The Unopposite Sex: The End of the Gender BattleHarper & Row, 1989 - 279 pages The current sexual revolution has roots that go back a long way. With less reliance on physical strength and more on intelligence, sexual identity has been blurred. Badinter looks at the interaction of the sexes since the beginning of human society. |
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Page 111
... instinct , light and darkness . We do not need to add that the manly values were said to embody order and the creative forces , whereas the feminine values were syn- onymous with chaos and degenerescence . Women's place was cer- tainly ...
... instinct , light and darkness . We do not need to add that the manly values were said to embody order and the creative forces , whereas the feminine values were syn- onymous with chaos and degenerescence . Women's place was cer- tainly ...
Page 113
... instincts . So much so that they have sometimes broken the treaty of alliance they had with their feminine counterparts . It is not surprising , then , that women one day decided to remind men of what they have in common - humanity ...
... instincts . So much so that they have sometimes broken the treaty of alliance they had with their feminine counterparts . It is not surprising , then , that women one day decided to remind men of what they have in common - humanity ...
Page 183
... instinct . On the other hand , while Stoller agrees with Karen Horney , Ernest Jones and Gregory Zilboorg in thinking that feminine psychosexuality comes first and appears before the phallic stage , unlike them , he maintains as a ...
... instinct . On the other hand , while Stoller agrees with Karen Horney , Ernest Jones and Gregory Zilboorg in thinking that feminine psychosexuality comes first and appears before the phallic stage , unlike them , he maintains as a ...
Contents
FROM FEMININE ASCENDANCY TO SHARED POWERS | 31 |
The One Without the Other 3332 | 53 |
God the Father | 60 |
Copyright | |
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André Leroi-Gourhan androgynous animals baby Baruya became become beginning biological birth bisexuality century characteristics child complementarity constituted contraception couple couvade culture daughter death desire divine divorce domination economic Edgar Morin equality evolution fact father favour fear fecundity feel female feminine feminists femmes fertility France Françoise d'Eaubonne Françoise Héritier Georges Balandier Georges Duby girls give goddess Godelier human hunting husband Ibid identity ideology incest individual Jacques Cauvin Jean Jean-Pierre Vernant less Lévi-Strauss linked living longer male Margaret Mead marriage married masculine matrilineal Maurice Godelier men's Mircea Eliade mother motherhood myth nature Neolithic object observed original Palaeolithic passion paternal patriarchal societies period prehistoric prestige primitive procreation psychological put an end relations relationship resemblance Robert Stoller role seems sexes sexual share social solitude specific sperm Stoller tion vagina Western wife woman womb women young