The Wonder of Girls: Understanding the Hidden Nature of Our Daughters
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About this ebook
In The Wonder of Girls, Gurian, himself the father of two girls, provides crucial information for fully understanding the basic nature of girls: up-to-date scientific research on female biology, hormones, and brain development and how they shape girls' interests, behavior, and relationships.
He also offers insight into a culture mired in competition between traditionalism and feminism and a new vision that provides for the equal status of girls and women yet acknowledges their nature as complex and distinct from men. He explains what is "normal" for girls each year from birth to age 20; what developmental needs girls face in each stage; how to communicate effectively with girls; and how to cope with developmental crises such as early sexuality, eating disorders, parental divorce, and more.
With personal insights, practical tips, real-life anecdotes, and accessible science, The Wonder of Girls creates a new parenting paradigm. Key elements include:
- a nature-based approach to why girls are the way they are
- the connection between the need for profound attachment and the physical and brain development of girls
- support for a girl's inherent need for intimacy
- tools to protect girls' self-esteem and emotional life
- a new approach to girls' character development and rites of passage.
With this scientifically based developmental map of girlhood, Gurian equips parents with a comprehensive guide for raising daughters. Challenging our culture to examine and embrace a crucial piece of the puzzle missing thus far, The Wonder of Girls elevates the dialogue on parenthood.
Michael Gurian
Michael Gurian has published books in many disciplines. A pioneering social philosopher, he has authored four national bestsellers, translated into fourteen languages, including the groundbreaking The Wonder of Boys, A Fine Young Man, and The Wonder of Girls. He is co-founder of The Gurian Institute, which conducts research and trains internationally in male/female brain difference. He is also a novelist. He lives in Spokane, Washington with his wife, Gail, and their two daughters.
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The Wonder of Girls - Michael Gurian
INTRODUCTION
Truth tends to shake us to our very bones.
—Marilyn Sewell
Soon after my first daughter was born, I wrote of my hope for our lives together:
in early spring
the world cool
green leaves open first
Gabrielle, two weeks old,
shivers
in my green intentions.
I was thirty-two years old, and knew little about what it means to have a daughter. I knew next to nothing about girls, though I thought I knew a lot about women. I had not yet acquired the wisdom to know that knowledge is never certain, and children are the best teachers.
I had specialized thus far in two kinds of work: writing itself— mainly novels and poetry—and the teaching of writing and literature; and psychological and neurobiological research, preparatory to becoming a therapist and educator in child development. Now here I was, father of a baby daughter; it was time to learn what that really meant.
My wife, Gail, also thirty-two, knew a great deal more than I did about girls, and yet, she too felt inadequate. What parent, upon having their first child, does not feel lost?
Now, many years later, I know from experience and research somewhat more of what it means to have a daughter. Yet so often, still, I feel that what I know is even too subtle for poetry. It exists in a wordless quiet when one of my daughters is reading silently beside me on the couch. It weaves through words while Gabrielle tells me about the latest discomfort she’s had with her friends, or Davita, three years younger, details her day of exuberant events. My intentions with my daughters are less green than they were at Gabrielle’s birth, but they are no less passionate.
Recently I asked Gabrielle what it should mean to me to have a daughter. She answered, affecting an actress’s pose, To love me beyond measure.
I asked Davita the same thing. She giggled, I don’t know,
and gave me a bear hug. Not poetry, not science, not even flawed memory can do justice to the emotions that surround the love of parent and child.
It is a love that is lived as one soul embraces another throughout the life journey.
The Wonder of Girls hopes to become a comprehensive part of your own answer to the question, What does it mean to have a daughter? While ever respectful that no book can be a complete answer, I will cover everything I can think of that a daughter needs— yet still there will be more.
The Wonder of Girls has grown not only from my own research and my own care for my daughters, but it has grown from my interactions with other parents and caregivers. If one is going to try to write a book that hopes to aid the life journey in a comprehensive way, it must be one that grows in that place where an expert’s ability to serve and an audience’s need come together. Even though there are numerous books about girls on the shelves these days, I think you’ll quickly discover that this one is needed, because it reveals the nature of your daughter.
Because I am fortunate to meet thousands of people every year, and receive numerous e-mails and letters, I am constantly learningparents’ needs from them. As both a parent of daughters and a professional, I came to fully realize that the book you are about to read both grew in me and was needed in the world when I read this beautiful letter from a mother of four, Cheryl McKenzie.
