Title: 1st ‘scientific’ studies of 'Negro Intelligence' Author: Place: 1913-16 Publisher: Date: Description: 2 items: • Marion J. Mayo. “The Mental Capacity of the American Negro”. Reprinted from the Archives of Psychology, No. 28. (NY, Nov. 1913) First Printing thus. Original printed wrappers. 71pp. • George Oscar Ferguson. The Psychology of the Negro / An Experimental Study [Archives of Psychology, Columbia University contributions to philosophy and psychology, Vol. XXV, No. 1] (New York, Science Press, 1916) First Edition. Original cloth binding. 138pp. Scarce imprints. Nearly a century before the “Bell Curve” controversy of the 1990s, the "scientific" development of IQ testing led to these early studies – two of the first three – of “Negro Intelligence”. Ferguson’s conclusions laid the groundwork for what might be called “Scientific Racism”, while Mayo surprisingly concluded that Black academic and intellectual performance might be “due solely to a difference in opportunity and not at all to superior [mental] endowment.” Assumptions of Black mental “inferiority” had an enormous impact on concepts of Black education from the days of Booker T. Washington onward. Lot Amendments Condition: Item number: 276272
Title: 1st ‘scientific’ studies of 'Negro Intelligence' Author: Place: 1913-16 Publisher: Date: Description: 2 items: • Marion J. Mayo. “The Mental Capacity of the American Negro”. Reprinted from the Archives of Psychology, No. 28. (NY, Nov. 1913) First Printing thus. Original printed wrappers. 71pp. • George Oscar Ferguson. The Psychology of the Negro / An Experimental Study [Archives of Psychology, Columbia University contributions to philosophy and psychology, Vol. XXV, No. 1] (New York, Science Press, 1916) First Edition. Original cloth binding. 138pp. Scarce imprints. Nearly a century before the “Bell Curve” controversy of the 1990s, the "scientific" development of IQ testing led to these early studies – two of the first three – of “Negro Intelligence”. Ferguson’s conclusions laid the groundwork for what might be called “Scientific Racism”, while Mayo surprisingly concluded that Black academic and intellectual performance might be “due solely to a difference in opportunity and not at all to superior [mental] endowment.” Assumptions of Black mental “inferiority” had an enormous impact on concepts of Black education from the days of Booker T. Washington onward. Lot Amendments Condition: Item number: 276272
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