Sunday, December 30, 2018

Review of Wild Life by Robert L. Trivers (Clara B. Jones)


Wild Life: Adventures of an Evolutionary Biologist
Robert L. Trivers
Biosocial Research
New Brunswick, NJ
2015
225 pages
$9.58 (Paperback and Kindle)

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones, Asheville, NC, USA (February, 2016)

To dispense with preliminaries, I have interacted with Robert L. “Bob” Trivers intermittently since I was in graduate school but have never been in his “inner circle.” I requested a complimentary copy of Wild Life from Robert, telling him that I intended to review it for a journal that was, at the time, undetermined. Robert was enthusiastic about the idea and sent the memoir. I have reviewed a number of books for ISBE Newsletter so it was logical for me to consider it as the venue for publication, particularly, since I speculated that many readers would be interested. I appreciate Andreas Svensson for giving me this opportunity.

In addition to several other biologists (e.g., Louise Emmons, Dan Janzen, Russ Lande, Nancy Moran, Steve Stearns, Mary Jane West-Eberhard, Don E. Wilson), I consider Trivers to be a National Treasure. Against numerous odds, he has risen to the top of his field, having published papers that are fundamental contributions to Social Biology, generators of immeasurable bodies of systematic and informal research and publications, as well as, continuing streams of productive thought—among his peers, other scientists, educators, students, journalists, and the general public. Many persons in and outside the scientific community will purchase a copy of Wild Life hoping, even, expecting, to find inside their names or mention of one of their vivid memories with Robert. Most of these men and women will be crushed, and I can think of four or five who will never recover. Robert's new book should have included a detailed index, not only for reference purposes, but, also, to prevent time wasted by some who would otherwise rifle through the book in search of evidence that Trivers considers them worthy of mention.

In the literary world, a memoir belongs to the genre, Creative Nonfiction. Wild Life, however, for the most part, appears to be uncontrived, a convincing example of a brilliant, though, controversial, figure telling it as he truly sees it. As the saying goes, “What you see is what you get.”, though Robert is clear to point out that he is unable to measure the full extent to which deception and self-deception influenced this project. After reading Wild Life, I was left with several messages, one being that its author has written a memoir hoping to determine the arc of his legacy. With the exception of Chapters 14 and 15, he crafts his story, as he has presented all of his ideas, with clinical, even, scapular, precision. There is a sense in which the dominant theme of the book can be summarized by a single observation expressed on page 186 when speaking of W.D. Hamilton: “I thought of Bill as perhaps the greatest evolutionary theorist since Darwin. Certainly, where social theory based on natural selection is concerned, he was our deepest and most original thinker.” Many would place E.O. Wilson in second place. However, in Wild Life, as well as, elsewhere, Robert seems of the opinion that Wilson is greatly overrated (an opinion with which I disagree). Though he does not say so explicitly, Trivers likely considers himself to hold second rank after Hamilton, a self-assessment that many would challenge if only because of the author's non-normative record of behavior. Nonetheless, as Robert told a reporter at Rutgers University in 2014, “I don’t want to sound immodest, but I am one of the greatest social theorists in evolutionary biology alive, period.”

Wild Life, dedicated to Robert's teacher, William H. Drury, Jr., comprises fifteen chapters, seven of which, in addition to numerous additional remembrances, concern his life and research in Jamaica. He reports, with obvious pride, that all of his five children are “American/Jamaican,” referring to himself as an “out-breeder” created by his peripatetic experiences as the son of a career diplomat. For decades, I was an obsessive reader of the print-version of The New York Times. One day in 1987, scanning the obituary page, I noticed the name, Howard Trivers [sic, no middle initial], and, because, at that time, I had received second-hand reports of Robert's life from one of his close friends, I determined from relevant details that the deceased was the evolutionary biologist's father. Among other prominent roles in the U.S. Department of State, Howard Trivers had been Director of its Office of Research and Analysis. It was impossible not to note that the diplomat's obituary included no personal information—no mention of parents, a wife, or other family members. I had been told that Robert had a very contentious relationship with his father, in part, because of the latter's profession. Robert has only mentioned his father to me once, in passing; thus, I was not totally surprised to find virtually no reference to his family, including his mother, in Wild Life. For this reason, combined with the, sometimes shocking, even, disturbing, particulars of his life, Robert would provide a Freudian scholar with copious material and room for speculation (e.g., Oedipal failure?). In addition to passing mention of his “family of origin” and his children, the Preface expresses the author's opinions about the conventional lives of scientists (“This kind of life never appealed to me.”), and the remaining few paragraphs introduce the reader to themes that follow.

Chapter 1 is revealing to all students of Trivers' work. He documents his early precocity in mathematics, particularly, The Calculus. I consider myself an amateur student of the thinking strategies of famous scientists. Many population ecologists, for example, think like physicists, characterizing genes and other events as mass flowing in space and time. Ecosystem ecologists, on the other hand, are likely to think, not only spatially, but at multiple scales at once. Robert's mind is that of a quantitative modeler expertly identifying and manipulating decision rules. A limitation but, even, more, a strength, of his mostly verbal theories is that they bypass complexity to identify fundamental principles of natural selection for mechanisms and functions of general import. Trivers reveals that Drury taught him to begin with interesting questions about human behavior, and Robert has exhibited a remarkable ability to choose topics basic to non-human, as well as, human, Social Biology, always cognizant of intra- and inter-individual conflict (-of-interest) and of genetics operating at the level of individuals, constrained by Hamilton's Rule. While I imagine there is intuition and art involved in Trivers' generative processes, I think his successes can be attributed, primarily, to his cogent choice of topics and his ability to write with laser clarity, as close as verbal models can come to mathematical ones. In my humble opinion, Robert is a better verbal modeler than Charles Darwin.