Dear Michael Gurian:
I have three daughters, 16, 13, and 9, and a son, 12. I’ve read a lot of books on parenting. I’m writing you because your book, The Wonder of Boys, changed our family. I’m hoping you’ll write a book like it for raising girls.
I’ve read Reviving Ophelia, which scared me to death. I’ve read Schoolgirls and know how to advocate for girls. I’ve read Ophelia Speaks, in a Different Voice, and Don’t Stop Loving Me. These were all good books. I understand how girls need to watch out for dangers, and need to have a voice. I’m an avid reader of magazines, like Parenting and American Girl. They teach me a lot about how our culture influences girls.
But I still don’t understand my girls like I need to. I don’t mean I’m ignorant or naive—I’m a smart woman and a smart parent. I mean that I want to know more about what makes my daughters tick . I felt this way about my son too, and then I read The Wonder of Boys. You told me what was actually going on in my son’s hormones and brain. Some big truths in my son’s life were right there, in his nature. Now I have the insight to help him find these truths.
You’ve helped me raise my son, now will you help me raise my daughters? Will you write about girls’ hormones and their brains and the hidden world girls live in? I’ve lived it, I know it’s there. Maybe it’s strange asking a man to do this, but you seem to know a lot about biology and psychology—most professionals in your field don’t deal much in the biological aspects. And I met a friend of your wife’s. From talking to her, I think Gail could help you and keep you honest.
To start you along, here are some things our family cares a lot about.
My husband and I have noticed that girls care more about character and morality than anyone really talks about. Everyone talks about self-esteem, and it’s sure important, but my girls and their friends are very moral young people. I wish someone would go into this part of girls’ lives more deeply.
Amelia, our eldest, is very curious about how different her nature is from boys. She can’t find the deep answers she wants. Because she’s spinning, I’m spinning too! Amelia is athletic and smart. She desperately wants to know how to love a boy, and how to understand herself when she’s with a boy. The other day she came home from school and said, Mom, we women are stronger than men, aren’t we?
She’s beginning to see that life is very complex. I want her to receive the kind of wisdom that understands that complexity.
Mary Ellen is my relational girl,
always paying attention to how everyone’s interactions are going. She’s not very competitive at all. She wants a lot of kids when she grows up. I want her to be accepted for this and not feel what I felt when I cut back to part-time to raise my children—that I hadn’t lived up to cultural expectations. I have a feeling that if people really understood why so many girls are like Mary Ellen, people would also understand that it’s important to really nurture that quality of relationship girls have. In my mind, it’s more important than being able to compete with boys and men. Does saying this make me old-fashioned?
Mia is very emotional. I’m always afraid I’ll destroy her self-esteem by trying to get her to focus on other things besides tears and dramatic outpourings. I know she needs to manage herself better. I would like to understand why she and I are so gushy with our feelings. This is very female,
as I’ve been reading, and I’m not ashamed to say it. I like how emotional I am. But Mia needs help learning to see through emotions to the truth behind them.
Amelia and I talk about feminism and gender roles a lot. She is very smart about feminism, and sees its uses. But she’s a new generation. Recently she said, Mom, we girls are not Gloria Steinem.
I know she’s not satisfied with what feminism has become. I’m not either. A lot of this new generation of girls is looking for a new logic for girls’ lives. These girls don’t want to throw out the advantages feminism has given us, but they don’t want to take on the narrowness of the feminist view anymore. I wish you could help form a new vision. In The Wonder of Boys you called on the carpet some of the feminist notions about boys. I think this was helpful. As a parent, I am searching for a new logic of girls’ lives, and as kids, my girls are looking for a new logic of women’s lives. We need help!
Please put your mind and research to girls’ lives. I know you are the father of two daughters. Besides Gail, they can help you. I hope this letter finds you, Gail, and your daughters well, and I hope you’ll teach others what you’ve learned about the wonder of girls. Maybe you could call the book that.
In my career I can say that this is one of the most challenging and mind-expanding letters I’ve received, and I thank Cheryl McKenzie, its author.
I am, indeed, the father of two daughters. This has become quite ironic to many of my readers, because I’ve written six books on raising boys!
Where are your sons?
people ask me.
Or: Without raising your own boys, how do you test out your theories?
Or: How has this happened to you?
