Modern trends in gender studies are sharply divergent, with sophisticated, nonreductionist research strategies often failing to gain a public hearing, while a regressive biological reductionism dominate the airwaves and bookstores. Montagu's commitment to the role of the anthropologist as public communicator about this issue has been crucial. Biologically oriented feminists in and out of the academy continue to show the complex interactions between culture and biology, an idea that Montagu introduces repeatedly in the book, with its insistence on "multiple and interlocking causation." In these accounts there is an explicit recognition of the social and political context of science. Recent work in cross-cultural studies of reproduction over women's life cycles reveals the way that biological events such as menarche and menopause are affected by cultural practices. Rather than a universal ovary and female body, we learn of a flexible, responsive body that develops epigentically in relationship to a variety of cultural practices. These practices are part of the larger ecology, including subsistence methods, the division of labor, reproductive rules and practices, social stratifications, diet, politics and history.
84 Ashley Montagu speaks to this when he distinguishes between what he calls "first nature" and "second nature," the latter being the effects of culture upon biology.
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