Read Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality Online

Authors: Christopher Ryan,Cacilda Jethá

Tags: #Non-Fiction, #Sociology, #Psychology, #Science, #Social Science; Science; Psychology & Psychiatry, #History

Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality (45 page)

BOOK: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality
2.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

or

boredom)-do-us-part marriage is a failure. Emotionally, economically, psychologically, and sexually, it just doesn’t work over the long term for too many couples. Yet while few mainstream therapists would contemplate trying to convince a gay man or lesbian to “grow up, get real, and just stop being gay,” these days, when it comes to unconventional approaches to heterosexual marriage, Perel points out,

“Sexual boundaries are one of the few areas where therapists seem to mirror the dominant culture. Monogamy,” she writes,

“is the norm, and sexual fidelity is considered to be mature, committed,

and

realistic.”

Forget

about

negotiating

alternatives:

“Nonmonogamy,

even

consensual

nonmonogamy, is suspect.” The notion that it might be possible to love one person while being sexual with another

“makes us shudder,” and conjures “images of chaos: promiscuity, orgies, debauchery.”16

Couples who turn to a therapist hoping for guidance on ways to loosen—but not break—the bonds of standard monogamy are likely to be offered little but defensive condemnation and stilted bromides like this advice from an evolutionary psychology based self-help book called
Mean Genes:
“The temptations we all face are deeply ingrained in the genes of our hearts and minds … [but] as long as we remain interesting dynamos, there will be no conflict between monogamy and our

infidelity-promoting

mean

genes.”17

Interesting

dynamos? No conflict? Sure. Tell that to Mrs. Coolidge.

Perel is the rare therapist willing to publicly consider the possibility that heterosexual couples might find alternative arrangements that can work well for them—even if they find themselves outside the bounds of what mainstream society approves. She writes, “It’s been my experience that couples who negotiate sexual boundaries … are no less committed than those who keep the gates closed. In fact, it is their desire to make the relationship stronger that leads them to explore other models of long-term love.”18

There are an infinite number of ways to adapt a flexible and loving partnership to our ancient appetites. Despite what most mainstream therapists claim, for example, couples with “open marriages” generally rate their overall satisfaction (with both their relationship and with life in general) significantly higher than those in conventional marriages do.19 Polyamorists have found ways to incorporate additional relationships into their lives without lying to one another and destroying their primary partnership. Like many gay male couples, these people recognize that additional relationships need not be taken as indictments of anyone. Dossie Easton and Catherine Liszt, authors of
The Ethical Slut,
write, “It is cruel and insensitive to interpret an affair as a symptom of sickness in the relationship, as it leaves the ‘cheated-on’ partner—who may already be feeling insecure—to wonder what is wrong with him…. Many people have sex outside their primary relationships for reasons that have nothing to do with any inadequacy in their partner or in the relationship.”20

Despite centuries of religious and scientific propoganda, the basic illusions underpinning the supposed “naturalness” of the conventional nuclear family are clearly exhausted. This collapse has left many of us isolated and unfulfilled. Blind insistence and well-intentioned inquisitions have failed to turn the tide, and show no signs of future success. Rather than endless War Between the Sexes, or rigid adherence to a notion of the human family that was never true to begin with, we need to seek peace with the truths of human sexuality.

Maybe this means improvising new familial configurations.

Perhaps it will require more community assistance for single mothers and their children. Or maybe it just means we must learn to adjust our expectations concerning sexual fidelity.

But this we know: vehement denial, inflexible religious or legislative dictate, and medieval stoning rituals in the desert have

all

proved

powerless

against

our

prehistoric

predilections.

