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OAPerfect Mothers and Stunted Workers
Honey Bee Sex Differences in the Co-Creation of Human and Animal Gender
- Amsterdam University Press
- Source: Yearbook of Women’s History / Jaarboek voor Vrouwengeschiedenis, Volume 42, Issue 2024: Gender and Animals in History, Dec 2024, p. 104 - 119
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- 01 Dec 2024
Abstract
Using honey bees (Apis mellifera) as a case study, this essay argues that animals and humans co-created gendered interpretations of sex differences and reproductive behaviour in the history of science. The typical narrative about gender in science says that humans have pushed our ideas about gender onto nonhuman nature. Rather than fight anthropocentrism, however, these explanations privilege humans as active historical agents and frame animals as passive. The science of honey bee sex differences demonstrates that gender has not only shaped bee science, but has also been shaped by it. Beekeeping manuals, scientific research, and even popular literature reveal that beekeepers and entomologists internalized honey bee gender while they attempted to describe and justify it.