Before Gail and I had children, I had begun my interdisciplinary research in applied neurobiology, anthropology, and psychology. There was very little published in our culture on male development, and I felt called to apply my research to that field. Thus, I had written two books in male development by the time Gabrielle, our first child, came to us. By the time Davita came to us, I had written the manuscript for The Wonder of Boys. Now Gail and I had our second girl—no boys—and I was about to publish my fourth book on male development!
Hmmm,
Gail smiled mischievously, I guess we’ll just have to have a third child.
But we had decided on two, and two we have, and I cannot see life any other way. Gabrielle and Davita complete me. I’m fated to be known by some of the media as the Dr. Spock for boys,
yet to have no sons!
As I look back now, especially in the context of letters like Cheryl’s, I realize that it has actually been of immense value that a male parenting expert and social philosopher, like myself, producing books on raising boys, has done so while living with a woman and two girls—it has created a balance in me, an ability to see more thanonly the boys’ side of things,
a constant measurement of whether what I say makes sense in the real world (as my wife and daughters always remind me, the real world is the world of girls!
). And it has always provided me with the best motive to help boys: I want to help parents, teachers, mentors, and policymakers raise a loving, wise, and responsible generation of men who will, one day, adore my daughters.
Meanwhile, I have been raising daughters and, as a family therapist, providing counseling to not only boys but girls, not only men but women; I have also been a researcher in female development. I’ve been preparing to write The Wonder of Girls for over a decade. Boys’ and girls’ lives are intertwined in all facets of our culture; their biological heritage is also intertwined. Their needs are intertwined. To study one sex responsibly is to study the other thoroughly.
This has been the premise not only of my family therapy practice, which I share with Gail, but also of my research and educational training programs at the Michael Gurian Institute, which began as a two-year pilot, at six school districts, in Kansas City, Missouri. Our goal has been to find the essential currents of human understanding by which to help girls and boys in family, school, and community life. We began publicizing our studies in our co-authored book, Boys and Girls Learn Differently!
While I am the sole author of The Wonder of Girls, it is also a kind of collaboration. It could not be written without the help, insight, direction, and critique of Gail and many others, as well as the stories and insights of the many girls and families we’ve worked with. Many of its stories and anecdotes come from my own and Gail’s family practice, the research of teachers and professionals who have specialized in girls, and also the work in school districts we’ve been doing in Missouri and elsewhere. I’ve asked (begged!) Gail to give me editorial advice and professional input so that she, as a woman, mother, professional, and former girl, can check everything I write for veracity and accuracy. Because she is my partner in parenting our girls, she appears often in this book, as do the lives of Gabrielle and Davita—with their permission, of course.
My goal is to make groundbreaking scientific research accessible here—research that leads with nature and what is natural to a girl’sdevelopment, while simultaneously providing you with a practical, inspiring guide to raising girls. While I find that most girls, with enough love and attention, can grow up healthy and safe, their natural wonder a delight to observe, many girls today are not doing well. Many are confused, many are hurting. I will speak to the needs of the wide spectrum of girls, those doing well and those in trouble.
Since they could speak, my daughters have asked, "Dad, when are you going to write just about girls?"
Soon,
I’ve promised, very soon.
Finally, the time has come.
Toward a New Logic of Girls’ Lives
At the outset, it is fair to say that the perspective of my work and studies, and thus of this book, shares qualities with the many very fine books on girls that have come out in the last two decades— some of which Cheryl referred to in her own library—but only to a point. The basic perspective of The Wonder of Girls is quite different from the books you may have read. As one mother told me, Don’t write just another book on girls. There are lots of those. Give us a new way of understanding girls, give us a book we can’t live without.
That is my aim. Fortunately for any parent raising daughters, there are many resources on bookshelves. I’ll refer to some of them in this work, but I won’t repeat what they’ve done. For your special needs or concerns—those that merit more information than this book provides—specific resources are listed in the appendix.
My approach to parenting, and coaching and training parents, is a nature-based approach. Its theoretical base lies in human nature, not in ideological theory. Human nature
is revealed, as you’ll notice throughout the book, by an acute emphasis on human sciences—neurobiology, biochemistry—checked by experience, human history, multicultural application, and just plain common sense. The Wonder of Girls finds wisdom in many disciplines, and thus has the temerity to call itself a comprehensive guide for parents.
