The Natural Superiority of WomenRowman Altamira, 1999 - 335 من الصفحات Among the central issues of the modern feminist movement, the debate over biology and culture over sex and gender, over genetics and gender roles has certainly been one of the most passionately contested. Making revolutionary arguments upon its first publication in 1953, The Natural Superiority of Women stands as one of the original feminist arguments against biological determinism. An iconoclast, Montagu wielded his encyclopedic knowledge of physical anthropology in critique of the conventional wisdom of women as the "weaker sex," showing how women's biological, genetic, and physical makeup made her not only man's equal, but his superior. Also a humanist, Montagu points to the emotional and social qualities typically ascribed to and devalued in women as being key to just social life and relationships. Subsequent editions of this book have provided additional support for Montagu's arguments, examining both biological and social scientific data of the late 20th century. One of the most broadly renowned and read scholars of our century, Montagu brings out this fifth edition with up-to-date statistics and references. A lengthy foreword by Susan Sperling contextualizes the book within the intellectual histories of feminism and anthropology, noting the huge social and intellectual changes that are spanned in Montagu's life and writing. Montagu's foundational book is an important addition to the library of all gender scholars. |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 1-5 من 45
الصفحة 13
... relationships between culture and biology , his " insist- ence on the principle of multiple and interlocking causation , " as Aldous Huxley wrote in his forward to Montagu's first edition of Man's Most Dangerous Myth : The Fallacy of ...
... relationships between culture and biology , his " insist- ence on the principle of multiple and interlocking causation , " as Aldous Huxley wrote in his forward to Montagu's first edition of Man's Most Dangerous Myth : The Fallacy of ...
الصفحة 14
... relationship between biology and culture . Sir Arthur Keith had said " Nature keeps her human orchard healthy by pruning and war is her pruning hook . ” In distinct contrast to this Malthusian perspective , Boas wrote in 1941 , It is ...
... relationship between biology and culture . Sir Arthur Keith had said " Nature keeps her human orchard healthy by pruning and war is her pruning hook . ” In distinct contrast to this Malthusian perspective , Boas wrote in 1941 , It is ...
الصفحة 17
... relationships between the sexes . 18 As noted by Frederick Engels , Bertrand Russell and others , Darwinism was both an expression of Victorian individualism and liberalism , and broadly used to justify these theories as natural law ...
... relationships between the sexes . 18 As noted by Frederick Engels , Bertrand Russell and others , Darwinism was both an expression of Victorian individualism and liberalism , and broadly used to justify these theories as natural law ...
الصفحة 21
... for proto- hominid evolution , that of the chimpanzees studied by Jane Goodall at the Gombe Reserve in Tanzania , was far more sensible.32 Here the analogy rested on the immensely closer phylogenetic relationship Foreword 21.
... for proto- hominid evolution , that of the chimpanzees studied by Jane Goodall at the Gombe Reserve in Tanzania , was far more sensible.32 Here the analogy rested on the immensely closer phylogenetic relationship Foreword 21.
الصفحة 22
Ashley Montagu. Here the analogy rested on the immensely closer phylogenetic relationship between chimps and human with humans and chimps sharing about 98 % of their genes , reflecting their recent common ancestor . This model emphasized ...
Ashley Montagu. Here the analogy rested on the immensely closer phylogenetic relationship between chimps and human with humans and chimps sharing about 98 % of their genes , reflecting their recent common ancestor . This model emphasized ...
المحتوى
Prologue | 45 |
The Natural Superiority of Women | 49 |
The Subjection of Women | 65 |
The Social Determinants of Biological Facts and Social Consequences | 91 |
Who Said The Inferior Sex? | 111 |
When X Doesnt Equal Y | 127 |
The Sexual Superiority of the Female | 141 |
Are Women More Emotional Than Men? | 151 |
Women and Creativity | 203 |
The Genius of Woman as the Genius of Humanity | 229 |
Mutual Aid | 241 |
Changing Traditions | 257 |
Womans Task | 279 |
United Nations Declaration on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women | 291 |
On the Origins of My Views on the Natural Superiority of Women | 297 |
Notes | 303 |
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
ability achievement adult aggressive anthropology Ashley Montagu average baboon become behavior believe Bell Curve better biological birth boys Camille Claudel century child chromosome civilization constitute cooperation creative cultural differences emotional equal evidence evolution evolutionary experience fact factors female female's feminine feminism feminist function gender genes genetic Gimbutas girls greater Havelock Ellis hemophilia human relations humankind husband idea important inferior intelligence Jane Goodall kind less living male dominance male's Marija Gimbutas marriage married masculine maternal means mental Michelle Rosaldo mother muscular power myth Natural Superiority neoteny organism ovum percent person physical political prejudice problem psychological race relationships response Richard Borshay Lee role scientists sexual social societies species studies subincised Superiority of Women survival tend tests things Toni Morrison traits understand UNESCO University Press Victorian wife wives woman X chromosome York
مقاطع مشهورة
الصفحة 19 - The chief distinction in the intellectual powers of the two sexes is shewn by man's attaining to a higher eminence, in whatever he takes up, than can woman- whether requiring deep thought, reason, or imagination, or merely the use of the senses and hands.