Hygiène raciale
Hygiène raciale

Hygiène raciale

April 01, 2012 | 52 min

Before being employed by the Nazis in what remains the most deadly program of “racial purification”, Eugenics was a very popular concept among scientists in the US and Europe. The science of “good birth”, which aims to create the perfect human being, sets out to achieve this by preventing reproduction of those perceived as weak, sick, disabled, or otherwise “degenerate”. As early as 1907, the US applied the first eugenics laws, which continued to be in force until the 1970s. In Sweden, 63,000 people were sterilized, mostly after WWII. The film switches deftly between the explanation of historians and the testimony of victims who continue to struggle for recognition of the harm they have suffered, which has been erased from the collective memory. From North Carolina to Sweden and Germany, a terrifying journey into this quest for the “best of worlds”.

Genres

Documentary History

Cast

Share on social media

More Like This

What Measures to Save a People?
Making-of man-hole
Pat Garrett & Billy the Kid: Deconstructing Pat & Billy
Rediscovering a Rebel
Napoli magica
Tom Gleeson's Secrets of the Australian Museum
If the camera blows up
Davit Guramishvili
Tarkan Camoka'ya Karşı
Wild Port of Europe
As Philarmonicas
Arthur Moreira Lima: Um Piano Para Todos
One in the Field is a Warrior
The Hidden Secrets: Gangsters of the 1920s and 1930s
The Weavers: Wasn't That a Time
Russia
The Otherworld
Law Enforcement Guide to Satanic Cults
American Revolution 2