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Contents

   



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1 Significance and reception  





2 Overview  





3 Synopsis  





4 References  





5 External links  














Eve's Seed







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


Eve’s Seed: Biology, the Sexes, and the Course of History
First edition
AuthorRobert S. McElvaine
Cover artistEde Dreikurs
LanguageEnglish
SubjectWomen, men, biology, religion, history
Genrenon-fiction
PublisherMcGraw-Hill

Publication date

2001
Publication placeUnited States
Pages453
ISBN978-0-07-135528-5
Websitehttp://Evesseed.net

Eve's Seed: Biology, the Sexes, and the Course of History is a 2001 book by noted American historian and writer Robert S. McElvaine that introduced the new field of "biohistory" and presents a major reinterpretation of the human experience. This "provocative study"[1] is history on the grandest scale. It "re-synthesizes the full sweep of human history around the concept of sexual difference".[2] McElvaine utilizes biology, anthropology, psychology, religious studies, women's studies, and popular culture, in addition to more traditional history, in weaving his reinterpretation of the course of human history from evolution to the present. He builds upon and extends the work of such thinkers as Karen Horney, Margaret Mead, Ashley Montagu, and Gerda Lerner.

A Chinese edition of Eve's Seed was published by Horizon Media Company of Beijing in 2004.

Significance and reception

[edit]

Some leading academics see Eve's Seed as a revolutionary work of major importance in how we understand human development, history, religion, and the sexes. World historian William Hardy McNeill calls Eve's Seed "a powerful, learned and provocative work" that "is a radical revision of traditional visions of human history". "As Marx turned Hegel upside down," Pulitzer Prize-winning Stanford historian Carl Degler has written, "so McElvaine overturns, among others, Aristotle, Marx, Freud, and even Darwin in showing how biological and cultural evolution need no longer see men and women as opposites or unequal". Degler calls Eve's Seed a "revelation, engagingly and imaginatively written and ... filled with fresh and challenging interpretations".[3]

In a rare case of agreement, feminist pioneer Betty Friedan and Harvard sociobiologist Edward O. Wilson both see Eve's Seed as a ground-breaking work that will change the way we see the human condition. "Eve's Seed signals a significant paradigm shift,” Friedan wrote, and Wilson said, "a new field is stirring to life" with the book.[3]

Writing in the Los Angeles Times Book Review, Joyce Appleby, past president of the American Historical Association says that Eve's Seed is written in "sparkling prose" and terms it "a bestseller waiting to be discovered".[1] In a starred review, Publishers Weekly said that McElvaine's "challenging overview" is "daring": "Written with passion, wit and insight, this accessible book throws down the gauntlet to academics and nonspecialists alike, daring a radical rethinking of the basic 'truths' on which cultures have been constructed."[4]

McElvaine's concept of biohistory has been explored in articles in The New York Times[5] and the Chronicle of Higher Education,[6] and his interdisciplinary reinterpretation of the human experience has been the subject of panels at meetings of the American Historical Association, the American Anthropological Association, the International Freud Conference, the International Society for the History, Philosophy, and Social Studies of Biology, and the Organization for the Study of Communication, Language, and Gender.

McElvaine has presented lectures on the ideas contained in Eve's Seed at conferences in Russia, Austria, South Korea, South Africa, Australia, New Zealand, and Papua New Guinea.

A major international, interdisciplinary conference on the McElvaine Thesis, "Bridging the Great Divide: Robert S. McElvaine's Eve's Seed and the Quest to Bring Together Biology, Anthropology, Religion, and History", was held in 2002.[7]

Overview

[edit]

McElvaine argues that because women can do certain things that men cannot—carry and give birth to offspring and nourish them from their bodies—many men have experienced to varying degrees what psychoanalyst Karen Horney termed "womb envy." Such insecure men have long attempted to define manhood in terms of complete opposition to womanhood. A "real man" has been seen in most cultures as "notawoman." To counterbalance the biological "no-man's lands" of pregnancy, birthing, and nursing, men create artificial "no-woman's lands." To compensate for what men cannot do, they tell women they may not do other things. Which areas women are excluded from vary from culture to culture, McElvaine writes, but they have usually included the clergy, politics, the military, and most of the business world.

Among McElvaine's contentions are that the invention of agriculture—which he believes was almost certainly accomplished by women, who were responsible for the provision of plant food in hunter-gatherer societies—disrupted the long-standing roles of the sexes and, over a period of time, devalued the traditional male roles, especially hunting. McElvaine begins the book by saying that if he had to sum up human history in a single sentence, it would be: "Hell hath no fury like a man devalued."[8]

Ultimately, the McElvaine Thesis maintains, agriculture provided men with a metaphor—seeds planted in the furrowed soil seemingly being analogous to men "planting" semen in the furrowed anatomy of a woman—that enabled them to claim that males are the sex with creative power: the authors of new life who therefore have authority over women. It necessarily followed that the Ultimate Creative Power, God, must also be male. This prehistoric mistake has, McElvaine says, enormously influenced all of history.

Synopsis

[edit]

The following synopsis of some of the major points in Eve's Seed is based on information contained in the book's official website.[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Joyce Appleby, "Sex, Science and the Vanity of the Species," Los Angeles Times Book Review, April 29, 2001.
  • ^ John Pettegrew, "Deepening the History of Masculinity and the Sexes," Reviews in American History, vol. 31, number 1 (2003) pp. 135-142.
  • ^ a b c "Eve's Seed". Archived from the original on 2009-12-21. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  • ^ "Publishers Weekly". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  • ^ Emily Eakin, "Tilling History With Biology's Tools," The New York Times, February 10, 2001.
  • ^ Robert S. McElvaine, "The Relevance of Biohistory," Chronicle Review, October 18, 2002.
  • ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2009-12-27.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  • ^ Robert S. McElvaine, Eve's Seed: Biology, the Sexes and the Course of History (New York: McGraw-Hill, 2001), p. 1.
  • [edit]
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Eve%27s_Seed&oldid=1133229928"

    Categories: 
    2001 non-fiction books
    McGraw-Hill books
    Hidden category: 
    CS1 maint: archived copy as title
     



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