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FROM GENIUS INVERTS TO GENDERED INTELLIGENCE

Hegarty, Peter
History of Psychology , Volume 10 (2): 132 PsycARTICLES®May 1, 2007

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FROM GENIUS INVERTS TO GENDERED INTELLIGENCE

Abstract

The histories of “intelligence” and “sexuality” have largely been narrated separately. In Lewis Terman’s work on individual differences, they intersect. Influenced by G. Stanley Hall, Terman initially described atypically accelerated development as problematic. Borrowing from Galton, Terman later positioned gifted children as nonaverage but ideal. Attention to the gifted effeminate subjects used to exemplify giftedness and gender nonconformity in Terman’s work shows the selective instantiation of nonaverageness as a propos of effeminacy, and as a propos of high intelligence. Throughout, high intelligence is conflated with health, masculinity, and heterosexuality. Terman’s research located marital sexual problems in women’s bodies, further undoing possibilities for evaluating heterosexual men’s practices as different from a normative position. Terman’s research modernized Galton’s imperialist vision of a society lead by a male cognitive elite. Psychologists continue to traffic in his logic that values and inculcates intelligence only in the service of sexual and gender conformity.
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/lp/psycarticles-reg/from-genius-inverts-to-gendered-intelligence-oeF7VKMXrY
Title
FROM GENIUS INVERTS TO GENDERED INTELLIGENCE
Author(s)
Hegarty, Peter
Journal
History of Psychology , Volume 10 (2): 132 PsycARTICLES® – May 1, 2007
Publisher
Educational Publishing Foundation
Copyright
Copyright © 2007 by American Psychological Association
ISSN
1093-4510
eISSN
1939-0610
D.O.I.
10.1037/1093-4510.10.2.132
Publisher site
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