Will boys always be boys and girls always
be girls? Will we ever really understand each other? You may be shocked
by your conclusions.
Prepare yourself for an intimate, erotic examination of physical differences between the sexes, from body fat to brain power.
See Turkish men demonstrate their
suitability as mates by wrestling in olive oil. Celebrate Mardi Gras in
New Orleans, where women bare their breasts to entice men to reward them
with strings of beads.
1. Different But Equal.
Observe women who flaunt their femininity as exotic dancers, and female
body builders who develop their muscles to the point of masculinity.
Examine brain scans that show that men and women even think differently
about the same problems. Different But Equal explores whether the amazing differences between men and women are based on biology or history.
2. The Language Of The Sexes.
How does boy meet girl? Is finding a mate ever easy? How do you send
out a signal that you’re available? There are as many ways to speak the
Language Of The Sexes as there are cultures. The Japanese build shrines
to the male phallus. many Muslim women live behind veils. Ethiopian
tribeswomen enlarge their lips with ceramic plates, and some Chinese
used to crush women’s feet to keep them tiny and delicate. Compare all
this to America, where women practice gender amplification with silicone
breast implants, collagen lip injections and tight high heels. It’s
easy to see why the Language Of The Sexes is so hard to understand.
3. Patterns Of Love. How
far would you go for love? Get ready to be amazed as you see people go
further than you ever thought possible. Patterns Of Love will take you
to a brothel in Nevada, love hotels for married adults in Japan and a
bachelor auction in Alaska. You’ll meet pop star Mongo Faya of Cameroon…
and his 58 wives. Visit Istanbul’s Topkapi Palace where the Sultans
keep harems of hundreds of wives. Fly to Moscow with a group of American
men hoping to bring home just one wife. And check out technology’s
answer to a troubled marriage: an automatic divorce machine that accepts
all major credit cards. Patterns Of Love may change your definition of love.
4. Passages Of Life.
Morris catalogues the ways human cultures mark, honor, and celebrate the
biological transition from childhood to puberty, and how such rituals
distinguish men from women. Highlights include a theory that
circumcision originated in ancient Egypt as part of a snake religion
strategy for achieving immortality.
5. The Maternal Dilemma.
In today’s world’ is it tougher to be a mother… or a father? Will it
ever be possible to balance work and motherhood? No matter what you
currently believe, The Maternal Dilemma will surprise you with new
insight. See working mothers in Japan and England who leave their
children in day-care centers. Discover the ‘granny solution’ in Greece.
Explore the ‘paternal solution’ with stay-at-home fathers in America.
Have dinner with a man from Utah who has several wives: some have
children while others pursue careers. Compare women who work in fields
with babies at their side, to Western women trying to balance kids with a
career. It’ll soon become clear that The Maternal Dilemma is something everybody shares.
6. The Gender Wars. Do
you know what side of the Battle Of The Sexes you’re on? You might be
stunned by this eye-opening look at the recent struggle for equality
between the sexes. Originally, there was a primitive balance between the
sexes, but when people left the village for the city, the natural
balance disappeared. Find out the origins of honeymoons and other tools
of male dominance like wedding rings and female circumcision. Travel to
Finland for the annual wife-carrying contest celebrating the capture of
women from other villages. follow the rise of feminism, from
turn-of-the-century suffragettes to the National Organization for Women.
Visit the front lines of the gender wars with female stock traders and
female firefighters who parachute into blazing California forests. Pay
attention: what you learn here may just help you survive The Gender Wars.
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