Review by Choice Review
This is a beautifully understandable book that should be on the reading list of every individual interested in the current discourse regarding gender and sex biology. Fuentes (Princeton Univ.), an accomplished primatologist and biological anthropologist, takes readers on a crisp journey through the most current research on sex biology and what is actually known about it, its patterns, and its diversity. The author effectively dispels numerous misconceptions regarding sex and gender in humans as he weaves a new narrative that combines "our knowledge of biology, sex, and human experience" (p. 3). Ultimately, the research shows that the "binary is wrong" (p. 149). Fuentes asserts that "the biological, behavioral, and social variation exhibited by humans is almost always substantively broader, and more dynamic, than culturally created binary descriptions and boundaries for gender and sex" (p. 149). Sex Is a Spectrum is both concise and direct, and Fuentes provides ample documentation for the research he quotes and relies on. His accessible text serves as a valuable resource for navigating the frequently confusing and confounding public conversations surrounding gender issues. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers through graduate students. --Llyn (aka Lynn Patterson) De Danaan, emeritus, Evergreen State College
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Reproductive anatomy is more variable than commonly understood, according to this eye-opening study. Fuentes (The Creative Spark), an anthropology professor at Princeton University, argues that many alleged sex differences are mirages born of cultural biases. For instance, he describes how archaeologists assumed a 5,000-year-old skeleton belonged to a man because it was surrounded by treasures, indicating high status, and possessed "typically male" pelvic bones, only for genetic analysis to reveal the individual had two X chromosomes. Rather than there being "two forms of human... there is a range of variation with some patterns in that variation," Fuentes contends, noting that there are countless women who are taller than men despite the general tendency for the latter to be larger. The raft of research convincingly debunks the idea that sex anatomy has much consequence on behavior, character, or cognitive ability (one brain-imaging study found no significant differences in men's and women's "verbal, spatial, or emotion processing"), and the illuminating discussions of animal biology demonstrate the profound diversity of sex expression in nature, be it Okinawa pygmy goby fish that switch from "male" to "female" throughout their lives or female hyenas whose enlarged, erectile clitorises upset conventional wisdom about "female" mammalian anatomy. It's a resounding refutation of the idea that there's anything natural about the gender binary. (May)
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