Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
Thu Aug 28, 2014, 09:13 AM Aug 2014

From Eve to Evolution: Darwin, Science, and Women’s Rights in Gilded Age America

BOOK REVIEW

Times Higher Education
From Eve to Evolution: Darwin, Science, and Women’s Rights in Gilded Age America, by Kimberly A. Hamlin
Ellen Carol DuBois extols a study of a scientific theory’s impact on the pursuit of empowerment
28 August 2014

As Kimberly Hamlin observes, feminists were ever in search of “an organizing belief system” on which to locate some lever to upend ancient gender inequalities. In the late 19th century, they found what they were looking for in the theory of evolution. How they did so, given that the men who dominated evolutionary science came to opposite conclusions, is the subject of this book. Feminist Darwinians emphasised a secondary aspect of evolutionary thought: the theory of sexual selection, by which sexual dimorphism advanced evolutionary progress via individuals’ choice of reproductive mates. Throughout the animal world, the choice was left to females – peacocks paraded their feathers to impress peahens. However, orthodox Darwinians contended that this pattern was reversed among humans. Their feminist contemporaries refused to accept the anomaly; evolution, they contended, empowered the human female.

Insisting that human reproduction and evolution were at one with the rest of the natural world by being based on female choice gave these pioneering biological thinkers a powerful tool. It suggested that women could control the future of what they called “the race” even as they claimed control over their own sexual and reproductive lives. As a historian of science, Hamlin is particularly interested in the world of evolutionary thought before professionalisation separated credentialed male scientists from bold female amateurs. But the stronger case here has to do with an intellectual and scientific tradition that offered many advantages to turn-of-the-century feminism.

This version of Darwinian thought allowed for a path from mid-19th century women’s rights egalitarians to the feminists of the early 20th century, with their new focus on the physical body. Historians of American feminism are frequently stymied by the transition from an emphasis on equality of men and women to sex differences. Hamlin has provided the most convincing explanation yet for this shift. When Elizabeth Cady Stanton began to speak in the 1860s not of the equal rights of the sexes but of their biological differences, she was not taking a step backward to “sexual spheres” but embracing an approach that engaged more deeply with what made human beings into men and women.

From Eve to Evolution does a fine job of arguing against those historians who dismiss out of hand the biologist turn of Gilded Age feminism for its racism and eugenicist overtones. Hamlin’s book is also full of original insights into well-known figures in women’s history – Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Margaret Sanger and Cady Stanton – even as it reintroduces long-forgotten contributors. Helen Gardener, an ardent and early advocate of evolution, was so persistent in her search for a biological basis for proving women’s intellectual equality to men that she bequeathed her brain to science....

MORE at http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/books/from-eve-to-evolution-darwin-science-and-womens-rights-in-gilded-age-america-by-kimberly-a-hamlin/2015323.article

Latest Discussions»Alliance Forums»History of Feminism»From Eve to Evolution: Da...