Read Women After All: Sex, Evolution, and the End of Male Supremacy Online
Authors: Melvin Konner
Tags: #Science, #Life Sciences, #Evolution, #Social Science, #Women's Studies
298
Lionel Tiger’s
The Decline of Males
:
Lionel Tiger,
The Decline of Males
(New York: Golden Books, 1999).
298
France research shows sperm count decline:
M. Rolland, J. Le Moal, V. Wagner, D. Royere, and J. De Mouzon, “Decline in Semen Concentration and Morphology in a Sample of 26,609 Men Close to General Population between 1989 and 2005 in France,”
Human Reproduction
28, no. 2 (2013): 462–70.
298
Finland decline:
N. Jorgensen, M. Vierula, R. Jacobsen, E. Pukkala, A. Perheentupa, H. E. Virtanen, N. E. Skakkebk, and J. Toppari, “Recent Adverse Trends in Semen Quality and Testis Cancer Incidence Among Finnish Men,”
International Journal of Andrology
34, no. 4 (2011): E37–E48.
298
Denmark decrease in sperm quality:
Niels Jorgensen and eleven other authors, “Human Semen Quality in the New Millennium: A Prospective Cross-Sectional Population-Based Study of 4867 Men,”
BMJ Open
2, no. 4 (2012).
299
India study:
Madhukar Shivajirao Dama and Singh
Rajender, “Secular Changes in the Semen Quality in India During the Past 33 Years,”
Journal of Andrology
33, no. 4 (2012): 740–44.
299
About 40 percent of births are to unmarried women:
Brady E. Hamilton, Joyce A. Martin, and Stephanie J. Ventura, “Births: Preliminary Data for 2012,”
National Vital Statistics Reports
62, no. 3, September 6, 2013, accessed Sept. 14, 2014, at http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nvsr/nvsr62/nvsr62_03.pdf.
299
Children will spend some time in single-parent households:
Gunnar Andersson, “Children’s Experience of Family Disruption and Family Formation: Evidence from 16 FFS Countries,”
Demographic Research
7 (2002): 343–64. The United States leads in these statistics, although Latvia is a close second.
299
Married women who outearn husbands:
Catharine Rampell, “U.S. Women on the Rise as Family Breadwinner,”
New York Times,
May 29, 2013, http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/30/business/economy/women-as-family-breadwinner-on-the-rise-study-says.html?_r=1&, accessed Sept. 14, 2014.
300
Children with two mothers or two fathers:
Charlotte J. Patterson, “Children of Lesbian and Gay Parents: Psychology, Law and Policy,”
American Psychologist
64, no. 8 (2009): 727–36. See also Konner,
Evolution of Childhood,
329–34.
300
Complex impact of divorce on children:
E. Mavis Hetherington, “Divorce and the Adjustment of Children,”
Pediatrics in Review
26, no. 5 (2005): 163–69; E. M. Hetherington, “Social Support and the Adjustment of Children in Divorced and Remarried Families,”
Childhood: A Global Journal of Child Research
10, no. 2 (2003): 217–36.
300
Children’s resilience and protective factors:
Michael Rutter, “Annual Research Review: Resilience—Clinical Implications,”
Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry
54, no. 4 (2013): 474–87; E. E. Werner, “Vulnerable but Invincible: High-Risk Children from Birth to Adulthood,” supplement,
Acta Paediatrica
422 (1997): 103–05.
304
“The world’s gone social”:
Sandberg is quoted by Jenna Goudreau in “What Men and Women Are Doing on Facebook,” which summarizes male-female differences in social media use:
Forbes,
April 26, 2010, accessed Sept. 14, 2014, at http://www.forbes.com/2010/04/26/popular-social-networking-sites-forbes-woman-time-facebook-twitter.html.
304
“A woman is the child of”:
Laurie Goering, “In Lesotho,
Women Hope for Control of Their Lives,”
Chicago Tribune,
October 17, 2004, accessed Sept. 14, 2014, at http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2004-10-17/news/0410170377_1_lesotho-husband-s-permission-south-africa.
305
“Like a glacier”:
Helen Fisher,
The First Sex: The Natural Talents of Women and How They Are Changing the World
(New York: Ballantine, 2000), 288.
