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Mother Nature: Maternal Instincts and How They Shape the Human Species (1999)

by Sarah Blaffer Hrdy

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4431060,082 (4.49)6
"Mother Nature presents a radical new way of understanding how mothers act and why, and how this new understanding is changing the way scientists think about how evolution works." "Drawing on anthropology, history, literature, developmental psychology, and animal behavior, Sarah Hrdy examines the distinct biological and genetic elements that constitute maternal instinct. She strips away the biases implicit in conventional stereotypes of female nature to give us very different and provocative perspectives on maternal ambivalence, the links between maternity and ambition, mother love and sexual love, and she explains why age-old tensions between the sexes persist and are being played out today in efforts to control women's reproductive choices."--Jacket.… (more)
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    Sperm Wars: Infidelity, Sexual Conflict, and Other Bedroom Battles by Robin Baker (espertus)
    espertus: While not as monumental and well-documented as Mother Nature, Sperm Wars provides a fascinating discussion of reproductive conflict between and within the sexes from an evolutionary psychology perspective.
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» See also 6 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
I was working a temporary job at the Cornell Bookstore during their textbook rush when I saw this book. During quiet times I would look through whatever text book caught my interest. This one got me to buy a copy. Hrdy set out to explain how women have always worked in various ways to make sure that their children not only survive, but thrive and rise within their social group. As a consequence of this research, she also clearly shows how mammals, including humans, sometimes ruthlessly, decide if an offspring is viable or not and the way they end thier life. This is a clear view of the evolution of motherhood, looking at human female physiology , non-human mammal physiology, history, economics, social evolution and more. Fascinating. ( )
  JDRussell | Aug 27, 2022 |
I loved this book when I read it for some research on motherhood and maternity years ago. Now that I'm a mother, I've been thinking about this book again. Absolutely a great read for anyone interested in new perspectives on the biology of motherhood and the oft-cited maternal instinct. ( )
  Virginia-A | Dec 21, 2016 |
Evolulutionary biology taking into account the different perspectives of the mother, the father & the embryo/child. Wonderful stuff.
Read Nov 2006 ( )
  mbmackay | Dec 6, 2015 |
I was finally motivated to pull this weighty tome down off of the shelf after an intriguing review by my sister of Hrdy's most recent work: Mothers and Others. An anthropologist, Hrdy uses human history, observations of our closest evolutionary relatives, and even social insects to examine what is really the true nature of motherhood. As a feminist, she is perhaps not surprised to find that much of what we have traditionally viewed as natural maternal behavior is in fact wishful thinking.

I found this book incredibly impressive and profoundly influential. Many times I've found both Andrew and I reciting anecdotes and arguments from this book in discussions on gender and parenting. (There were quite a number of sections I just had to read aloud to Andrew.)

Though I didn't always agree with her every point, I look forward to reading other work by Hrdy, and will continue to recommend her far and wide. ( )
  greeniezona | Sep 20, 2014 |


A really excellent evolutionary history of mothers and infants. No, not evopsych. The good stuff. ( )
  jen.e.moore | Mar 30, 2013 |
Showing 1-5 of 9 (next | show all)
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"Mother Nature—who by the bye is an old lady with some bad habits..."
— George Eliot, 1848
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I have spent my entire adult life engaged in a quest to understand not just who I am but how creatures like me came to be.
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"Mother Nature presents a radical new way of understanding how mothers act and why, and how this new understanding is changing the way scientists think about how evolution works." "Drawing on anthropology, history, literature, developmental psychology, and animal behavior, Sarah Hrdy examines the distinct biological and genetic elements that constitute maternal instinct. She strips away the biases implicit in conventional stereotypes of female nature to give us very different and provocative perspectives on maternal ambivalence, the links between maternity and ambition, mother love and sexual love, and she explains why age-old tensions between the sexes persist and are being played out today in efforts to control women's reproductive choices."--Jacket.

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