Chapters 2 and 3 describe early experiences conducting fieldwork and the impact of Drury and Ernst Mayr, respectively, on the development of the memoirist's early thinking, publications, and career. Robert convincingly communicates the extent to which he honors these men, and he shares with candor the pivotal role they played in the formation of some of his most important ideas. Trivers has reason to be confident that his acknowledgments of others' inputs will not reduce his reputation and that, though some critics may attempt to diminish his project, particularly, posthumously, Robert's theories are not subject to claims that they are derivative. Chapter 4 is titled, “I Become a Lizard Man in Jamaica,” describing how he became “a green lizard freak” after accompanying Ernest Williams there as a research assistant. Some readers will be offended by both men's evaluation of primatologists and, by implication, Anthropology as a field (but, see Chapter 6). In another chapter he denigrates Psychology, and it is clear throughout the memoir that Robert's opinion about what constitutes a Science is a narrow one.

Wild Life is peppered with interesting facts about lizards and other animals, as well as, snapshots of geography and human nature. Chapters 5, 7, 8, 9, and 10 recount a variety of experiences in Jamaica, some of them life-threatening, as well as, significant friendships, mostly with men. The only women who receive a lingering nod in the memoir are “mother-in-law,” “Miss Nini,” and her daughter, Robert's “wife,” Lorna, mother of four of his children. Even though these chapters, and a few other accounts, document Robert's capacity for deep, sincere, and reciprocated feelings, he sometimes refers to friends using clinical, seemingly detached, language.

Chapter 11 is an interesting one in which the author reminisces about his relationship to Huey Newton and the Black Panther Party, and Chapter 12 continues descriptions of his entanglements with intra-specific conflict, including, incarceration. Robert seems not to have learned a litany from Behavioral Ecology that the costs of aggression (or, spite) usually outweigh its benefits (see the self-analysis in Chapter 15, and Parker 1974). Chapter 13, titled, “Vignettes of Famous Evolutionary Biologists,” suggests that, in addition to Drury, Mayr, and Williams, Richard Dawkins and W.D. Hamilton, effectively, complete Trivers' list of illustrious figures in the field who have influenced him and his ideas, and in this chapter, Robert includes a few sarcastic paragraphs about Stephen J. Gould that I consider gratuitous and unnecessary.

The final two chapters are intimate in nature, Chapter 14 is titled, “Ambivalence About Jamaica,” describing the unsettling and increasing rates of violence there. Some readers will find the final chapter haunting since Robert candidly assesses personal failings and outlines his burial plans. I was surprised that he had nothing to say about politics or the state of the world (e.g., climate change, income inequality, racism, biodiversity loss, terrorism), if only to inform the reader about how his opinions and values might have changed since his Black Panther days (“One man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter.”, as the CIA used to say). His life is not as dark as it may appear, however, since Robert has recently outlined several proposals for future research, specifically, speciation processes (with Koos Boomsma); evolutionary heterogamety; natural selection of honor killings; evolutionary dynamics of homosexuality; and, human evolutionary genetics.

It would be remiss and unrealistic not to provide some academic critique of Trivers' work, and I consider it appropriate to suggest a couple of limitations*. Since I was introduced to his publications in the 1970s by Behavioral Ecologists at Cornell, it has concerned me that Robert's research fails to reflect the importance of Evolutionary Ecology, particularly, evolution in changing environments about which there is a significant literature pre-dating Robert's first publication (e.g., Levins 1968, Lewontin 1957). Though Evolutionary Ecology is relatively recent as a systematic discipline, Robert has a terrific grasp of Population Genetics and G x E interactions, an operation receiving limited treatment, at best, in his publications (e.g., How do “selfish” genes and social traits behave when conditions vary or along gradients? When and under what conditions is social behavior situation-dependent? ...flexible?). Furthermore, his “feel” for statistical thinking is that of an expert, and I would expect more treatment of variation and deviations from central tendencies in his canon.

On the other hand, one way that Trivers' work achieves elegance, is by simplifying complex phenomena; thus, environmentally-focused, realistic theories might not have been as successful, productive, or fundamental. In a sense, the author's insights are primitive in the deep, honorific sense that the word is employed to describe some treatments in pure mathematics. Nonetheless, all theoretical work of import is subject to vetting by subsequent theory, models, experiments and other empirical tests. Already, a few researchers have modified certain details of Trivers' theory of sex ratio selection, and his ideas about parental investment and sexual selection have been challenged by some feminist biologists. Related to any discussion of Robert's legacy, in Wild Life, the memoirist states how important the appreciation of conflict (genetic and whole organism, intra- and inter-individual) has been to his success. In my opinion, this observation confirms Trivers' understanding that asymmetries produce differential “fitness optima” and that differential (asymmetric) phenotypes are exposed to environments upon which selection may act. I strongly recommend Wild Life to all who are interested in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, not only, for its explication of “wild” experiences, but, also, for insights into how a stunning mind works.

References

Levins R (1968) Evolution in changing environments: some theoretical explorations (No. 2). Princeton University Press.

Lewontin RC (1957) The adaptation of populations to varying environments. Cold Spring Harbor Symp Quant Biol 22: 395-408.

Parker GA (1974) Assessment strategy and the evolution of fighting behaviour. J Theor Biol 224: 115-126,


*Unlike E.O. Wilson, Trivers is not a synthesizer, though his most heralded papers have general import. Trivers has not communicated much interest in a search for general patterns--within, between, and across taxa. Also, again, in contrast to E.O. Wilson, Trivers' canon pays scant attention to Genotype<----->Phenotype<----->Environment<-----> causes and effects. One seeks, for the most part, in vain, to locate Ecology--abiotic & biotic Environments [however conceptualized] in Trivers' writings...


Clara B. Jones (foucault03@gmail.com)
Asheville, NC, USA
February, 2016 In International Society of Behavioral Ecology Newsletter











Review of Benediction by Alice Notley (Clara B. Jones)


Alice Notley
Benediction
2015
256 pages
Letter Machine Editions
Tucson, Arizona
$20.00

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones

This month (2015), Yellow Chair Review features poems on the theme, “Popular Culture,” a fitting category for the poems of Alice Notley, a brilliant associate of the New York School of Poetry. David Lehman's book, The Last Avant-Garde: The Making of the New York School of Poets (1999, Anchor Books) presents the movement as part of “popular cultural history” whose members (e.g., John Ashbery, Kenneth Koch, Barbara Guest, Ron Padgett, Notley's first husband, Ted Berrigan) drew creative energy from “the bliss of being alive and young.” According to Lehman, these poets sought authenticity in their lives and speech and were subversives and “non-mainstream.” The New York School extends from the early 1950s to the mid-1960s, originally including visual artists, writers, and their admirers whose early members gathered regularly in New York's Cedar Tavern. Lehman proposes that these “playful, irreverent, tradition-shattering” innovators created a “New Aesthetic” that made New York City the “culture capital of the world.”