I
mportant predecessors of this book or some critical aspects of it are Margaret Mead’s
Male and Female,
Ashley Montagu’s
The Natural Superiority of Women,
Simone de Beauvoir’s
The Second Sex,
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy’s
The Woman That Never Evolved,
Laura Betzig’s
Despotism and Differential Reproduction,
Camille Paglia’s
Sexual Personae,
Helen Fisher’s
The First Sex,
Bobbi Low’s
Why Sex Matters,
Steven Pinker’s
The Better Angels of Our Nature,
and Hanna Rosin’s
The End of
Men.
This should not be taken to mean that these authors would agree with all my claims (I don’t agree with all of theirs), just that I have learned a lot from them that helped me write this book. On a sadder note and one on which there is no disagreement on my part, Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn’s
Half the Sky
is a broad and moving overview of what is being done to help oppressed women throughout the world.
For an entertaining and reliable account of the evolution of sex, see Jared Diamond’s
Why Is Sex Fun?
And for the full range of animal mating systems and sexual proclivities, you can’t do better than the delightful, hilarious, and completely authoritative
Dr. Tatiana’s Sex Advice to All Creation,
by Olivia Judson. Dr. T lets you know what you must do to succeed in the mating game if you are a fairy wren, a golden potto, a cockroach, or one of any number of other creatures facing the eternal puzzles of love and life.
An extended treatment of sexual orientation and identity in all their manifestations was not in the scope of this book. Joan Roughgarden’s
Evolution’s Rainbow
(although it contains an immoderate attack on the theory of sexual selection) is a fascinating and celebratory account of the variety of animal and human sex and gender arrangements, by a distinguished biologist who is herself an openly transgender woman with a moving personal story. It should be read in connection with the reviews in
Nature
by Sarah Blaffer Hrdy and in
Science
by Alison Jolly. Gilbert Herdt’s
Third Sex, Third Gender
remains the definitive source on cross-cultural variation in roles for people who do not fit easily into the categories usually labeled “male” and “female.” One of the most illuminating—in fact, riveting—first-person accounts of gender is Norah Vincent’s
Self-Made Man,
in which she describes with great insight and compassion what she saw and learned in a year of successfully impersonating a man.
Although I see
Women After All
as a brief in favor of women, some will see it as a brief against men. To some extent that is inevitable, for two reasons. First, along with their many accomplishments, men have done a great deal of damage. Second, if women are superior even in some ways, then by definition men must be inferior in those ways. But I have said that there is good reason to worry about boys and men. It can be simultaneously true that (1) men have held and wielded most of the power in history and that (2) most men are not now and never were powerful. Other books have given attention to these facts, as well as to the particular vulnerabilities boys and men face as women’s power grows. Among these I recommend Warren Farrell’s
The Myth of Male Power,
Christina Hoff Sommers’s
The War Against Boys,
Lionel Tiger’s
The Decline of Males,
and Roy Baumeister’s
Is There Anything Good About Men?
Camille Paglia can always be counted on for a spirited and sophisticated defense of men, through easily available essays, speeches, and interviews (for example, in
Time,
December 30, 2013). I think of these views as a needed antidote to an idea I have not advanced and do not share: that men are all-powerful and mostly without value
.
Page numbers listed correspond to the print edition of this book. You can use your device’s search function to locate particular terms in the text.