By the final chapter of this book, I hope you will experience four things specifically:
a fundamental challenge to many of the ideologies and conventions by which our culture has, since 1960, conceived of girls’ lives and development;
an in-depth understanding of girls’ actual biological and personal development;
comprehensive, practical help in applying your new understanding, whether you are raising a girl of two or twelve or twenty;
a passion to move beyond many of our present, dominant ideologies into a new stage of social thought regarding the lives of girls and women.
Any one of these in itself is a tall order, and all four together may seem especially daunting, but I hope you’ll join me in high expectations of all of us. Even while the bulk of this book is written to help parents and other caregivers with the daily raising of girls, for those interested in social theory, I will very clearly be calling for fundamental changes—not only in patriarchy, but also in feminism.
In The Wonder of Boys I ask the reader to engage in revolutionary thinking in regard to boys’ lives and male development. In The Wonder of Girls, I ask you to do the same for girls: Engage in a revolutionary perspective—like the feminist call of Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan, and others was four decades ago—but this time, a grassroots effort to move beyond feminism into womanism, a term fully defined in Chapter 8. The call to find a new logic, a womanist logic, will lead, I hope, to a quiet revolution; one that transpires first and foremost in our care for our individual daughters—from there, who knows how loud it will become.
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
How do I talk to my fifteen-year-old?
a mother asks.
Why are girls getting so much nastier these days?
a grandmother asks.
How do I, as a father, handle my daughter’s sexual yearnings?
a father asks.
Over the last decade and a half, Gail and I have been asked questions like these, and hundreds of others, which we will answer with practical strategies.
Are the issues of American girls the same issues girls face around the world?
How do I help my daughter get through my divorce?
How can I help my daughter handle her own feelings and emotions on a daily basis?
As you read this book, I hope you’ll find that we’ve covered most of your questions. The answers I provide may startle you, and you may disagree with some. I hope that even as you disagree, you’ll still receive enough hard information to deal with dilemmas you are experiencing in your daughter’s life. Even disagreements are part of the process of creating a quiet revolution in our girls’ lives.
How can I provide the best discipline for my daughter without crushing her independence or her self-esteem?
How much backtalk should I allow with my daughter?
My daughter is really searching for herself. How do I help?
As we explore girls’ lives, don’t be surprised to notice that you are learning a lot about the lives of grown women, especially women from puberty until menopause. The fields of neuro- and sociobiology teach us that the life of the pubescent girl and the thirty something adult woman have more in common, biologically and therefore relationally, than people have understood. The same holds true, in many ways, for boys, thus I have often heard, " The Wonder of Boys helped me understand not only my son, but my husband." I hope The Wonder of Girls will help you understand not just the girl, but the woman, and I’ve written it to accomplish that goal.
In the end, I offer The Wonder of Girls as a heartfelt vision, hoping you’ll be inspired and touched by it. I’ve worked to bring together the best of the new wisdom on girls without losing the best of the old. I want to thank Gail and my daughters, Gabrielle and Davita, for helping me understand many of the secrets of girls’ lives. And I want to thank all of the girls, mothers, grandmothers, fathers, grandfathers, caregivers, mentors, and counselors who have shared their lives and stories with me over the years. Without their efforts and wisdom, this book would be incomplete.
I have learned the wonder of girls from all of them.
PART I
074341702X-001Why Girls Are the
Way They Are
Who in the world am I?
Ah, that’s the great puzzle.
—LEWISCARROLL,
Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland
1
BEGINNING OUR SEARCH
A NEW LOGIC OF GIRLS’ LIVES
We have to look beyond patriarchy, that’s for sure. But, you know, it’s starting to be that we also have to look beyond feminism too. Our daughters’ lives are limited by both theories.
—Gail Reid-Gurian, mother of two girls
and family therapist
On a sunny day in June, I took my daughters to Manito Park, our neighborhood play area. Gabrielle was seven and Davita four. Beyond the normal swings and slides, the girls always enjoyed a sculpture there, built from logs and shaped like a Viking ship. On this particular day, we arrived early, and the girls, who had brought some of their stuffed animals, began to play a game involving two mothers caring for children on an ocean voyage. I offered to be part of the game if they wanted me, but then, as they enjoyed their girl world
without me, I settled into a book on a bench at the periphery.
Their play went comfortably, filled with creative ideas and adjustments, in that way girls have with each other. They could have gone on happily, alone together, until they got hungry for lunch. But a car pulled up, and out stepped a mom and two boys, around five and eight years old. The mom and I waved as strangers do in parks when the sweet energy of children is about. Her two sons dashed onto the ship loudly. I watched, fascinated at first, then disquieted.