At age 70, Alice Notley, who has lived in Paris since the 1990s, is considered one of America's foremost poets. She has described her writing this way: “I think I try with my poems to create a beginning space. I always seem to be erasing and starting over, rather than picking up where I left off, even if I wind up taking up the same themes. This is probably one reason that I change form and style so much, out of a desire to find a new beginning, which is always the true beginning.” Notley, who has more than twenty-five books in print, some of which she illustrated, is particularly noted for her “epic poems,” and Benediction, dedicated to her second husband, the late British poet, Douglas Oliver, is a blessing to him in long-form. Divided into two untitled parts, these poems are an homage to common, but, not, arbitrary, speech, intimate “prose essays” that I did not want to stop reading. In the poem, “City of Tingling,” Notley writes, “my hair tangled and hangs down is it is hair real hair, understand? Is hair real hair.” and, in the poem, “Memory,” “it only takes a moment to have been in such a past all along...” Using copious white spaces and repetitions, as well as, diverse forms, Benediction's contents treat feelings as real entities and generate a sense of free-association and improvisation. What makes these poems remarkable, however, is that the language is, nonetheless, controlled and non-random.

Notley and her work deserve to be taken very seriously and will be of particular interest to serious readers interested in experimental poetry by females as well as of particular interest to historians of poetics and aesthetics. Additional information about Notley, including, an informative interview, can be found in Frost EA, Hogue C, Eds, 2006, Innovative Women Poets, University of Iowa Press. Alice Notley has been called “one of America's greatest living poets,” and Benediction will show you why.


Review of The Racial Imaginary Ed. by C. Rankine, B. Loffreda, & M.K. Cap (Clara B. Jones)


The Racial Imaginary: Writers on Race in the Life of the Mind Edited by Claudia Rankine, Beth Loffreda, & Max King Cap

Fence Books

285 pages $19.95 USD

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones*


Who is permitted to write about Race and People of Color? Claudia Rankine is a renowned poet whose popularity seems to increase as her “prosecutorial” formulations multiply. Receiving several prestigious nominations and awards, Rankine is at her best when writing about the Universal or the Transcendent (“Some years there exists a wanting to escape.”), literary configurations that Rankine dismisses in the volume under review. The Introduction to The Racial Imaginary, written with the writer, Beth Loffreda (hereafter, R&L), informs us that Rankine initiated the Racial Imaginary project online with “an open letter about race and the creative imagination” (p 13), soliciting readers' responses. The resulting book presents 28 selected posts, illustrated by strong and timely artwork chosen by the artist Max King Cap.

R&L's Introduction is most emphatic when rejecting “the imagination [as] a free space” (15) and when arguing that “To say, as a white writer, that I have a right to write about whoever I want, including writing from the point of view of characters of color—that I have a right of access and that my artistry is harmed if I am told I cannot do so—is to make a mistake.” (15-16). These themes continually resonate with the reader. The volume is divided into five Sections—Institutions, Lives, Readings, Critiques, and Poetics. Institutions highlights R&L's distinction between Race and Racism, and a wide range of intensely personal, even, confessional, voices describe their experiences, mostly in the form of seemingly cathartic expressions of white guilt, realizing the Editors' prediction that, “[The 'internal tumult' will] be made up of some admixture of shame, guilt, loathing, opportunism, anxiety, irritation, dismissal, self-hatred, pain, hope, affection, and other even less nameable energies.” (21). The entries in the book's first two Sections, and their sometimes discomforting revelations, left me wondering about the power differentials and dynamics between Rankine and most of the other writers. The potential for Rankine's voice to influence, if not intimidate, her subordinates should be considered; although, Rankine might counter that attempts to construct a hierarchy based upon rank, prominence, or authority inherently reflects structural racism, classism, and sexism. Clearly, Rankine intended her Racial Imaginary project to be an egalitarian and communal effort.

The Section, Readings, begins with a well-researched and instructive essay by Joshua Weiner. He has a fundamentally progressive goal, “to disrupt the structure, so that we can see it” (124). Weiner's tools for dismantling power structures are ideas and words, and his cogent analysis of representations of identity in several texts, privileges the universality of the theme, “the individual and society”.

Critique is a brief Section addressing the challenging topic, “writing race”. As a self-described “black woman”, Diane Exavier states, “I feel like race isn't something I always want (or need) to talk about, but it is something that other people won't let me forget.” (205). Importantly, this author proposes a solution: “I truly believe that it is the recognition of the Other that ultimately leads to unification.” (206). However, Exavier does not tell us how to do this. In the same Section, Soraya Membreno's perspectives on race and ethnicity are refreshing and unique in this volume. “I am Hispanic, yes, but that's not your business.” (212). And, later in her essay, “Race does not define me, it is my culture, but it is not me.” (213). Membreno asserts her right to define her own identity, a timely topic given recent debates about Rachel Dolezal's “passing” (also see Lacy M. Johnson;s piece in this section and Tamiko Beyer's essay on page 245).

The Poetics Section includes 15 brief entries on how individual poets engage the topic, “Race” in their practices. I wish this Section had been expanded to include more personal reflections on the process of writing poetry. The book would have benefited from a discerning summary chapter written by R&L with the purpose of placing in perspective similar and different themes and trends across essays, including, a (revised) conceptual framework, particularly, since many of the contributors' views seem incompatible with those of the Editors as proffered in their Introduction. Throughout the volume, this reviewer was annoyed by numerous editorial oversights, and one has the impression that the book was hastily assembled. Nonetheless, The Racial Imaginary is recommended as a genuine attempt to initiate a conversation about Race. The Editors present a variety of viewpoints from a diverse group of contributors.

