Evolution, Gender, and Rape

Cover
Cheryl Brown Travis
MIT Press, 2003 - 454 Seiten

Multidisciplinary critiques of the notion of rape as an evolutionary adaptation.

Are women and men biologically destined to be in perpetual conflict? Does evolutionary genetics adequately explain sexual aggression? Such questions have been much debated in both the media and academia. In particular, the notion that rape is an evolutionary adaptation, put forth by Randy Thornhill and Craig T. Palmer in their book A Natural History of Rape (MIT Press, 2000), vaulted the debate into national prominence. This book assesses Thornhill and Palmer's ideas, as well as the critical responses to their work. Drawing on theory and data from anthropology, behavioral ecology, evolutionary biology, primatology, psychology, and sociology, the essays explain the flaws and limitations of a strictly biological model of rape. They argue that traditionally stereotyped gender roles are grounded more in culture than in differing biological reproductive roles.The book is divided into three parts.

The first part, "Evolutionary Models and Gender," addresses broad theoretical and methodological issues of evolutionary theory and sociobiology. Part 2, "Critiquing Evolutionary Models of Rape," addresses specific propositions of Thornhill and Palmer, making explicit their unexamined assumptions and challenging the scientific bases for their conclusions. It also considers other studies on biological gender differences. Part 3, "Integrative Cultural Models of Gender and Rape," offers alternative models of rape, which incorporate psychology and cultural systems, as well as a broader interpretation of evolutionary theory.

 

Inhalt

Talking Evolution and Selling Difference
3
Female Sexuality and the Myth of Male Control
29
Power Asymmetries between the Sexes Mate Preferences and Components of Fitness
61
Does SelfReport Make Sense as an Investigative Method in Evolutionary Psychology?
87
Understanding Rape
105
Pop Sociobiology Reborn The Evolutionary Psychology of Sex and Violence
139
Critiquing Evolutionary Models of Rape
169
Of Vice and Men A Case Study in Evolutionary Psychology
171
Violence against Science Rape and Evolution
235
Integrative and Cultural Models of Gender and Rape
263
The Origins of Sex Differences in Human Behavior Evolved Dispositions versus Social Roles
265
The Evolutionary Value of the Man to Child Affiliative Bond Closer to Obligate Than to Facultative
305
RapeFree versus RapeProne How Culture Makes a Difference
337
What Is Rape?Toward a Historical Ethnographic Approach
363
Understanding Rape A Metatheoretical Framework
383
Coming Full Circle Refuting Biological Determinism
413

Evolutionary Models of Why Men Rape Acknowledging the Complexities
191
Theory and Data on Rape and Evolution
207
An Unnatural History of Rape
221
Index
425
Urheberrecht

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Beliebte Passagen

Seite 415 - Amongst many animals, sexual selection will have given its aid to ordinary selection, by assuring to the most vigorous and best adapted males the greatest number of offspring. Sexual selection will also give characters useful to the males alone, in their struggles...
Seite 339 - It may be said that natural selection is daily and hourly scrutinising, throughout the world, every variation, even the slightest ; rejecting that which is bad, preserving and adding up all that is good ; silently and insensibly working, whenever and wherever opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being in relation to its organic and inorganic conditions of life.
Seite 221 - ... and drawn to a zeal for learning and knowing; and we think it glorious to excel therein, while we count it base and immoral to fall into error, to wander from the truth, to be ignorant, to be led astray. In this pursuit, which is both natural and morally right, two errors are to be avoided: first, we must not treat the unknown as known and too readily accept it; and he who wishes to avoid this error (as all should do) will devote both time and attention to the weighing of evidence.
Seite 363 - Since Hobbes, at least, the competitive and acquisitive characteristics of Western man have been confounded with Nature, and the Nature thus fashioned in the human image has been in turn reapplied to the explanation of Western man. The effect of this dialectic has been to anchor the properties of human social action, as we conceive them, in Nature, and the laws of Nature in our conceptions of human social action. Human society is natural, and natural societies are curiously human.
Seite 340 - Islander any more than it is to us; it implies love and lovemaking; it becomes the nucleus of such venerable institutions as marriage and the family; it pervades art and it produces its spells and its magic. It dominates in fact almost every aspect of culture. Sex, in its widest meaning ... is rather a sociological and cultural force than a mere bodily relation of two individuals.
Seite 371 - ... thick description" of what he is doing ("practicing a burlesque of a friend faking a wink to deceive an innocent into thinking a conspiracy is in motion...
Seite 371 - ... of what he is doing ("practicing a burlesque of a friend taking a wink to deceive an innocent into thinking a conspiracy is in motion") lies the object of ethnography: a stratified hierarchy of meaningful structures in terms of which twitches, winks, fake-winks...

Autoren-Profil (2003)

Cheryl Brown Travis is Professor of Psychology and Chair of Women's Studies at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.

Bibliografische Informationen