ABC News, 283
abortion, 240
Abraham, 164
Achilles, 98, 162, 163, 196–97
Ackman, Bill, 217
Adam, 163
Adams, Abigail, 188–89
Adams, Renée, 289
adaptive polyandry, 97–98, 100
adrenal gland, 27
adultery, 133, 139, 187
Advertising & Society Review
, 253–54
Afghanistan, 241, 274
Africa, 291
FGC in, 251–53
Agamemnon, 98
aggression, 29, 86
among bonobos, 115
among chimps, 115
male vs. female, 212
prepubertally, 213
see also
violence
agonistic buffering, 104–5
agriculture, 120, 145, 159, 174
birth frequency and, 150–51
health and, 149–50
patriarchy and, 155
polygyny in, 168
transition to, 146–47, 149
and warfare, 162
Agta (people), 142, 143, 158
AIDS,
see
HIV/AIDS epidemic
Aka (people), 143
alliances:
among baboons, 103
among bonobos, 113–14
among chimps, 110
Alliant Energy, 233
alligators, 70
Altmann, Jeanne, 108
altruism, 62, 114
Amazon basin, 147
ambiguous genitalia, 24, 27–28
American Anthropologist
, 154
American Revolution, 188–89
American Water Works Company, 233
amygdala, 117, 228, 229
“Ancient Asexual Scandals” (Judson and Normark), 59
androgen insensitivity syndrome, 37
androgens, 26, 27, 30, 35, 63–64
absence of, 37
and gender identity, 29–31
in lemurs, 97
prenatal exposure and, 29–31, 228
androgen toxicity, 26
Anestis, Stephanie, 93
Angela’s House, 260
Angkor Wat, 156
anglerfish, 66
Anthony, Susan B., 190
antibiotics, 53
antlers, 83
apes, 95, 106, 114, 121, 122, 124–25, 130, 274, 301
see also specific apes
Archer Daniels Midland, 232
architecture, 155
Ardipithecus ramidus
(Ardi), 122, 123
Argentina, 236
Aristophanes, 192
Aristotle, 187
Arjuna, 166
armed forces, women in, 232, 274–75
Armelagos, George, 149
army, 155–56, 169, 176, 179, 244, 257, 271, 274
Army Rangers, 274
art, 155–56
artificial insemination, 65, 66
Ashanti (people), 152, 168
Astaire, Fred, 208
Athena, 47–48
Athens, 156, 187
Atlanta, Ga., 259
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
, 261
Atmajaa
(Born from the Soul) (TV series), 240
attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), 209
Augustine, 181
Austen, Jane, 187–88, 189
Australia, 237
Australian aborigines, 127
Australopithecus afarensis
, 123
autism, 92, 209
Ayalon, Hanna, 264
Ayotte, Kelly, 283
Aztecs (people), 147, 156, 157, 168
baboons, 88, 102–5, 108, 113, 122
dominance among, 103
baby care, 75, 158
Baillargeon, Raymond, 212
Baldwin, Tammy, 235
Bangkok Post
, 244
Bangladesh, 241, 248, 254, 255–56
Ban Ki-moon, 251
Bao, Ai-Min, 228
Barbin, Herculine, 19–21, 24, 25, 27
“Bare Market: Campus Sex Ratios, Romantic Relationships, and Sexual Behavior” (Uecker & Regnerus), 221
Barnes, Joanna, 217
barn swallows, 78–79
Barra, Mary, 284–86
Barré-Sinoussi, Françoise, 208
Barry, Herbert, 204
Bashir, Omar al-, 271
Bathsheba, 165
Bauer, Gretchen, 291
Baumeister, Roy, 223, 226
Bayh, Birch, 274
Beall, Alec, 125
Beck, Anna, 234
Beltz, Adriene, 228
Benchmark Electronics, 233
Benin, 254
Berbesque, Colette, 130
Berenbaum, Sheri, 228
Better Angels of Our Nature, The
(Pinker), 180, 275
Betzig, Laura, 167
Bhagavad Gita, 166
Bible, 163–64, 169, 196
Biesele, Megan, 135
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, 243, 246–47
biotechnology, 5
birds, 70
courtship feeding in, 79–80
pair-bonding in, 74–76, 82
see also specific birds
birds of paradise, 70
birds of prey, 87
birth attendants, 242, 243
birth control, 125, 191, 231, 241, 283
birth rates, 241
bisexuals, 225
Bix, Amy Sue, 264–65
Blackburn, Elizabeth, 208
black grouse, 82
Blackwell, Elizabeth, 190, 191
black widow spiders, 54–55, 302
blue-eyed black lemurs, 96
blue whales, 86
Blumenfield, Tami, 154
Blumenthal, Richard, 286
boars, 70, 76
“Body Time and Social Time” (Rossi & Rossi), 230
Boesch, Christophe, 110–11
Boko Haram, 257
bonobos, 62, 67, 111–18, 121, 122–23, 124, 129, 303
conflict among, 114–15
estrus in, 113
female control of male aggression in, 86
genome of, 112, 117
Boston, Mass., 189
botany, 49
Botswana, 246
brains, 3, 4, 7–8, 15, 29, 30, 32, 34, 45, 46, 62–64, 80–81, 90–93, 116–17, 119, 121–23