A particularly evident, though, possibly, useful, consequence of reading each essay is thinking about the inherent inconsistencies of assumptions and intellectual constructs employed by the authors, and it might be worthwhile for scholars to “unpack” the subtexts and deep structures within and between Sections. Indeed, Rankine, herself, may have some ambivalence about her rejection of the Universal and the Transcendent, since the “voice” of her 2014 book, Citizen (Graywolf), employs many generic references and sentences relevant to all humans, especially, marginalized groups other than blacks (“You are you even before you.”; “Why do you feel okay saying this to me?”; As usual, you drive straight through the moment with the expected backing off of what was previously said.”). Furthermore, Rankine is aware that, in a Postmodern world, identity is fractured, though she advances a collective identity and meta-narrative based on Race. Hopefully, Rankine and Loffreda will expand this program and other writers will initiate their own. The project under review makes clear that poets need to talk among themselves about definitions, motivations, craft, and priorities and that poets of color should dialogue about the potential to ignore facts that do not fit particular narratives or metanarratives.

*Not sure if this was published; maybe on amazon.com; i recall not being pleased with it...



Review of Fruta Bomba: Poems by Holly Iglesias (Clara B. Jones)


Fruta Bomba: Poems
Holly Iglesias
Making Her Mark Press
(self-published)
Asheville, NC
2015
$6.00

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones*

Holly Iglesias, a professor at the University of North Carolina-Asheville, is an accomplished poet and translator (Spanish). She has published several chapbooks and books, and her writing has appeared in Prarie Schooner, Barrow Street, Crab Orchard Review, Massachusetts Review, as well as other venues. The poet has been awarded fellowships from a number of sources, including, the National Endowment for the Arts and the North Carolina Arts Council, and her first book, Souvenirs of a Shrunken World, won the First Book Award from Kore Press in 2008. Recently, I had the pleasure of attending a reading by Iglesias, and it was apparent that I was in the presence of a socially-conscious poet whose creative work transcends politics, sociology, and journalism. The lyricism that she achieves is reminiscent of the “deep song” form associated with Federico Garcia Lorca, a poet whose verse introduces Fruta Bomba [tr. papaya or female genitalia].

Fruta Bomba, a revised edition of a 2012 chapbook published by Q Avenue Press, is a historical as well as an artistic document. Each contribution is a prose poem, some exhibiting experimental forms and many in the tradition of Lorca's surrealism, emphasizing events in Cuba and Miami, as well as physical and emotional distances between these two locations. Iglesias' poems of place, time, and space authentically reflect tropical sensuousness—the colors, the passion and soul (Lorca's duende), the exoticism, the mystery, and the potential for violence. Fruta Bomba is not a didactic work; however, it is clearly influenced by historical figures and highlights, in particular, Cuba's liberation from Spain and the death of José Martí; the Spanish Civil War and the death of Lorca; Janet Reno's advocacy of children's rights, particularly, the Elián González case; and, the Cold War. Though Iglesias has clearly renounced the [optimistic] Modernism characteristic of Martí and Lorca, the poems in this chapbook are not depressing or nihilistic. They reflect, rather, an awareness of the complexities and contradictions of the post-World War II political landscape—at personal and social scales.

The poet and editor, Eleanor Wilner, has praised Iglesias' “pitch-perfect ear and keen eye for the voices, vantages, and scraps of the actual”, and most of the poems in the present collection are noteworthy for their metric and imagistic qualities, notwithstanding their prose form. Iglesias' formal skills are, also, evident in her placement of poems relative to one another, and song-like poems stringing words together [“list poems”] serve almost as “white space”, providing relief from difficult, sometimes, disturbing, verses. Even the “Glossary” and “Notes” at the end of the chapbook mimic poems, the former elucidating contrasting effects of the same word, and “Notes” reminding us of the historical and legal backgrounds of the poems.

Several poems (e.g., “Talking Without Italics”; “Llorona”) address change, difference, and the disruption of calm, and “Bicentenario” echoes an earlier epigram in which Martí tells us that he has two fatherlands—Cuba and nighttime. In this poem, babies are excited to see a garbage truck in the morning, but the speaker, apparently, a woman, visits a doctor, physically and mentally ill (“Doctor, my eyes my ears the tremor the buckling walls Big truck!”). Continuing a recurrent theme, the welfare of babies and children, the poem, “Anthem”, expresses concern for children's safety and the preservation of innocence (“teach my children well feed them on my dreams”). In other poems, the vulnerability of children contrasts with the vulnerability of adults bearing the consequences of political unrest and war (“Assassination can seldom be employed with a clear conscience”) and the instability of reality when things are not what they appear to be (“The goat, a bee, six nuns by the sea.”; “The concept of Miami was correct but got out of hand.”). Other poems represent the tropics as an ethereal experience (“Another afternoon cloudburst and what to do but wait.”; “the same easy pleasure his finger takes when circling the headlight of a Lamborghini as though it were capable of arousal”). Iglesias' work clearly derives from serious consideration of and direct experience with her themes, and the poems resonate with Post-structuralist tones since interpretation is yielded to the reader.

Fruta Bomba offers its audience many pleasures and discoveries and is an excellent example of the high quality of writing to be found in chapbook format. Iglesias' prose, including, experimental, poems do not appear to be contrived but seem to be almost classical conventions appropriate to theme, meaning, and meter. A good example is the poem, “Oremos”, that begins with a religious litany and moves, sensitively and logically, to a statement about inequality and oppression. But, Iglesias cannot be dismissed as a polemical poet. Her craft is always primary. She is not telling her reader what to think or do. This chapbook presents the work of a mature poet who deserves a wider audience and is one of the most compelling collections that I have read in some time. Fruta Bomba is a major achievement recommended to all who love literature, and I look forward to reading Iglesias' future publications.

