| | he takes up, than can womanwhether requiring deep thought, reason, or imagination, or merely the use of the senses and hands. If two lists were made of the most eminent men and women in poetry, painting, sculpture, music (inclusive both of composition and performance), history, science, and philosophy, with half a dozen names under each subject, the two lists would not bear comparison. We may also infer . . . that if men are capable of a decided pre-eminence over women in many subjects, the average of mental power in man must be above that of women . . . (men have had) to defend their females, as well as their young, from enemies of all kinds, and to hunt for their joint subsistence. But to avoid enemies or to attack them with success, to capture wild animals and to fashion weapons requires the aid of the higher mental faculties, namely, observation, reason, invention, or imagination. These various faculties will thus have been continually put to the test and selected during manhood.
20
|
The Natural Superiority of Women may be read as a multilayered argument against this passage in Darwin, taking us on a century-long time travel in which Montagu engages many of the chief arguments against this view of women's "natural" inferiority. During Darwin's lifetime, feminists Eliza Burt Gamble and Antoinette Brown Blackwell indicted the sexist bias in Darwin's work, their ideas receiving little attention among scientists. 21 Important twentieth-century works in human and animal ethology followed this model of active male and passive female (a model also embedded in Geddes' and Thomson's influential The Evolution of Sex, written in 1890). 22 To the "Man the Hunter" model of the 1960s and 1970s, may be added such studies as Wickler's (1973) work on algae, showing active males and passive females, Geist's on mountain sheep (1971) and Williams' text on the evolution of human behavior, Sex and Evolution (1975), standard references of the period. 23 As a number of feminist anthropologists have pointed out, both Darwinism and the androcentric evolutionary literature of the 1970s occurred coincident with the first and second waves of Western feminism, and both were popularized as in some cases explicit rebuttals to claims for gender equality. 24
|
Montagu's response to Darwinian sexism, past and present, is complex. On the one hand, he staunchly denies and effectively deconstructs the idea of women's passive role in evolution and
|
|