A ground-breaking look at gender and sex from the world's leading primatologist and New York Times bestselling author of ARE WE SMART ENOUGH TO KNOW HOW SMART ANIMALS ARE?
Frans de Waal is the author of the New York Times bestseller Are We Smart Enough to Know How Smart Animals Are? (Granta, 2016), and Mama''s Last Hug (Granta 2018), winner of the PEN award for non-fiction, among many other books. Named one of Time''s 100 Most Influential People, he is the emeritus C. H. Candler Professor of Psychology at Emory University and emeritus Distinguished Professor at the University of Utrecht. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia.
A brilliant and fascinating book that brings a scientific,
compassionate and balanced approach to some of the hottest
controversies about sex and gender
*Yuval Noah Harari*
Every new book by Frans de Waal is a cause for excitement, and this
one is no different. A breath of fresh air in the cramped debate
about the differences between men and women. Fascinating, nuanced
and very timely.
*Rutger Bregman, author of Humankind*
Superb... These pages are packed with great stories, fascinating
data, and thought-provoking ideas. They are sure to spark the
important conversations we all-male and female, queer and straight,
trans and nonbinary-need to have to create a more just and
equitable human society
*Sy Montgomery, author of The Soul of an Octopus*
If you don't know your bonobo from your gibbon, Different has many
surprises in store for you, surprises that will leave you humble
about complex primate evolution has been, and how much we have yet
to learn about how it shapes our lives
*New York Times*
This enlightened book looks at the emergent arguments in gender
studies. Moving with fluidity and grace between animal and human
models, Frans de Waal demonstrates how many common social
prejudices that we deem "natural" are in fact anything but. His
crisp writing, his skillful deployment of anecdote, and his deep
knowledge of animal science inform this nuanced and profound
consideration not only of difference, but also of sameness
*Andrew Solomon, author of Far From the Tree and The Noonday
Demon*
Frans de Waal's DIFFERENT brings a refreshingly calm biological
perspective to the current debate around human gender
differences.
*Desmond Morris, author of The Naked Ape*
With great clarity, insight, and wit, [de Waal] examines human sex
differences, never once letting us forget that, at the end of the
day, we are just another kind of primate. This is a superb,
intensely stimulating read
*Robert M. Sapolsky, author of Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our
Best and Worst*
[De Waal uses] a gift for story-telling, a sincere respect for
culture, along with intimate knowledge of longtime bonobo and
chimpanzee associates, to deftly negotiate this treacherous
terrain. Wise and humane
*Sarah Blaffer Hrdy, author of The Woman that Never Evolved*
Courageous... Quietly progressive... Offer[s] fascinating
insights
*The Times*
Frans de Waal's magnum opus... [He] remove[s] the blinkers, and
[his] readers will never see the world the same way again
*TLS*
A testament to de Waal's profound and sensitive understanding of
our nearest evolutionary relatives
*Lancet Journal*
Very interesting: de Waal's often highly personal encounters with
chimps and bonobos are fascinating... he is equally good on the
blind spots of science and psychology
*Tablet*
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