Not in our genes : biology, ideology and human nature / Steven Rose, Leon J. Kamin and R.C. Lewontin.
- Steven Rose
- Date:
- 1984
Licence: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0)
Credit: Not in our genes : biology, ideology and human nature / Steven Rose, Leon J. Kamin and R.C. Lewontin. Source: Wellcome Collection.
312/340 page 298
![and Dizygotic Twins: Testing an Assumption, in Methods and Goals in Human Behavior Genetics, ed. S. G. Vandenberg (New York; Academic Press, 1965). 39. M. Skodak and H. M. Skeels, A Final Follow-up Study of One Hundred Adopted Children, Journal of Genetic Psychology 75 (1949): 83-125. 40. B. Tizard, IQ^nd Race, Nature 247 (1974): 316 41. Ibid. 42. S. Scarr-Salapatek and R. A. Weinberg, IQJTest Performance of Black Chil¬ dren Adopted by White Families, American Psychologist 31 (1976); 726-39. 43. J. Loehlin, G. Lindzey, and J. Spuhler, Race Differences in Intelligence (San Francisco: Freeman, 1975). 44. Schiff et al., How Much Could We Boost Scholastic Achievement (pp. 165- 96). CHAPTER SIX / THE DETERMINED PATRIARCHY 1. We would like to acknowledge our particular debt, in writing this chapter, to the feminist scholarship on which we have drawn extensively, and in particular to the critical comments on earlier drafts made by Lynda Birke, Ruth Hubbard, and Hilary Rose. 2. Z. R. Eisenstein, ed.. Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism (New York: Monthly Review Press, 1979); C. Delphy, The Main Enemy: A Materialist Analy¬ sis of Women 'i Oppression, WRRC Publication no. 3 (London, 1977); M. Barrett and M. Mcintosh, The Family Wage, in The Changing Experience of Women, ed. E. Whitelegg et al. (Oxford: Martin Robertson, 1982); H. Hartmann, The Unhappy Mar¬ riage of Marxism and Feminism (London: Pluto, 1981); and A. Oakley, Sex, Gender and Society (New York: Harper & Row, 1972). 3. Quoted by K. Paige in Women Learn to Sing the Blues, Psychology Today, September 1973; According to the Alloa [Scotland] Advertiser, at the time of the Falklands/Malvinas War in 1982, Tam Dalyell, M.P., claimed that Margaret Thatcher was not fully capable of making vital decisions like that between war and peace simply because she was a woman and like every woman was affected by the menstrual cycle. 4. Wall Street Journal, 20 July 1981. 5. For example, see correspondence in the Morning Star (London), especially letters by M. Mcintosh (24 November 1982) and B. MacDermott (27 November 1982). 6. H. Land, The Myth of the Male Breadwinner, New Society, 9 October 1975; H. Rose and S. Rose, Moving Right Out of Welfare-and the Way Back, Critical Social Policy 2, no. i (1982): 7-18. 7. Quoted in The Sun (London), i8 February 1981. 8. J. Morgall, Typing Our Way to Freedom: Is it True That New Office Technol¬ ogy Can Liberate Women? in Changing Experience of Women, pp. 136-46. 9. S. Witelson, quoted in Psychology Today, November 1978, p. 51. 10. J. Money and A. A. Ehrhardt, Man and Woman, Boy and Girl (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press, 1972). Their list of criteria also includes expenditure of energy in outdoor play and games, fantasies of materialism and romance, and childhood sexual play. 11. J. Herman, Father-Daughter Incest (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 1981); 298 / Notes for Pages 115-137](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b18032631_0313.JP2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)
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