Challenging conventional constructions of the Harlem Renaissance
and American modernism, Daylanne English links writers from both
movements to debates about eugenics in the Progressive Era. She
argues that, in the 1920s, the form and content of writings by
figures as disparate as W. E. B. Du Bois, T. S. Eliot, Gertrude
Stein, and Nella Larsen were shaped by anxieties regarding
immigration, migration, and intraracial breeding.
English's interdisciplinary approach brings together the work of
those canonical writers with relatively neglected literary, social
scientific, and visual texts. She examines antilynching plays by
Angelina Weld Grimke as well as the provocative writings of white
female eugenics field workers. English also analyzes the
Crisis magazine as a family album filtering uplift through
eugenics by means of photographic documentation of an
ever-improving black race.
English suggests that current scholarship often misreads
early-twentieth-century visual, literary, and political culture by
applying contemporary social and moral standards to the past. Du
Bois, she argues, was actually more of a eugenicist than Eliot.
Through such reconfiguration of the modern period, English creates
an allegory for the American present: because eugenics was, in its
time, widely accepted as a reasonable, progressive ideology, we
need to consider the long-term implications of contemporary genetic
engineering, fertility enhancement and control, and legislation
promoting or discouraging family growth.