
The Prehistory of Sex
by Taylor, Timothy L.Buy New
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations | |
Acknowledgments | |
Introduction: Beyond Nature | |
Making the Beast with Two Backs: The Evolution of Human Sexual Culture | p. 19 |
Skull Sex and Brain Sex | p. 52 |
Mysteries of the Organism | p. 72 |
Meet the Real Flintstones | p. 97 |
Venus in Furs | p. 115 |
The Milk of the Vulture Goddess | p. 142 |
The Grave of the Golden Penis | p. 167 |
Shamans and Amazons | p. 193 |
The Return of the Beast with Two Backs: Sex and the Prehistory of Race | p. 227 |
Conclusion: Beyond Culture | p. 261 |
Notes | p. 269 |
Bibliography | p. 301 |
Index | p. 343 |
Table of Contents provided by Syndetics. All Rights Reserved. |
Excerpts
Four million years ago in Africa, a small group of chimplike creatures began walking exclusively on their hind legs. The reason they did so is debated, but it marked a profound turning point, leading to the emergence of modern people. Our tree-swinging ancestors were very successful breeders. What they found erotic was probably quite varied: they may even have been as extreme as the pygmy chimps of today, who take their pleasure singly or in groups, often with no particular focus on reproduction, sometimes with members of their own sex or immediate family. However varied the behavior of our prehuman ancestors was, sex involved ideas of beauty, the physical basis of recognition and desire. Females had large clitorises and no breasts. Males had vanishingly small penises. Both sexes were covered with thick body hair. Then, somehow, what was considered beautiful altered dramatically. Upright walking hid the female genital opening and encouraged the development of buttocks. The evolution of the first female breasts followed, along with the loss of most of the thick body hair in males and females alike. The clitoris reduced in size, while the penis grew dramatically larger.
Natural selection--"the survival of the fittest"--cannot explain all these transformations. In the process of natural selection, a species facing an environmental challenge either changes or dies out. In any species change occurs because there is some variation among the individual members, and only those best fitted to the new conditions survive to pass on their characteristics. Generation by generation, over millions and millions of years, changes accrue that turn not only sheeplike creatures into giraffes but fish into reptiles, and reptiles into birds. As a species changes, it sometimes divides into two different species. When it does, the criteria of mutual recognition between individual members must slowly alter: giraffes share a common ancestry with okapi, but they no longer try to mate with them. As Darwin himself pointed out, however, natural selection alone cannot account for the fantastic variety of life on earth. The peacock's tail, for example, makes the peacock an easy target for predators. The critical compensation for this vulnerability and an important foundation for this book--is that peahens find it sexy.
Darwin recognized that certain characteristically human features, such as our lack of protective body hair (a stark contrast to our nearest primate relatives), make no sense in terms of basic survival. He proposed that "sexual selection" was the key to understanding them, arguing that the particular mate choices that individuals in a species make can be as crucial to evolution as pressures from the outside environment. In one form of sexual selection, brute force is used, almost always by males, to compete for the chance to mate with the opposite sex. A second, more important form of sexual selection is by the female, who usually makes the ultimate reproductive choice. Sometimes she may choose to conceive with a physically weaker but more astute and, in her eyes, more beautiful male while the brawny ones are still locked in battle.
Despite these relatively recent influences on our experience of sex, the last few thousand years represent just a tiny part of the four-million-year saga of its prehistory. By taking a long view of the evolution of human sexual culture--by seeing what people actually did, rather than making claims about what they ought to have done--we will be better able to consider our options for the next four million years.
Excerpted from The Prehistory of Sex: Four Million Years of Human Sexual Culture by Timothy Taylor
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