those assumptions. Are women really naturally secondary to men? Do women really
scientists, these aren’t critics of science, they’re scientists themselves.
They’re trained in primatology. They both have connections to Sherwood
what they’re learning from feminism.
Greenwood: Yes. And he said that it was conversations with his female
colleagues that really pushed him on his theories and his thinking that changed
his mind. So I think that’s interesting.
Riddell: Samara, in the recent issue of The New Yorker,
interestingly, I read something that seemed relevant to our conversation. It’s
an article by Charles Bethea, who is a staff writer for The New Yorker and he’s
writing an article on camps for men where they crawl through mud and carry
heavy objects and desire to be more manly and more formidable and perhaps
unsurprisingly the word alpha male gets mentioned a lot. I’m actually going to
read you this little paragraph because I thought this was interesting and I happened
to be reading it right at the same time as we were about to talk. In 1982, Frans
De Waal book, Chimpanzee Politics helped popularize the term alpha male. The
book is an account of power struggles within a colony of male chimps at a zoo
in the Netherlands. De Waal, a Dutch primatologist who taught at Emory
challenged a number of assumptions about non-human primates.
He noticed that the leaders of the chimps he studied were
not necessarily the strongest or the most intimidating, but rather the ones who
excelled at coalition building. They kept the peace impartially often by
protecting underdogs when conflicts arose. De Waal called his alphas the
consolers in chief. It’s not clear how closely people read the book. In the
’90s, Newt Gingrich handed out copies to freshman congressmen. After that, the
term alpha male became very popular, De Waal explained in a TED Talk. On the
internet, you will find all these business books that tell you how to be an
alpha male and what they mean by an alpha male is how to beat up others and
beat them over the head and let them know that you are the boss and don’t mess
with me and so on. And basically an alpha male for them is a bully, which
obviously was not what Dr. De Waal had observed and reported.
And I just wondered what your take on that is to the degree
that there is a leader, that the successful ones are good at restoring the
peace and keeping the colony functioning well. Just any thoughts that you have
on why it is that our sense of the alpha male or the leader is the biggest,
baddest and in some ways the worst.
Greenwood: Yes. I think Frans De Waal’s research is fabulous and he’s
done other research where he’s looked at often there’s so much interest in when
a conflict happens, like how the conflict happens within a primate society,
which doesn’t happen that often, let’s just say that as well. And what he
started to study was, well, okay, what happens after a conflict? And what he
found that there was a whole lot of behaviors that were about recovering from
conflict. So what do the primates do to come back together to become friends
and allies again after conflict? And this is an important part of the story. I
think what often gets missed out is there tends to be this monofocus on a
particular minor aspect of behavior for whatever reason and all of these other
really important behaviors, yes, they might be more subtle to see, but they
dominate in terms of amount of time and amount of effort if you’re looking at
all of the behaviors.
And so the upshot is that I think yes, this more complex
story is more accurate than when we narrow our focus and only look at certain
behaviors and draw them out as being key like so often happens in that kind of
public alpha male story, which just really doesn’t have any basis as far as I
can tell in the science itself in animal behavior studies. Why does this story
keep persisting?
Surely there’s a whole lot of reasons. It’s not an area of
study I do and if I was studying it, I feel like that would be a whole PhD in
itself. But off the top of my head or things that I have considered are one
interesting thing that I do know from the history is that that military model
of primate behavior, that was actually taught in middle schools. So Irven DeVore
was part of the system that in the 1960s set up this study of main American
middle schools and was rolled out across the board and it was really the
description there are very much about this traditional idea of an alpha male as
sort of a military kind of leader. A whole generation got indoctrinated into
that kind of thinking. So it’s really pervasive. You then see it repeated in
films and in television. So the social environment reinforced it for a very
long time and you don’t see any of that kind of thing happening with this newer
story, with this corrective story that is about this more complexity.
And even when you do, like as you said with Frans of all’s
book, when it is spelled out in a public book, still only certain pieces are
picked out and kind of focused on. It’s a sticky idea. Why is it a sticky idea?
I think other people might need to answer that. I think that’s beyond me, but
it does seem that alpha male as this, as you said, as a bully, just seems like
a very sticky thing that’s very hard to break.
Riddell: It really does. Was Irven DeVore in the UK or the United
States or where were children being educated in those ideas?
