Stockholm university

Research project The “Female Turn” in Evolutionary Biology – a science study of shifting canonical knowledge

The project "The 'Female Turn' in Evolutionary Biology – a science study of shifting canonical knowledge 1980-2000" explores how the international evolutionary research community radically shifted perspectives on the role of females in evolutionary biology. The project aims at understanding why and how perceptions of females changed.

Foto: Alexas_Fotos / Pixabay
Foto: Alexas_Fotos / Pixabay

Sexual selection, the evolutionary theory concerning sex differences, is both an expansive and controversial field. Theoretically, females were long expected to gain no benefit from mating with more than one male. Since 1980, evolutionary biologists’ views have undergone a radical shift following the findings that females often mate with multiple males. Early polyandry research was male-focused, followed by increased interest in questions pertaining to females. This “Female Turn” may be conceived as a controversy coming to a closure. In this project, I analyze scientific publications, scientific debates and oral history interviews with the analytical concepts situated knowledges and epistemology of ignorance.

This project illuminates the interaction between society and the scientific process of evolutionary research on sex at a hitherto unexamined crucial turn, thereby contributing significantly to the international forefront of feminist science studies.

Project members

Project managers

Malin Ah-King

Vikarierande Universitetslektor

Department of Ethnology, History of Religions and Gender Studies
Malin Ah-King Foto Henning Brüllhoff