*Originally published in Rhizomatic Ideas, ~2015





Fjords Review Publishes Special Issue of Writing by African-Americans (Clara B. Jones)


Fjords Review Publishes Special Issue of Writing by African-Americans*
Review of Fjords Special Edition 1, “Black American Edition” (2015) Reviewed by Clara B. Jones
Price: $10.00
Rating: 4 stars (quite good)

Fjords Review (www.fjordsreview.com) is a relatively young, widely available, and sometimes themed literary journal publishing a variety of genres, including, poetry, fiction, translation, reviews, and photography. Its literature is mostly conventional and free-form, though experimental work is considered. The journal, founded and edited by John Gosslee, is published twice yearly in print, with online content changing monthly. Submissions are received by post or online (for a small fee), and decisions are usually reported within 45 days. The editorial staff of Fjords will comment on a submission for $15.00, a useful service often costing significantly more at other venues. My review evaluates the first in a series of special issues titled, “Black American Edition” (“Special Issue 1”), guest edited by Geffrey Davis, a professor at the University of Arkansas and illustrated with drawings by the controversial African-American artist, Kara Walker.

It may not be an exaggeration to say that the contemporary art scene represented by young black creative writers, especially, young black male poets, is undergoing a Renaissance. Ishion Hutchinson, Gregory Pardlo, Terrance Hayes, Saeed Jones, Roger Reeves, and Dante Micheaux come first to mind. Perhaps we are witnessing a renewed emphasis on the black male voice influenced by political events highlighting the vulnerability of the black male body, often the victim as well as the perpetrator of violent crime in the United States. Brit Bennett has recently pointed out in an article in The New Yorker that, statistically, the black female body is at risk, also. However, the frequency, rate, and proportion of violence associated with the black male body in the United States is staggering and, effectively, without comparison.

By choosing to initiate their Special Edition series with a focus on (mostly emerging) African-American writers, Gosslee acknowledges the centrality of Race in the American discourse and the important role black literature and art have to play in the revision of that narrative. In his introduction, Davis, a poet, sees the black creative project as a “counterforce” to “trauma” as the country decides “what must come next for America”. Davis paves the way for a radical critique of structural racism in the United States; however, as noted below, most of the contributions to this Special Edition are not overtly political, concentrating, instead, on personal experience and intimate relations.

Thirty-one writers, mostly poets and mostly female, are represented in Special Edition 1, addressing topics with varying degrees of relevance to Davis' conceptual framework, “trauma”. Contributions examine sexual violence as well as romantic love, anger and hope, resignation and acceptance, suicide and birth, the challenge as well as the promise of assimilation, “lack” and ambition, fracture as well as repair. This reviewer had the impression that, for the most part, there are no revolutionaries among this group of writers; although, some of the contributions are provocative (see, for example, works by Ricardo Cruz, t'ai freedom ford, and Remica L. Bingham-Risher). Diamond Sharp's treatment of mental illness in her noteworthy poem, “Mal de Ojo” (tr. “The Evil Eye”), is a complex statement about History on two scales, the personal and the national. However, Kamilah Aisha Moon's poem, “The Emperor's Deer”, is the only contribution directly addressing structural racism. In Special Edition 1, fear and confusion are more often sources of imagination than anger or politics. Most of the trauma described in “Black American Edition” is of a personal nature, often attributed to pain experienced in intimate relationships (with fathers or partners, in particular).

Several of the poems in Special Edition 1 are excellent by any standards, though the “personal” voice, contrasted with the “abstract” position, is ubiquitous. An exception is the voice of Dante Micheaux, represented by three exquisite poems showing why he is among the most highly regarded of young black poets currently writing in the United States. His “Slaughter of the Geese” takes one's breath away (“With the scrim of green and crimson/leaves lost to winter/the bottom of the garden/was conspicuous/bare....”). Also transcendent is the humanity expressed in Isaac Black's poem, “Visiting Daddy, the War Dead”. Black's effect is heartbreaking, exhibiting, at the same time, pain and the will to transcend it. In Micheaux's and in Black's poems, the universal supports and enhances the particular, as a change in seasons denotes, as well, loss or mortality, themes we can all relate to, regardless of race, ethnicity, gender, class, sexual orientation, and the like.

The writers in “Black American Edition” bear witness to trauma but do not address how we can transform the personal or the political, though, based on my online research, some of the represented poets are engaged in community outreach projects. Many of the works in Special Edition 1 suffer from a didactic quality. However, it is important to “hear” each writer's story and to think seriously about the narratives that emerge when writers do not have the privilege of taking History for granted. As such, “Black American Edition”is a document worth having and reading as a scholarly as well as an artistic text, with a particular focus on the concerns of young black writers. Gosslee and his staff have produced a visually appealing and professionally crafted text, though the failure to include contributors' biographies is a serious oversight. Nonetheless, Fjords deserves praise for the high quality of its selections and for its creative vision. I look forward to future issues and Special Editions and will begin to visit the journal's webpage on a regular basis.

*Originally published in The Review Review, 2015





Fragment re: Black Nationalist Poetry (Clara B. Jones)


The new genre, Black Nationalist Poetry may have something in common with Joyce & Yeats [Irish Nationalism]...also, there are a number of similarities w authoritarian movements of 1930s & 40s [e.g., individual subordinate to group; realism]...Black Nationalist Poetry appears to be a backlash to calls for diversity in the Poetry community, led by Morgan Parker and presented in manifesto form in her Harriet: The Blog blogpost abt 1 month ago...she states that the roots of Black Nationalist Poetry can be found in the Poetry of Nikki Giovanni...ummm...how about Cesaire's "negritude?"...or, Black Arts Movement...?...BTW, Black Nationalist Poetry is, for the most part, allied w Modernism [metanarratives (institutional racism; the underclass), essentialism (Binary--black : white); utopianism; heroic (e.g., MLK, Malcolm X; Nikki Giovanni), allegories? (see Rankine)]...Post-modernist & Post-structuralist concepts concerning the primacy of text [Derrida]; construction/performance of race; interpretation being in the hands of the reader/audience; discursive "alliances [Foucault], etc., are, IMO, not emphasized...Black Nationalist Poetry's ties to Modernism may account for its Conservatism [ties to the past/slavery/Africa; ties to myth]...a sense in which Black Nationalist Poetry is DECIDEDLY POSTMODERNIST is the sense in which the poem is NOT autonomous but, rather, is to be interpreted in its Social and Political context...