Greenwood: That was across the US. Across. And there was films. He’d done films
of aggressive baboon behavior, again, a small part of the whole picture and
that was part of this. So it was visuals, it was audio. He had a model of how
he imagined. He said he’d seen this model of how primate societies were
constructed with the lead males in the center and all the peripheral members
around the outside always describing the females as peripheral or secondary and
in need of protection. And this became a very quite strong kind of model, this
picture. But then you have studies again and again coming after it, debunking
it going, “This is not observable in nature at all. Where is it? ”
You’re seeing females in every one of those positions. You’re seeing females
leading the group. How did this come up? It seems to have come from some sort
of pre-ideas about what was expected to be seen as opposed to what was actually
seen out in the wild.
Riddell: Or they were hoping to see. I mean, the term alpha female
existed too, but it’s never had the same traction as alpha male.
Greenwood: Yeah. I do think alpha in itself is a terrible, terrible
term. If we can start to talk about leading individuals, I think it starts to
soften the way that we’re talking about it. A leading individual has more
capacity in our imaginations to encompass some of those things you were talking
about, that cooperation, that protection of those that are in less strong
positions, all of those kind of things we are starting to take on board that
that’s what true leadership is. When you put the word alpha in there, I don’t
know, the whole conversation changes.
Riddell: Well, and then in the manosphere, there’s a lot of talk
about Beta Boys as in the second and the lesser. I am a writer and we know that
in stories it’s very, very helpful to have a single hero. More people will read
the story, more people will pick up the book in the first place and we’ll keep
reading it. Every movie basically is around a single hero. There does seem to
be something about the human brain that’s better able to track the trajectory
of a single individual rather than a collective.
Greenwood: I also wonder if it’s just like a story, again, like a
narrative type that can be shifted. We’ve just so often been geared towards the
goodie and the baddie, right? The hero and the evil, this is real binary.
Perhaps we can evolve. Perhaps we can change to see different kinds of stories
as being truer and more interesting as well. I certainly do.
Riddell: I like that. Now, how can you and I and our listeners mount
a campaign to less the hold on our imagination that the alpha male story still
commands?
Greenwood: So this is something I have occasionally tried to imagine,
but I can’t claim to have any grand plan. This is beyond kind of my expertise,
but my intuition is if this story is going to loosen its grip, it’s unlikely to
happen through academic arguments alone where as much as we do great academic
arguments, it is a struggle to convince beyond sort of small groups of people.
I do think it would need to be taken up in popular culture, right? Those films,
those documentaries, even TikTok, once it starts to spread this sort of
alternate, more complex, I think more interesting story, as well as it’s more
accurate, right, that’s maybe when we can start to break down the old story
because we’ve got something new that is more interesting and more captivating.
Maybe one particularly captivating way to do that would be to tell the story of
the scientists It’s like I’m doing, especially the women who helped expose the
limits of that older model and opened up a richer understanding of primate
social life. You’ve got a story where there are some heroes in there, but
it’s not an old style kind of story.
Riddell: I do think it’s possible that Gen Z has more of that
knowledge of the importance of groups and community and have been raised in a
different way where that model of the dominant male has lost some of its power.
Greenwood: I think so too. It’s certainly my experience. I’ve got two
daughters that certainly seem along that track, but it does seem, as we’re
seeing with the manosphere, that there are niches where some of these old ideas
are really not only just being perpetuated, but being accelerated. So that’s
challenging.
Riddell: Yeah.
Greenwood: If we were successful, what might change? That was, I think,
your other part of the question.
Riddell: Yeah. So if we did succeed at this, if you and I come with a
great campaign and the listeners get all excited about it and want to really
make a change in this arena, what do you think might shift?
Greenwood: That’s really important to think about. I think we
underestimate how much the stories that we tell about nature become the stories
we tell about ourselves. Whether it’s right or wrong, there’s a strong
connection about how we imagine nature and how we imagine ourselves. Hence why
how we imagine primates, non-human primates, and how that relates to primates.
So if we loosen the hold of that alpha male myth, we might also loosen some of
the assumptions that we make about aggression, domination and control, which
currently kind of seem natural, inevitable, and admirable to changing that to
something else, to seeing them as a more minor part of a broader spectrum of
behaviors. That could open up more space for people to think differently about
masculinity, leadership, cooperation, and social life. We would have a more
accurate picture of the natural world and that seems like a good place to
start.
Riddell: Well, it really does. Even when you just think logically
about the natural world, even without firsthand observation, it makes sense
that an organism is not going to deliberately put himself or herself in
jeopardy. So I think that our idea that the alpha male is always looking for a
fight is something that’s held by people who’ve never been in a fight and have
never been punched. Nobody wants to get hurt unnecessarily. It’s a real risk to
enter into a battle. So it makes a lot of sense that these animals would have
the capacity to try to create peace in the group and to try to have the group
function smoothly the way Frans de Waal described it.
