
Title: Feeble-Minded in a Rural County of Ohio (From White Trash: The Eugenic Family Studies 1877-1919, P 253-340, 1988, Nicole Hahn Rafter, ed. -- See NCJ-121120)
Author(s): M A Sessions
Sale: Northeastern University Press
Managing Manager
360 Huntington Avenue
Boston, MA 02115
United States
Publication Date: 1988
Pages: 88
Type: Theoretical research
Origin: United States
Language: English
Annotation: This family study focuses on an impoverished coal mining county in southeastern Ohio to discover the extent and social significance of feeble-mindedness in the genealogy of a family known as the Happy Hickories.
Abstract: Those who are unable to support themselves in a competitive environment, such as people who pay low rent, squatters who pay no rent at all, miners who work under direction, and the unemployed are considered feeble-minded. Given the author's definition of feeble-mindedness as the inability to support oneself in a demanding environment and her using this definition, the study defines a large proportion of inmates in two county institutions as mentally defective and should be transferred to State institutions. The survey of public schools reveals that rates of feeble-mindedness are higher in rural than in urban schools, and especially high in two remote districts characterized by dire poverty with three out of every five feeble-minded persons being male. The Happy Hickories live by foraging off land that belongs to others, begging, and basketmaking, although they are not criminals because their general mentality is too low to permit any crime except dependency. The family is also characterized by promiscuity. 15 tables, 8 figures.
Main Term(s): Biological influences
Index Term(s): Mental defectives ; White Americans ; Criminality prediction ; Family histories ; Ohio
 
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
http://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=121130

* A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.


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