American Chordata, New Literary and Arts Magazine (Clara B. Jones)


American Chordata, New Literary and Arts Magazine*

Reviewed by Clara B. Jones

Five Stars

Free form poetry, as well as, fiction and artwork emphasizing emotional experience

The current (September/October) issue of Poets & Writers says the new journal, American Chordata (http://americanchordata.org), “is on its way to solidifying an editorial identity with an impressive debut issue”. The magazine, published twice each year (Spring, Autumn), is currently available in hard copy (from booksellers) and is free to download online (PDF). AC is open for submissions year-round, and guidelines are available on their website. The first issue includes three selections of fiction, work by eight poets, and two photographic series, in addition to other visuals. The new magazine's Editor, Ben Yarling, told me (via e-mail) that, “We're founded on the belief that a good literary magazine can celebrate sophisticated design and earnest expression on the same 5.5” x 8.5” page. What interests us most—what we love to read and what we want to share with our readers—is work that's new but not slick or sarcastic, that's brave enough to give us emotional detail and skilled enough to do it without melodrama. Stories and poems (and works of art and photography) that are surprising but not flashy. Unusual but not esoteric. Clear-sighted without being cynical. Cool without being cold. We try to do what we do with a deliberate respect for the plurality of human experience.”

Upon reading AC for the first time, I immediately noticed that the magazine's masthead lists an “Art Director”, Bobby Doherty, and that artwork (photography and painting, in particular) plays a major role in the publication, so much so that I have come to think of AC as a small “coffee-table” publication. I asked Yarling whether he considers AC to be a combined Literature-Art magazine. His response? “Absolutely! One of the most rewarding aspects of putting together this first issue was creating conversations between the writing and the art and photography. Conversations in which both sides carry more-or-less equal weight. We included two photo features in Issue One, and we have a couple already lined up for Issue Two that Bobby Doherty and I are really excited about.”

As Ben's comments suggest, AC is seriously curated, reminiscent of several magazines that I read on a regular basis (TANK, Sleek, Zoo, Interview) characterized by deliberate attention to detail and cross-referencing of themes and images. Like many European publications, AC explores numerous aspects of Human Nature, including, its ambiguous and unconscious dimensions. AC, however, is targeted to the literate American audience but is not self-conscious, elitist, or patronizing, evidence of the editors' concern that their magazine should be accessible to the general reader. In addition to appreciating AC's content, one is immediately impressed by the respect the magazine offers to contributors, a posture evident in Yarling's introductory “Note” and by the placement of contributors' bios directly after the Table of Contents. The magazine's title, also, reflects respect for readers as well as contributors, since the biological category, Chordata, includes many of the most complex, (evolutionarily) recent, and social organisms on Earth (including Humans and other primates). AC continues the tradition of highlighting Literature and Art as fundamental modes of communication.

Diana Xin's short fiction presents a portrait of lovers, neither of whom likes to talk. This (heterosexual) couple is not OK. After an uncomfortable interaction, the sexual act becomes an avoidance mechanism rather than a method to reconcile, and the female character is designed in a stereotyped way—no agency, no identity, no name. These young people simply settle for whatever happens to come along, imputing significance to irrelevant things in order to feel alive. Ultimately, though Xin's minimalist writing is well-crafted, her characters did not sustain my interest, nor did they tell me anything that I wanted to know. The ladder in the center of the couple's studio apartment might be a metaphor for escape or transcendence; but, ultimately, there is no sign of relief or progress. Colby Halloran's short story describes a family obsessed by rules violated by a father's infidelity. Echoing Xin's contribution, Halloran's piece addresses identity fractured and ill-defined and is effectively illustrated by a haunting, unsentimental painting whose markings and reflections are reminiscent of tears. The most expressionistic and, in my opinion, the most effective, piece of fiction is Carianne King's coming-of-age story featuring a vulnerable high-school student with an ineffective and ineffectual mother. A temporary facial injury serves as a metaphor for the girl's unstable self-image, though it is clear that her intelligence and insight may rescue her from a grim present and depressing future. All three stories belong to the American tradition of “grotesque” or “Gothic” fiction (Raymond Carver, Flannery O'Connor, Bobbie Ann Mason); however, the strongest examples of this genre raise questions of morality. With the possible exception of King's piece, none of these stories rises to that bar. As Paul Fry (Yale) pointed out, literature doesn't have to reconcile issues, but it should make us better citizens.

The quality of poetry in AC's first issue rises above its fiction. As a poet, I have a few “pet peeves”, a major one being that words or phrases should not seem obvious or expected or formulaic. For the most part, this wasn't a problem; however, Cal Graves' fragment, “Living Forever”, made me think of a Woody Allen joke (“I want to live forever; so far, so good.”). Distracting. Many contemporary poems considered publication-worthy begin with an imagistic or a concrete phrase or sentence leading into an experiential space or interlude like daydreaming or feelings/emotions or “ostensive moments” (Paul Fry). CA's selections are no exception, and D. Eric Parkinson's poems are excellent examples of this form (“You've seen the boy on the bus/Whose brothers beat him?/.../Think, though, of a bee-less world;/In breathtaking, useless rows.”). The poem, “Saccades”, by Emma Furman attaches words to feelings with an effect of hallucination (“There is no happy childhood. You just grow away.”), and Sarah V. Schweig's poem, “Stories (II)”, interestingly, produces a type of visual-auditory enjambment (“It is your last night on Earth. I am unaware./.../It is your last night, I am unaware, and have nothing to tell her./.../Tell me..../”). Soren Bliefnick's poetry is very strong. His prose poem, “Curio Storage”, “unspools” (Helen Vendler's referent) like a prayer or supplication ending, seemingly, inevitably, with the phrase, “time resumed”, as if what came before was an interlude of dreaming, a distortion of reality pulling back on itself, becoming whole (“I am the absolver of gooseflesh, I knew.”).

