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> On Dec 14, 2019, at 10:23 PM, Ken Hiebert via Marxism 
> <marxism@lists.csbs.utah.edu> wrote:
> 
> Tonight I had occasion to pick up a copy of The Spark, Marxist Theory and 
> Discussion, a publication of the Communist Party of Canada.
> It carries a review of Lysenko’s Ghost: Epigenetics and Russia.  The reviewer 
> claims that advances in science have vindicated Lysenko.
> 
> “…the author accidentally but fatally exposes West capitalist bioscience to 
> be severely flawed.  With its dogmatic rejection of the possibility of other 
> methods of inheritance it was Western bioscience that was shown to  be less 
> open, narrow, non-dialectical, philosophically frozen and inferior in 
> comparison to an imperfect but superior Soviet dialectical science.”
> 
> Can someone who knows more about this than I do please comment.



LOREN GRAHAM, Lysenko’s Ghost: Epigenetics and Russia. Cambridge, MA: Harvard 
University Press, 2016. Pp. 200. ISBN 978-0-674-08905-1. £18.95 (hardback). 
doi:10.1017/S0007087416000959
<https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/british-journal-for-the-history-of-science/article/loren-graham-lysenkos-ghost-epigenetics-and-russia-cambridge-ma-harvard-university-press-2016-pp-200-isbn-9780674089051-1895-hardback/47C91EA18AA95602D0F8DE90A55B6F7C>

There is a remarkable moment, halfway through this book, when Graham happens to 
bump into Trofim Lysenko (1898–1976) – after numerous failed attempts to 
arrange a meeting – in a dining room at the House of Scientists. Lysenko is 
sitting and eating alone, having lost his position of dominance at the 
Institute of Genetics (where he dismissed Mendelian genetics and promoted a 
version of the inheritance of acquired characteristics that promised to make 
Russia a verdant land). Amazingly, we witness Lysenko brazenly laying down the 
victim card, but Graham has the better hand, citing Lysenko’s public criticism 
of his rivals, who often ended up in prison or dead. When Lysenko died five 
years after this encounter, few people would have predicted that he and his 
theories would be granted a curtain call. But, as Graham shows in this 
delightful little book – part history, part memoir – research in epigenetics 
has done so. In recent years, geneti- cists have shown that environmental 
changes can affect the expression of genes (without altering the genetic code) 
and that, crucially, in some cases and through an as-yet-unknown mechanism, the 
resulting phenotype can be inherited. Graham asks whether this research 
vindicates Lysenko, but he also offers his book as a history of the concept of 
‘soft inheritance’.

Graham takes us from Hippocrates to Paul Kammerer via Jean-Baptiste Lamarck and 
Ivan Pavlov in thirty-two pages. It is useful to have this synthesis, as it 
shows how common belief in the inheritance of acquired characteristics has 
been; indeed, it underlines Graham’s assertion that ‘the twentieth-century 
denial of the inheritance of acquired characteristics is likely to be con- 
sidered an odd detour in biological thought’ (p. 16). This is chiefly a history 
of ‘official’ science, and as such Graham perhaps overstates the extent to 
which the inheritance of acquired characteristics had been discredited in the 
West by the 1920s. As Piers Hale’s work suggests (to take one example), 
research scientists like J.B.S. Haldane and Julian Huxley were at least 
concerned that the non-specialist public (and perhaps other research 
scientists) would accept George Bernard Shaw’s Lamarckian-inspired biology. 
More research on this needs to be done, touching as it does on important issues 
of the relation between science and the public, and the construction of 
scientific understandings in the ‘popular’ realm. Graham maintains a similar 
division between ‘of- ficial’ science and the popular when citing Kammerer’s 
status as a ‘popularizer’ and a ‘speculator in a way that is alien to 
scientists seeking reliable evidence and rigorous analysis’ as a reason why 
scientists rejected his ideas (p. 39). This sort of speculation was fairly 
common amongst scientists in the early twentieth century, for example in the 
To-day and To-morrow series – small books, some of which were written by 
practising scientists (including Haldane, the biologist H.S. Jennings and the 
physicist James Jeans), which often contained speculative scientific daydreams. 
Indeed, Graham is particularly good at pointing out how politics shaped ideas 
about heredity (and vice versa).

The material on what is happening in Russia today is perhaps most fascinating, 
not least because many of the historical chapters on the USSR will be familiar 
to readers of Graham’s previous work. Supporters of Lysenko have emerged from 
the woodwork in recent years, claiming that research in epigenetics vindicates 
his beliefs. One of these is Iurii Ignat′evich Mukhin, a metallurgist who has 
written a book entitled Genetics: A Prostitute (2006). Graham convincingly 
shows that these apologists often have political motivations: many want to 
rehabilitate Stalin via his favourite agronomist. Having read all of Lysenko’s 
publications that appeared between 1923 and 1965, Graham is in an excellent 
position to debunk many of the myths and misunderstandings perpetu- ated by 
Lysenko’s defenders, for example that Lysenko thought his work could be applied 
to humans. But no matter how little these writers actually know about Lysenko 
and his theories, their propaganda is having bizarre, sometimes nasty, effects 
in Russia. Geneticists understandably do not wish to be associated with 
Lysenko, and there is therefore a dearth of epigenetic research in Russia. The 
famine that accompanied the blockade of Leningrad between 1941 and the 
beginning of 1944 could be revealing of the transgenerational epigenetic impact 
of extreme hunger and stress, but Lysenko is managing to suppress science from 
beyond the grave, and Russian scientists have not yet researched the event (p. 
127). Beyond science, what Graham calls ‘the New Lysenkoism’ has been used by 
figures in the Russian Orthodox Church to try to discredit Darwin and genetics, 
and by those who see homosexuality as unnatural. Meanwhile, some critics of the 
Lysenko– Stalinists have conceded that characteristics can be inherited: how 
else to explain the Russian population’s continued political passivity, they 
say, but as a result of epigenetic markers having been inherited after years of 
subjugation?

Graham attempts, like those critics of resurgent Lysenkoists within Russia, to 
cut the connection between Lysenko, epigenetics and the concept of inheritance 
of acquired characteristics. He has sound historical reasons for doing so: many 
others, aside from Lysenko, have believed in soft in- heritance, and 
epigenetics would not exist had biology developed along Lysenko’s lines. Graham 
says that we should instead associate Lysenko’s name with abuse of power and 
poor research. In doing so, he tries to take the fear out of Lysenko’s ghost. 
This is, therefore, not only an immensely interesting book; it is also a highly 
relevant one.

OLIVER HILL-ANDREWS
University of Sussex
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