Evolution's Empress: Darwinian Perspectives on the Nature of Women

Evolution's Empress: Darwinian Perspectives on the Nature of Women

ISBN-10:
0199892741
ISBN-13:
9780199892747
Pub. Date:
02/27/2013
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199892741
ISBN-13:
9780199892747
Pub. Date:
02/27/2013
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Evolution's Empress: Darwinian Perspectives on the Nature of Women

Evolution's Empress: Darwinian Perspectives on the Nature of Women

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Overview

Over the last decade, there has been increasing debate as to whether feminism and evolutionary psychology can co-exist. Such debates often conclude with a resounding "no," often on the grounds that the former is a political movement while the latter is a field of scientific inquiry. In the midst of these debates, there has been growing dissatisfaction within the field of evolutionary psychology about the way the discipline (and others) have repeatedly shown women to be in passive roles when it comes to survival and reproduction. Evolutionary behavioral research has made significant strides in the past few decades, but continues to take for granted many theoretical assumption that are perhaps, in light of the most recent evidence, misguided. As a result, the research community has missed important areas of research, and in some cases, will likely come to inaccurate conclusions based on existing dogma, rather than rigorous, theoretically driven research. Bias in the field of evolutionary psychology echoes the complaints against the political movement attached to academic feminisms. This is an intellectual squabble where much is at stake, including a fundamental understanding of the evolutionary significance of women's roles in culture, mothering, reproductive health and physiology, mating, female alliances, female aggression, and female intrasexual competition.

Evolution's Empress identifies women as active agents within the evolutionary process. The chapters in this volume focus on topics as diverse as female social interactions, mate competition and mating strategies, motherhood, women's health, sex differences in communication and motivation, sex discrimination, and women in literature. The volume editors bring together a diverse range of perspectives to demonstrate ways in which evolutionary approaches to human behavior have thus far been too limited. By reconsidering the role of women in evolution, this volume furthers the goal of generating dialogue between the realms of women's studies and evolutionary psychology.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199892747
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 02/27/2013
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 512
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Maryanne L. Fisher, Ph.D., is Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology and member of the Women and Gender Studies program at Saint Mary's University in Halifax, Canada.

Justin R. Garcia, M.S., Ph.D., is CTRD Research Fellow at The Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender, and Reproduction and member of the Center for the Integrative Study of Animal Behavior and the Cognitive Science Program at Indiana University, Bloomington.

Rosemarie Sokol Chang, Ph.D., is Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychology at State University of New York at New Paltz.

Table of Contents

Contributors

Overdue Dialogues: Foreword to Evolution's Empress
Sarah Blaffer Hrdy

Introduction

Introduction to Evolution's Empress
Maryanne L. Fisher, Rosemarie Sokol Chang, and Justin R. Garcia

Part One: Sex Roles, Competition and Cooperation

1. Women's Intrasexual Competition for Mates
Maryanne L. Fisher

2. The Tangled Web She Weaves: The Evolution of Female-female Aggression and Status-seeking
Laurette Liesen

3. Getting by with a Little Help From Friends: The Importance of Social Bonds for Female Primates
Liza R. Moscovice

4. A Sex-Neutral Theoretical Framework for Making Strong-Inferences about the Origins of Sex Roles
Patricia Adair Gowaty

Part Two: Mothers and Parenting

5. Mothers, Traditions, and the Human Strategy to Leave Descendants
Kathryn Coe and Craig T. Palmer

6. Maternal Effect and Offspring Development
Nicole M. Cameron and Justin R. Garcia

7. The Evolution of Flexible Parenting
Lesley Newson and Peter J. Richerson

8. Human Attachment Vocalizations and the Expanding Notion of Nurture
Rosemarie Sokol Chang

9. Fathers vs. Sons: Why Jocasta Matters
Laura Betzig

Part Three: Health and Reproduction

10. Women's Health at the Crossroads of Evolution and Epidemiology
Chris Reiber

11. Fertility: Life History and Ecological Aspects
Bobbi S. Low

12. Reproductive Strategies in Female Post-generative Life
Johannes Johow, Eckart Voland, and Kai Willführ

13. Now or Later: Peripartum Shifts in Female Sociosexuality
Michelle Escasa-Dorne, Sharon M. Young, and Peter Gray

Part Four: Mating and Communication

14. Sexual Conflict in White-faced Capuchins: It's Not Whether You Win or Lose
Linda Fedigan and Katharine Jack

15. The Importance of Female Choice: Evolutionary Perspectives on Constraints, Expressions, and Variations in Female Mating Strategies
David Frederick, Tania Reynolds, and Brooke Scelza

16. Swept off Their Feet? Females' Strategic Mating Behavior as a Means of Supplying the Broom
Christopher J. Wilbur and Lorne Campbell

17. Sex and Gender Differences in Communication Strategies
Elisabeth Oberzaucher

Part Five: New Disciplinary Frontiers

18. A New View of Evolutionary Psychology Using Female Priorities and Motivations
Tami Meredith and Maryanne Fisher

19. From Reproductive Resource to Autonomous Individuality: Charlotte Bronte's Jane Eyre
Nancy Easterlin

20. The Empress's Clothes
Julie Seaman

21. Consuming Midlife Motherhood: Cooperative Breeding and the 'Disestablishment' of the Reproductive Clock in the Postindustrial Era
Michele Pridmore-Brown

22. The Quick and the Dead: Gendered Agency in the History of Western Science and Evolutionary Theory
Leslie L. Heywood
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