The expertly-chosen artwork unifies the issue by continual cross-referencing and interweaving of images, characters, events, and themes throughout text and artwork. Thus, yellow, green, and red are iterated. Images occur recursively [balloons, horses, plants, space (NASA, astronauts, atmosphere, altitude) and themes are repurposed—impermanence, phallic symbols (ice-cream cone, ladder, charred trees, tears), hands, social insects, sand...many more]. As anyone who has assembled a coherent project will understand, such curation takes a lot of thought, a lot of planning, and a lot of work. AC is, in my experience, a virtually unique publication, indeed, a carefully- and beautifully-crafted product. When I encountered Talena Sanders' remarkable series of photographs titled, “Body Memory”, it occurred to me that the magazine would, not only, make a “coffee-table” volume for pleasurable perusal, but could, also, become a source of games whereby players might compete to identify the largest number of repeated references or themes or list the most interpretations for a given work of art or poem or story. My five-star rating of American Chordata is a measure of its impeccable production and of my enthusiasm to have it receive the largest possible audience.

*Originally published in The Review Review, 2016

Online Journal Publishes Special Issue On Adrienne Rich (Clara B. Jones)


Online Journal Publishes Special Issue On Adrienne Rich*

Review of The Critical Flame: A Journal of Literature and Culture, 23 March 2015 by Clara B. Jones

Rating: 3 stars

Keywords: Literary and Critical Essays

According to the webpage of the progressive, online venue, The Critical Flame: A Journal of Literature and Culture, its Mission is “to encourage intelligent public discussion about literature and culture through long-form literary and critical essays covering a wide range of topics”. Surfing the site, essays group into three categories: Verse, Fiction, and Non-fiction with contributions on subjects as varied as Vivian Gornick's new memoir, Nicola Griffith's recent novel on female identity in art, and Mark Doty's 2014 poetry collection, Deep Lane. Most of the essays I skimmed were fewer than twelve paragraphs long, written in a style reminiscent of short academic articles but without formal notation or distractingly technical language.

The journal's webpage informs us that “between May 2014 and April 2015, Critical Flame dedicated its pages to women writers and writers of color”, and one project was the Special Issue, “The enduring power of Adrienne Rich”, a feminist and political poet who died in 2012 at the age of 82. In her 1983 book, Writing Like A Woman, the feminist poetry critic, Alicia Ostriker, said, “Rich is the strongest woman poet in the country, and a major influence.” Many readers of this review will be familiar with Rich's work, particularly, the volumes, The Will To Change (1971) and Diving Into The Wreck (1973), and her first book, A Change Of World (1951), was awarded the Yale Younger Poets' Award by W.H. Auden.

This Special Issue includes an Introduction by the journal's Founding Editor, Daniel E. Pritchard, one interview, seven essays and one contribution presenting brief personal testimonies by six female poets on the “lasting influence of Adrienne Rich”. I strongly identified with these unevenly-written pieces because, in the 1970's, Rich's poetry, and the writing of Francoise Giroud, changed the direction of my life. Three of the seven essays are contributed by men, and, two of these address technical aspects of Rich's poems (syntax and word placement) in a relatively detached manner while the third essay by a man (discussed below) is the most conventionally academic in the issue. I highlight this point because, except for the Introduction, the content of texts is, on balance, gendered in the sense that female contributors write in a personal, intimate voice. The reader is encouraged to see Ostriker's book, Stealing The Language (1986), for a detailed treatment of differences between male and female writing.

The enduring power of Adrienne Rich” includes a 2001 translation of an interview between Rich and the Chilean poet, Magdalena Edwards, recorded during a conference, Chile Poesia, in Santiago. The interview is accompanied by an 8 minute video (in color), and both documents will serve scholars and other interested readers with archival evidence of Rich's knowledge of and commitment to political initiatives designed to highlight and to combat oppression. Ostriker (Writing Like A Woman) considers Rich “a poet of ideas” whose poems and prose “depend on the assumption that the writer's mind exists to embody the implicit meaning of a culture at a moment in time”, a narrative privileging social conditions. Indeed, by the early 1970s, when the formerly-married mother of three sons announced her homosexuality, her themes addressed self-revelation, feminism, love between females, war, patriarchy, anger, and capitalism. Some, like the poetry critic, Helen Vendler, consider Rich's work after 1973 to be, primarily, “Sociology” and “Politics”; however, even Vendler, a classicist who considers gender (and race) to be secondary to “temperament”, has demonstrated a consistent interest in the compelling nature of Rich's writing and themes. One of the characteristic themes of Rich's work is sexuality, discussed at length and not without criticism by Ostriker (Writing Like A Woman). Notwithstanding, at one point in the interview, Rich asks, “What about desire? How dangerous could it be?”, remarkable queries of import for all inquisitive readers, especially, perhaps, women.

Anne Charles, the only contributor who identifies as lesbian, acknowledges the effect of Rich's “vision” , especially, the impact of “lies, secrets, and silence” (see Rich's book of prose, 1979, of the same name). Other essays address education, social change, location, and the politics of motherhood, and some critics might classify Rich as a writer in the “politically Queer” tradition (see Maggie Nelson's 2015 book, The Argonauts) which has an uncomfortable relationship to maternity. Indeed, Rich's early writing often concerned the stresses associated with motherhood and other aspects of family life. Rich is, also, discussed as a “poet of dissent”, and in Writing Like A Woman, Ostriker points out that Rich writes about many types of “burning” (e.g., books, men, children, slavery, sexual loneliness).

In my opinion, the strongest essay is authored by Joshua Jacobs who proposes that we compare Rich's poetry with that of Claudia Rankine (see, Citizen: An American Lyric, 2014). Jacobs seems, particularly, impressed with the idea that both poets are “witnesses to social injustice”, women and blacks, respectively. A strong case can be made for Jacobs' perspective, and he has identified a new dimension of research on women's literature; although, it seems to me that Rich had a global, in addition to a local, perspective on violence and oppression, while one still searches for these connections and influences in Rankine's writing. I think that the most fundamental similarity between Rich and Rankine is their treatment of language, such that, Rich states, “This is the oppressor's language yet I need it to talk to you.” (Poems: Selected And New, 1975), while, similarly, Rankine says, “Perhaps the most insidious and least understood form of segregation is that of the word.” (Citizen). A final observation that may be important when comparing these female poets is that both would probably be considered conventional (“normative”) by current Queer Theorists (e.g., Judith Butler, Lee Edelman), making Jacobs' project even more significant to scholars and intellectuals. One hopes that Jacobs will expand his proposals, providing a template for other critics.