In 1988, Roy Romer, then governor of Colorado, faced a feeding-frenzy

of

questions

about

his

long-running

extramarital affair that had become publicly known. Romer did what few public figures have dared. In the spirit of the Yucatán, he refused to accept the premise underlying the intrusive questions: that his extramarital relationship was a betrayal of his wife and family. Instead, he called an extraordinary press conference where he pointed out that his wife of forty-five years had known about and accepted the relationship all along. Romer confronted the tittering reporters with “life as it really happens.” “What is fidelity?” he asked the suddenly silent gaggle of reporters. “Fidelity is what kind of openness you have. What kind of trust you have, which is based on truth and openness. And so, in my own family, we’ve discussed that at some length and we’ve tried to arrive at an understanding of what our feelings are, what our needs are, and work it out with
that
kind of fidelity.”21

The Marriage of the Sun and the

Moon

In a sky swarming with uncountable stars, clouds endlessly flowing, and planets wandering, always and forever there has been just one moon and one sun. To our ancestors, these two mysterious bodies reflected the female and the male essences.

From Iceland to Tierra del Fuego, people attributed the Sun’s constancy and power to his masculinity; the Moon’s changeability, unspeakable beauty, and monthly cycles were signs of her femininity.

To human eyes turned toward the sky 100,000 years ago, they appeared identical in size, as they do to our eyes today. In a total solar eclipse, the disc of the moon fits so precisely over that of the sun that the naked eye can see solar flares leaping into space from behind.

But while they
appear
precisely the same size to terrestrial observers, scientists long ago determined that the true diameter of the sun is about
four hundred times
that of the moon. Yet incredibly, the sun’s distance from Earth is roughly four hundred times that of the moon’s, thus bringing them into unlikely balance when viewed from the only planet with anyone around to notice.22

Some will say, “Interesting coincidence.” Others will wonder whether there isn’t an extraordinary message contained in this celestial convergence of difference and similarity, intimacy and distance, rhythmic constancy and cyclical change. Like our distant ancestors, we watch the eternal dance of our sun

and our moon, looking for clues to the nature of man and woman, masculine and feminine here at home.

Luc Viatour/www.lucnix.be

* Recall Beckerman’s description of mate-sharing in the Amazon: “You know that if you die, there’s some other man who has a residual obligation to care for at least one of your children. So looking the other way or even giving your blessing when your wife takes a lover is the only insurance you can buy.”

REFERENCES

AND

SUGGESTED

FURTHER

READING

Abbott, E. (1999).
A History of Celibacy.
Cambridge, MA: Da Capo Press.

Abramson, P. R., and Pinkerton, S. D. (Eds.). (1995a).
Sexual
Nature Sexual Culture.
Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

_____ (1995b).
With Pleasure: Thoughts on the Nature of
Human Sexuality.
New York: Oxford University Press.

Acton, W. (1857/2008).
The Functions and Disorders of the
Reproductive Organs in Childhood, Youth, Adult Age, and
Advanced Live Considered in their Physiological, Social, and
Moral Relations.
Charleston, SC: BiblioLife.

Adovasio, J. M., Soffer, O., and Page, J. (2007).
The Invisible
Sex: Uncovering the True Roles of Women in Prehistory.
New York: Smithsonian Books.

Alexander, M. G., and Fisher, T. D. (2003). Truth and consequences: Using the bogus pipeline to examine sex differences in self-reported sexuality.
The Journal of Sex
Research,
40: 27–35.

Alexander, R. D. (1987).
The Biology of Moral Systems.

Chicago: Aldine.

Alexander, R. D., Hoogland, J. L., Howard, R. D., Noonan, K. M., and Sherman, P. W. (1979). Sexual dimorphisms and breeding systems in pinnepeds, ungulates, primates and humans. In N. Chagnon and W. Irons (Eds.),
Evolutionary
Biology and Human Social Behavior: An Anthropological
Perspective
(pp. 402–435). New York: Wadsworth.

Allen, M. L., and Lemmon, W. B. (1981). Orgasm in female primates.
American Journal of Primatology,
1: 15–34.

Alvergne, A., and Lummaa, V. (2009). Does the contraceptive pill alter mate choice in humans?
Trends in
Ecology and Evolution,
24. In press—published online October 7, 2009.

Ambrose, S. (1998). Late Pleistocene human population bottlenecks, volcanic winter, and differentiation of modern humans.
Journal of Human Evolution
34(6): 623–651.

Amos, W., and Hoffman, J. I. (2009). Evidence that two main bottleneck events shaped modern human genetic diversity.

Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Published online before print October 7, 2009, doi:10.1098/ rspb.2009.1473.

Anderson, M., Hessel, J., and Dixson, A. F. (2004). Primate mating systems and the evolution of immune response.

Journal of Reproductive Immunology,
61: 31–38.

Angier, N. (1995).
The Beauty of the Beastly: New Views of
the Nature of Life.
New York: Houghton Mifflin.

______ (1999).
Woman: An Intimate Geography.
New York: Virago.

Anokhin, A. P., Golosheykin, S., Sirevaag, E., Kristjansson, S., Rohrbaugh, J. W., and Heath, A. C. (2006). Rapid discrimination of visual scene content in the human brain.

Brain Research,
doi:10.1016/j.brainres.2006.03.108, available online May 18, 2006.

Ardrey, R. (1976).
The Hunting Hypothesis.
New York: Athenaeum.

Axelrod, R. (1984).
The Evolution of Cooperation.
New York: Basic Books.

Bagemihl, B. (1999).
Biological Exuberance: Animal
Homosexuality and Natural Diversity.
New York: St.

Martin’s Press.

Baker, R. R. (1996).
Sperm Wars: The Science of Sex.
New York: Basic Books.

Baker, R. R., and Bellis, M. (1995).
Human Sperm
Competition.
London: Chapman Hall.

Barash, D. P. (1977).
Sociobiology and Behavior.

Amsterdam: Elsevier.

Barash, D. P., and Lipton, J. E. (2001).
The Myth of
Monogamy: Fidelity and Infidelity in Animals and People.

New York: W. H. Freeman.

Barkow, J. H. (1984). The distance between genes and culture.
Journal of Anthropological Research,
40: 367–379.

Barkow, J. H., Cosmides, L., and Tooby, J. (Eds.). (1992).

The Adapted Mind: Evolutionary Psychology and the
Generation of Culture.
New York: Oxford University Press.

Barlow, C. (Ed.). (1984).
Evolution Extended: Biological
Debates on the Meaning of Life.
Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.

Barlow, N. (Ed.). (1958).
The Autobiography of Charles
Darwin.
New York: Harcourt Brace.

Barratt, C. L. R., Kay, V., and Oxenham, S. K. (2009). The human spermatozoon—a stripped down but refined machine.

Journal of Biology,
8: 63. http://jbiol.com/content/8/7/63.

Bateman, A. J. (1948). Intra-sexual selection in
Drosophila.

Heredity,
2: 349–368.

Batten, M. (1992).
Sexual Strategies: How Females Choose
Their Mates.
New York: Putnam.

Baumeister, R. F. (2000). Gender differences in erotic plasticity: The female sex drive as socially flexible and responsive.
Psychological Bulletin,
126: 347–374.

Beach, F. (Ed.). (1976).
Human Sexuality in Four
Perspectives.
Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press.

Bean, L. J. (1978). Social organization. In R. Heizer (Ed.),
Handbook of North American Indians,
Vol. 8:
California
(pp.

673–682). Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press.

Beckerman, S., and Valentine, P. (Eds.). (2002).
Cultures of
Multiple Fathers: The Theory and Practice of Partible
Paternity in Lowland South America.
Gainesville: University Press of Florida.

Bellis, M. A., and Baker, R. R. (1990). Do females promote sperm competition: Data for humans.
Animal Behaviour,
40: 997–999.

Belliveau, J. (2006).
Romance on the Road: Travelling
Women Who Love Foreign Men.
Baltimore, MD: Beau Monde Press.

Behar, D. M., et al. (2008). The dawn of human matrilineal diversity.
The American Journal of Human Genetics,
82: 1130–1140.

BOOK: Sex at Dawn: The Prehistoric Origins of Modern Sexuality
2.35Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Red Road by Denise Mina
The Tamarind Seed by Evelyn Anthony
An Unholy Alliance by Susanna Gregory
A Proper Companion by Candice Hern
Numbers Game by Rebecca Rode
A Hockey Tutor by Smith, Mary
A Pride of Lions by Isobel Chace
The Alchemy of Murder by Carol McCleary