Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective

Humans belong to the few species in which females and males live for a relatively long time after the end of their reproductive period. In this paper, I present theoretical concepts explaining the relatively long post-reproductive life span of humans and the menopause: the grandmother hypothesis and...

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Main Author: Uhrin Michal
Format: Article
Language:ces
Published: Sciendo 2020-03-01
Series:Slovenský Národopis
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.2478/se-2020-0004
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spelling doaj-7bed353092a54a52ab54e4a0abc8bce52021-09-05T14:01:50ZcesSciendo Slovenský Národopis1339-93572020-03-01681688310.2478/se-2020-0004se-2020-0004Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary PerspectiveUhrin Michal0Katedra etnológie a muzeológie, Filozofická fakulta UK v Bratislave, Gondova 2, 811 02BratislavaHumans belong to the few species in which females and males live for a relatively long time after the end of their reproductive period. In this paper, I present theoretical concepts explaining the relatively long post-reproductive life span of humans and the menopause: the grandmother hypothesis and the diet, intelligence and longevity model (also known as the embodied capital model). The grandmother hypothesis, offering an evolutionary explanation of the menopause, shows that throughout most of the human history, childrearing has been a cooperative endeavour. In all societies across the world, mothers, fathers, grandparents, and other family members cooperate in networks consisting of kins and non-kins in order to assist with child rearing. The paper also argues how ethnographic research can contribute to the testing of evolutionary theories of grandparenthood in contemporary societies.https://doi.org/10.2478/se-2020-0004evolutionary anthropologygrandparenthoodmenopauselongevityethnography
collection DOAJ
language ces
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Uhrin Michal
spellingShingle Uhrin Michal
Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
Slovenský Národopis
evolutionary anthropology
grandparenthood
menopause
longevity
ethnography
author_facet Uhrin Michal
author_sort Uhrin Michal
title Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
title_short Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
title_full Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
title_fullStr Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Grandparenthood from the Evolutionary Perspective
title_sort grandparenthood from the evolutionary perspective
publisher Sciendo
series Slovenský Národopis
issn 1339-9357
publishDate 2020-03-01
description Humans belong to the few species in which females and males live for a relatively long time after the end of their reproductive period. In this paper, I present theoretical concepts explaining the relatively long post-reproductive life span of humans and the menopause: the grandmother hypothesis and the diet, intelligence and longevity model (also known as the embodied capital model). The grandmother hypothesis, offering an evolutionary explanation of the menopause, shows that throughout most of the human history, childrearing has been a cooperative endeavour. In all societies across the world, mothers, fathers, grandparents, and other family members cooperate in networks consisting of kins and non-kins in order to assist with child rearing. The paper also argues how ethnographic research can contribute to the testing of evolutionary theories of grandparenthood in contemporary societies.
topic evolutionary anthropology
grandparenthood
menopause
longevity
ethnography
url https://doi.org/10.2478/se-2020-0004
work_keys_str_mv AT uhrinmichal grandparenthoodfromtheevolutionaryperspective
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