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Location Call # Volume Status
 Sherman Library  QL775 .C66 2022    AVAILABLE  
Author Cooke, Lucy, 1970- author.
Title Bitch : on the female of the species / Lucy Cooke.
Edition First US edition.
OCLC 1322488372
ISBN 9781541674899 (hardcover)
1541674898
(ebook)
Publisher New York : Basic Books, 2022.
Description xxi, 369 pages ; 25 cm
English Motion picture directors lcdgt
LC Subject heading/s Social behavior in animals -- Popular works.
Females -- Evolution -- Popular works.
Sexual behavior in animals -- Popular works.
Sex differences -- Popular works.
Medical
Subject heading/s
Women -- psychology.
Psychology, Comparative.
Biological Evolution.
Sociobiology.
Social Behavior.
Sexual Behavior, Animal.
Sexual Selection.
Mating Preference, Animal.
Other
Subject heading/s
Gender identity.
Other
Genre heading/s
Trivia and miscellanea.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 291-352) and index.
Summary "It's a tale as old as time: the philandering man wants to chase sex with whomever, wherever, and at all costs-and to avoid supporting his offspring at all costs, too-while leaving a long-suffering wife to clean up his mess. You can find the idea in comedians' routines, inane self-help books, and any number of movies, novels, and television shows. It almost all comes from evolutionary biology and psychology, and the tale boils down to this: Females are naturally submissive, passive, and maternal, while males are necessarily dominant, competitive, and promiscuous. And as Lucy Cooke shows in Bitch, it's almost completely wrong. In its place, Cooke offers a new vision of the female sex: depending on which one you choose, you can find females that are inherently as promiscuous, competitive, strategically cooperative, ardent, aggressive, dominant, dynamic, complex and variable as evolutionary psychology's stereotypical male. So how did the idea of the passive female get so entrenched? Tracing biology from Darwin to today, Cooke shows how the men behind breakthrough theories in evolution have infused their ideas with a massive dose of societal sexism. Cooke surfs the work of two generations of feminist evolutionary biologists, showing how they've pushed back against the blinkered views of evolution's founding fathers to reveal the true diversity of nature. She meets with pioneering scientists--Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, Jeanne Altmann, Mary-Jane West-Eberhard, Patricia Gowaty and more--following their work around the globe. From the dominant female lemurs of Madagascar to same-sex female albatross couples in Hawaii to female killer whale elders in the Salish sea, Cooke takes us on a journey through a side of nature that's much less binary, less heterosexual, and less sexist than we have been led to expect. Fierce, funny, and revolutionary, Bitch is a scientific manifesto that shows us an entirely new perspective on what it means to be a female animal, with serious implications for all of us today"-- Provided by publisher.
Contents Introduction -- The anarchy of sex -- The mysteries of mate choice -- The monogamy myth -- Fifty ways to eat your lover -- Love is a battlefield -- Madonna no more -- Bitch eat bitch -- Primate politics -- Matriarchs and menopause -- Sisters are doing it for themselves -- Beyond the binary -- Conclusion: A natural world without prejudice.
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