The complex game Gabrielle and Davita had created was interruptedby the louder and more aggressive energy of the boys. Within seconds, my girls abandoned their game and took to observing the boys’ action and cries. I’m captain now!
Shoot the shark!
Watching this usurpation of my girls’ play-world, I felt a growing irritation. I thought sadly of how often this happened between boys and girls.
There it is, I thought. What we are so often warned about: that when the boys come around, the girls step aside. The girls’ self-esteem drops and the boys take over.
My protective instincts for my girls rose even while I harbored no ill will toward the boys, who were, after all, just enjoying the world through their own way of being. I felt almost like a crime was being committed to my daughters. I felt like I should do something.
A professional student of human nature, I spend a lot of time observing children’s behavior. When I’m not sure what to do, I fall back on watching. On this morning I did just that. And I learned a valuable lesson.
For about five minutes, my daughters tried to return to their game. This became impossible, given the noise and interruptions. Then Gabrielle said something to the older of the boys, made some suggestions, began a negotiation I couldn’t hear from my bench. The boys slowed down a little, listened, talked in the midst of their bouncing and playing. Gabrielle, as the alpha female on the ship, seemed to talk mostly to the older boy, the alpha male. She pointed; he pointed. She told Davita to move one of the dolls over to where he was, and he instructed his little brother to take hold of it and prop it up on the aft rim of the ship.
Within ten minutes from the boys’ arrival, the set
was rearranged. Now the four children were in a group near the helm of the ship, each of them with a different job, and all of them engaged in some new game, even more rich and complex than had been my daughters’ or the boys’ original intentions for play, this one featuring princesses, giants, pirates, treasures, and, I found out later from Davita, Cinderella’s lost shoes.
My disquiet, my irritation, even my hidden anger were replacednow by admiration. As so often happens in the world of children, something small was really something large. The kids were living out their nature wholeheartedly, and it was worth a lot to observe it at work.
A Moment of Awakening
This moment at the park was the first of many incidents that cried out for me to think beyond our culture’s present ideas about girls, about girls and boys, and about women and men. If you think about it, how many times have similar things happened on playgrounds, in workplaces, in homes, among children, teenagers, adults? Initially, there is overwhelming energy from males, but soon, gradual assessment, then guidance, from females. As a married man, I am no stranger to this circumstance!
And in the five minutes of negotiation that went on between Gabrielle, Davita, and the two boys, I realized I needed to revise the timeline by which I watched for drops in girls’ self-esteem. Among these four children there was no drop in self-esteem, though initial observation seemed to show there was a sad drop for my girls. Instead, there were the natural interpersonal relationships that emerge when we are patient enough to observe them.
This incident occurred many years ago. It was one of the times in my life that I’ve felt dissatisfied, as a parent, by what our present, conventional conversation about girls has taught me about gender stereotypes,
girls’ self-esteem drops,
girls in crisis.
A number of catchphrases dominate our dialogue about girls, but our girls actually live far beyond the words. That morning, I went home and began a list of these phrases, as well as some of the theories that indoctrinate me nearly every day—in some form in our media and pop culture—to see girls in a way that allows very little for the subtleties in which girls really live their lives.
I told Gail about my observation. As she does so often, she smiled at me, a little bemused. Quite often she sees things more clearly and much earlier than I do, but just doesn’t tell me about it. Mike,hardly anyone anymore really looks under the surface of girls’ lives,
she said. Feminism used to do it twenty, thirty years ago. It was deep. But now it’s skidding on the surface.
It was during the rest of that day that Gail and I talked about this, talked about my writing this book, and acknowledged something we, brought up in the feminist tradition, had avoided dealing with.
The great ocean of girls’ lives actually lies beneath the surface of the simple formulas we are now taught about girl power
and girls’ self-esteem. Feminism is, we realized, no longer the best theory to care for many of our girls.
In this book, my primary objective is to help parents and caregivers raise daughters. I am a teacher and counselor who greatly enjoys working intimately with people and their families. I am not seeking to be a political figure on one side
of a political debate.
And yet to write about girls in any way different from current convention is to immediately become a person of the fight. My experiences from around the world, my research, and my own parenting lead me to somewhat different conclusions from my peers. Thus, in offering this parenting guide, I feel compelled to speak not only as a helpful professional but as a figure in a social debate. I don’t think The Wonder of Girls would be comprehensive if it did not briefly explore some of the ideologies and theories our girls are now being raised in.
