1st Edition

On the Origins of Gender Inequality

By Joan Huber Copyright 2007
    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    184 Pages
    by Routledge

    In our fast-paced world of technology and conveniences, the biological origins of women's inequality can be forgotten. This book offers a richer understanding of gender inequality by explaining a key cause-women's reproductive and lactation patterns. Until about 1900, infants nursed every fifteen minutes on average for two years because very frequent suckling prevented pregnancy. The practice evolved because it maximized infant survival. If a forager child was born before its older sibling could take part in the daily food search, the older one died. This practice persisted until the modern era because until after the discovery of the germ theory of disease, human milk was the only food certain to be unspoiled. Lactation patterns excluded women from the activities that led to political leadership. During the twentieth century the ancient mode declined and women entered the labor market en masse. Joan Huber challenges feminists toward a richer understanding of biological origins of inequality-knowledge that can help women achieve greater equality today.

    Introduction; Chapter 1 Why the Search for Human Origins Stumbled; Chapter 2 From Primates to Humans; Chapter 3 The Hominids Appear; Chapter 4 Human Milk; Chapter 5 Subsistence Modes and Infant Diet; Chapter 6 The Future of Gender Inequality;

    Biography

    Joan Huber

    “Huber shows why it is important for social scientists, anthropologists, and sociologists to include biological data in their research on sex and gender stratification. Recommended.”
    —CHOICE