Mothers and others

the evolutionary origins of mutual understanding

Hardcover, 422 pages

English language

Published Jan. 24, 2009 by Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.

ISBN:
9780674032996

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3 stars (1 review)

1 edition

Challenging Bias with Blinkers

3 stars

This book is a difficult one to review. On the one hand, it is a thorough and well researched anthology of anthropology and primatology that shows how human children (and some nonhuman) came to rely on the care of many actors, not just the immediate family or (as is popularly believed in anthropology) the mother. Hrdy writes well and accessibly, and questions accepted norms about child-rearing, particularly taking aim at this in the fifth chapter which finally confronts American bias toward a nuclear family (where the author is based).

On the other hand, the book makes some extraordinarily prejudiced assumptions that are themselves loaded with Western bias. There are repeated references to contemporary hunter-gatherer societies as if they represent past societies. Although Hrdy admires many of their traits, and she explores different systems of parenting and alloparenting, it is highly problematic that these societies are positioned as they are: At …

Subjects

  • Mother and child
  • Parental behavior in animals
  • Child rearing -- Psychological aspects
  • Behavior evolution