Greenwood: Exactly right. And it’s not just about the individual. Part
of any social group is the good of the whole, right? The good of the whole
means the good of the self. Once the whole breaks down, then you’re much more
vulnerable. So yes, there’s a logic here, right? So it’s much more logical,
this contemporary kind of view than the old view and yet the old view still
sticks around.
Riddell: Right. I mean, we care about our own self-interest. So if
you’d commit an action that makes somebody else perceive you as a bully, the
other person who sees you as a bully may well be plotting revenge. So it’s a
big risk.
Greenwood: Yeah. And you can see how that starts to break down all of
those bonds that keep a social group together. And when you’re looking at, say,
baboons or any other monkeys and apes out in the wild, that’s really important
to their survival is keeping that group safe and bonded and functioning
properly, as you say.
Riddell: Right. And it’s a lot of work to keep a group cohesive and
it is natural for things to gradually break down over time and to have a long
surviving troop of chimpanzees has got to be relatively unusual, I would think.
I mean, it takes work to do it, I guess is what I’m saying.
Greenwood: That’s right.
Riddell: So you’ve been studying the people who study primates and
thinking about them a lot. Has that changed the way you see us, the way you see
your human friends or your colleagues? Or if you pass by one of the beautiful
city parks in Melbourne and you see a group of people playing, do you ever have
this sudden image of us as the apes that we all actually are?
Greenwood: What a cute question. I actually think it’s a little bit in
reverse. By learning about the complexity of non-human primate societies, I now
look at monkeys differently. I’m like, wow. If you just do some sort of casual
observation, even at a zoo, you’re just noticing little bits of behaviors. But
now that I understand some of the systematics behind their social behavior, I’m
fascinated by when you do observe them, how that actually plays out. And I
guess therefore the reverse, seeing some more of our complex human interactions
in the primate world. So yeah, I think opened my eyes has been in the reverse
direction.
Riddell: So even though you weren’t crazy about monkeys as a kid, now
you love to see them.
Greenwood: Absolutely. Absolutely. And I do remember some of the people
I interviewed as part of my research when they first started even entering into
primatology in say the 1950s or the 1960s said the first big surprise for them
was that primates had a society, that concept that there is a society amongst
primate social groups was just mind blowing. And I’m like, “I can totally
see that. ” That is a really interesting insight.
Riddell: One thing that I think is a step forward is that when Darwin
first posited the idea that we were related to apes, that was widely rejected
and considered very offensive to humans. And I do think that most people
understand now that we are cousins, that we are related and I do think that’s a
step forward.
Greenwood: Yeah, certainly.
Riddell: Do you have a life philosophy or any basic tenets or a motto
that you repeat to sort of help keep you going and on your track to finish your
dissertation and on your track to be present in the world and the way that you
want to be?
Greenwood: Yeah. I do really like that quote by Ivan Ilick who was an
Austrian theologian and philosopher, which says that if we want to change
society for the better, we need to tell a more powerful story. And as he put
it, one that kind of sweeps away the old myths and becomes the preferred story,
one so inclusive that it gathers all the bits of our past and our present into
a coherent whole and on that even shin some light into the future so that we
can take the next step. So it’s one that when I first read this probably 20
years ago really just resonated really deeply with me because it gives you a
sense not only how can we make some positive change in the world, let’s do our
part in making this story, but it also tells us something about having to test
our own assumptions to go, okay, something about our current story.
If things aren’t working well, then something about what
we’re telling ourselves now is wrong. What is that? Identifying that, trying to
come up, do the research. Part of what I love about academia is actually
getting to do the research and see what it tells us about building this better
story.
Riddell: Yes. Samara, is it possible that those women critiquing
primatology at that time might turn out in the future to actually be wrong,
that someone will gather fresh data and prove the fallacy of their views the
same way that they proved wrong the men who came before them?
Greenwood: So I get asked this question a lot and it’s one that has
gone on in my head quite a bit because I know there’s something we’re not
thinking through quite correctly when we ask this question. I’m going to try
and articulate what I think it is. When we talk about sort of masculinism and
feminism, they feel like they’re mirror images of each other or that you’re
just replacing male bias with female bias. But what we need to realize is that
the two cases aren’t the same. They’re not parallel. The earlier male bias
perspective involved a genuine blind spot, right? It had a very narrow view
where researchers were assuming sort of going into the field assuming that
female primates were passive and secondary by default while males were assumed
to be the natural center of social life almost as a foregone conclusion and
that assumption was allowed to persist even when there was already evidence
that pointed beyond it.