This chapter, then, is about the social debate we raise our girls within. If you are uninterested in politics of this kind, you might want to move to Chapter 2. If, however, you want to revise some of the political logic by which girls have been raised for the last few decades, then this chapter will be enjoyable. It is an analysis of feminist theory, specifically of feminist theories about factors predominant in making girls the way they are. It is also a call to move beyond feminism, to a new logic of girls’ lives.
The central core of the new logic is this: Feminism as we know it today is power feminism
—based in acquiring more and more social and workplace power for females. While this acquisition is important, it is being pursued at the expense of what I will arguethat my daughters, and yours, need and want as much or more. Feminism has, in its worthwhile and useful search for power, neglected this other world of girls’ needs. In the last chapter of this book, we will define a set of principles by which to provide our girls with an even wider scope of happiness and success than present-day feminism offers.
Looking Beyond Feminism:
Old Myths and New Theories
Almost four decades ago, Gloria Steinem, Betty Friedan, and others based their feminist revolution on showing us the Victorian and patriarchal myths that impeded the progress of girls and women. The myths they fought against—and many of us along with them—went something like this:
Since a girl’s ultimate social goal should be to catch the right husband, girls don’t need equal opportunity for education, especially higher education.
Girls don’t need to become leaders in society and business; their job as women will be to serve men and raise a man’s children.
Women’s rights, including reproductive rights, voting rights, right to work outside the home, and right to physical safety, should be controlled by men.
If women do work outside the home, they don’t need equal pay for equal work, and girls should not expect it.
Because of the inspiration and direction provided by the feminist movement, we have each, over the last decades, seen amazing changes in the home, the workplace, the school classroom, and the media. There are still many battles to fight in pursuit of women’s equality, but many have also been won. Because of the inspiration of feminists, we’ve worked to change our culture, and we’ve succeeded.
Yet if you are like Gail and myself, while ready to congratulate feminists for the powerful work the movement has done for our girls and women, you have begun to suspect, over the last few years, during moments of your own awakening, that feminist theory is often static and overreactive, sometimes unfair, and generally incomplete in its assessment of human nature. But you may also feel like the villagers in the story The Emperor’s New Clothes,
hesitant to to cry out, But look! There’s something wrong with this picture!
Let’s feel this hesitancy no longer. Let’s explore some of the most predominant feminist theories in our culture, and make decisions about whether they really do apply to our homes, our classrooms, and our culture.
Let’s look at the four most prevalent feminist theories, and the imperatives they impose on our thinking as parents, regarding why girls are the way they are. To fully care for girls in this millennium, these four theories will have to be broken through.
THEORY 1
HUMAN NATURE IS NOT VERY IMPORTANT TO GIRLS’ LIVES.
Girls are who they are predominantly because of the way they are socialized in our society. Nature plays a smaller part in why girls are the way they are.
What we need to know about girls, we are told, can be learned by studying socialization.
In our society, a girl’s socialization is patriarchal and male dominated, and females are second-class citizens. When a girl experiences a self-esteem drop, a problem, an unrequited desire, or a fear of life itself, interpretation of socialization
provides the reason. To spend time looking at hormones, the female brain, and the natural evolution of the female is to risk limiting girls’ potential, so we must avoid it. Human nature (as girls live it) is a subject too risky for contemporary parents and teachers, for spending a lot of time on the nature of a girl will lead, ultimately, to her oppression.
This first feminist theory found its genesis just under forty years ago. It was a logical response to the misuse of biology and nature-based observations by nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century neurobiologists and psychologists. When, over a hundred years ago, we discovered that the male brain was ten percent larger than the female, some male scientists cried, You see, men are smarter than women!
Sigmund Freud, a genius in many ways, based his own theories on just a few people—his patients—and found in them penis envy; he claimed this to be natural to females, and overburdened this nature-based
theory with male chauvinism.
Early feminists reacted strongly and effectively to the limitations and just plain bad theory of many of the men in the early century. In the 1960s and ’70s, academic feminists buried neurobiological and sociobiological research. They’ve continued this trend unflinchingly. In a 1995 television interview on male/female brain differences, Gloria Steinem told 20/20 reporter John Stossel that to talk about biology was to continue the patriarchy.
Hormonal and biochemical research—so useful