Now the feminist intervention was not about installing some
opposing female centric view that cut out the male behavior, right? So it’s not
just the flip. Instead, it was about making that blind spot visible,
highlighting it as a problem and about taking seriously evidence that had
previously been overlooked or downplayed. So rather than narrowing the field to
just half the story that had happened previously as in the case of male bias,
what their job was to open it up to the fuller story to include all of this
information that was being sort of downplayed or disregarded. And this in turn
made it more difficult for future researchers to blindly ignore female agency
variation in sex roles and the complexity of primate social life. Now, could
some of those feminist interpretations later be revised? Absolutely. That’s
true of any scientific claim, right? But that revision of their sort of first
pass at what this new thing would look like, that’s not the same as saying that
they were just another bias.
Their major contribution was to reveal a hidden distortion
in that earlier work and to provide ways of remedying that structural, deep
structural problem. So even as they undoubtedly had limitations of their own
and there are certainly future assumptions and current assumptions that still
need to be challenged that does not cancel out the fact that they brought about
an important and positive shift at that time.
Riddell: You know what it’s making me think of as you say that? I’m
thinking about stories and books that are written as a series and the first
book actually is pretty minimalist and you really do only get to meet one
character and maybe two friends and some other minor characters and that as the
series progresses, they always start to populate it with more and more people,
people in more complex roles and more complex relationships. And it’s almost as
though when the science was being written, there was a very bare bones
narrative. They chose one that was relatively convenient for the people that
were doing the research and appeared obvious to them and that complexity and
the value of the connections among the various players in that group of
primates only comes with time and more looking and deeper understanding as
things progress.
Greenwood: I think that’s part of it, but as you mentioned before, we
have the Japanese studying at exactly the same time and they are engaging in
much more complex theorizing from the start. You definitely develop a more
complex understanding over time, but part of it is the position that you’re
starting from. So what are the assumptions you’re bringing to that study? And
if you begin with a background assumption that it’s going to be complex and
that you need to study all of the individuals, not just half of them in a
serious equal kind of fashion, then you’re going to immediately get a different
result. One of the analogies that I quite like is that you could compare it to
looking at something with just one eye. So you’ve got a hand over one eye and
you try to describe it with just one eye and then someone goes, “Hang on,
you’re going to get a much deeper field of vision if you look with both
eyes.” And that’s what these feminist scientists were doing.
They’re going, “If you look with one eye, you’re going
to get the wrong idea. You’re going to really distort the picture. Open up this
other eye and you’re going to see things much more clearly.” So I think
that was the major transition.
Riddell: That’s beautifully put. And I’m also just thinking too about
the value of coming into some sort of a research opportunity with the desire to
be able to study all the individual organisms rather than just looking at ones
that appear flashy or interesting and trying to make a lot of judgments based
on a very small population sample.
Greenwood: Yeah. And that correlates to the other big change that
happened, which was that when they first started studying, they were really
interested in old world monkeys and apes, so sort of African, larger kind of
animals. And then when different groups started studying primates from
different parts of Asia, from different parts of South America, the story just
blossomed into much more complexity. You found different primate species were
doing very, very different things. And so that challenged that core idea as well.
So yes, very much what you’re taking as your subject, what you even just choose
to look at can affect the whole sort of system.
Riddell: Samara, this has been amazing. I feel like I’ve learned so
much. Thank you so much for coming on the show.
Greenwood: Thank you so much for having me. It’s been a delight.
Riddell: The Shape of the World is about nature, cities, and people
and the world we share. It’s a production of the Office of Modern Composition,
a business that coaches writers and helps people and organizations tell their
stories. If you have something you’re trying to write, the Office of Modern
Composition can help. The Shape of the World is produced in the vital,
vigorous, and beautiful metropolis of Chicago and the Prairie State of
Illinois. The shape of the world is a completely carbon neutral endeavor thanks
to reductions we made and from a carbon offset purchased from Tradewater. If
you’re interested in eliminating your carbon footprint, go to the website
tradewater.us. You can find Shape of the World on Instagram and Facebook and on
our own website, shapeoftheworldshow.com. There you’ll find out more about
Samara Greenwood and you’ll also find a drawing of Samara made by the artist,
Olivia Cohen. This episode of The Shape of the World was produced by Max
Hatlam. Our theme music was composed by Brad Wood. We are only three episodes
into our seventh season, so you can expect another brand new episode to come
out very soon. Thanks for listening.