Although this Critical Flame Special Issue is an innovative and welcome initiative, two omissions cannot be overlooked and limit its utility. First, Rich's lesbianism, fundamental to her identity, “temperament”, politics, and writing, is, for all purposes, not mentioned in the contributions, including, Charles'. Even if this “lack” resulted because of prurience, it is unfortunate, at best, and the Editor might have added an essay to explore this aspect of Rich's personhood. Second, Rich's partner, the scholar, Michelle Cliff (now 68), is not mentioned in any of the issue's texts (including the interview and video). Rich and Cliff were a couple from 1976 until Rich's death and influenced each others' work. Cliff deserves the same acknowledgment as a spouse or significant colleague of other major figures would receive. In a 2010 interview with Julie R. Enszer on the Lambda Literary Blog, Cliff, a woman of color and a highly-trained Italian scholar who has been characterized as a practitioner of “resistance literature”, reported that she is working on a manuscript about the 18th Century Astronomer, Caroline Herschel. This project is, without question, a “love-symbol” (a phrase from one of Cliff's poems) to Rich whose famous poem, “Planetarium” (The Will To Change), is dedicated to Herschel. As a sign of Rich's devotion to Cliff, the reader is referred to Rich's poem, “The Spirit Of Place” (A Wild Patience Has Taken Me This Far, 1981). Despite my reservations, “The enduring power of Adrienne Rich” is recommended to readers as an important tribute to, as many critics would conclude, the premier female poet of her generation in America.
*Originally published in The Review Review, 2015









Tuesday, December 25, 2018

Constraints On Human Speciation (Clara B. Jones, 2013) [IN NEED OF REVISION]


Constraints On Speciation In Human Populations: Phenotypic
Diversity Matters
Clara B. Jones1*
Director, 1Mammals and Phenogroups (MaPs), Asheville, NC 28801, USA
*Corresponding Author. E-mail: foucault03@gmail.com Phone: -828-279-4429

ABSTRACT:
A phenotype is an expression of a genotype interacting with a component of an environment. Phenotypic diversity can be generated by mutation, physiological mechanisms, developmental processes, or learning (reinforcing and aversive stimulus-response effects). Causes and consequences of lifetime reproductive success can be partitioned into one or another of the previous mechanisms of phenotypic diversity. This article highlights, in particular, the ways in which behavioral diversity including cultural rules, enhances a phenotype’s relative reproductive success. Expanding Frank’s (2011) theoretical framework, it is argued that, while a diverse (e.g., “modular”) human phenotype may broaden a phenotype’s success in a given landscape, byproducts are produced that increase gene flow between populations, limiting the potential for population divergence and reproductive isolation. The mechanisms discussed herein are not necessarily dependent upon conscious and aware operations.

Key words: Homo sapiens; Behavioral flexibility; Collaboration; Cooperation; Fitness landscape; Gene flow; Multilevel societies; Open groups; Phenotypic diversity

INTRODUCTION:
In the Order Primates, thirteen extant genera are represented by a single species (Groves, 2001; Wilson & Reeder, 2005), indicating that mechanisms and processes characteristic of those taxa have delayed, interrupted, or prevented speciation events. Our own species, Homo sapiens, is one of the thirteen. A review of each genus in the set of thirteen reveals few commonalities. With the notable absence of insectivores, virtually all dietary strategies are represented (omnivore, frugivore-insectivore, folivore-frugivore, granivore). No pattern is detected when the thirteen single-species genera are compared for alpha- (α: within-habitat), beta- (β: between-habitat), or, gamma- (γ: geographic)-diversity (Pimm & Gittleman, 1992; Jones, 1997), the overwhelming ecological dominance of humans is unique. Four of the thirteen genera (31%) are nocturnal, and a mix of crepuscular, arboreal, and terrestrial habits is exhibited. Similarly, a broad range of socio-sexual structures is represented among these primate genera, for example, “solitary” (Mirza, giant mouse lemur), “monogamous” (Symphalangus, siamang), polygynous (Erythrocebus, patas monkey), multimale-multifemale (Oreonax, yellow-tailed wooly monkey), and “multi-level” (Theropithecus, gelada; humans).
Eight of the thirteen species (62%) are typically found in one habitat type or demonstrate a strong preference for same. The remaining taxa, including, humans, have been observed in several habitat types, making them good candidates for a number of comparative analyses (genomics, physiology, and behavior, as well as, population, community, and ecosystem ecology), . Significantly, cooperatively-breeding primates are not represented among the subset of thirteen (but, see, Allocebus, hairy-eared dwarf lemur). On the other hand, several genera, are distinguished by elaborate vocal repertoires (e.g., Lemur, ring-tail lemur; siamang; Homo), and all have one or more exaggerated anatomical or morphological features (e.g., pelage, coloration, genital structures), suggesting evolution by sexual selection, a controversial mechanism of speciation (“macroevolution”: Servedio & Kopp, 2012). Insufficient empirical data exist on the relative significance of historical geographical barriers to gene flow that might have facilitated the speciation process (Jones, 1987; Groves, 2001) or of the roles played by habitat specificity (“habitat selection”: Jones, 1997; but, see Erythrocebus) in limiting a genus to a single species, a condition obscuring patterns that may exist in Nature.
In the present paper, humans are highlighted in an attempt to identify both general and specific features constraining differentiation of their populations into interbreeding, reproductively-isolated units (“the biological species concept”: see Rundle & Boughman, 2010). Such analyses may contribute to our understanding of Homo sapiens as a “weedy”, invasive species, the most geographically and ecologically successful taxon among terrestrial vertebrates. Though many aspects of human biology are relatively well-known, the capacity of technological societies to maintain high population densities (high α-diversity), to successfully invade virtually all global habitats (high β-diversity), to modify their areal ranges (high γ-diversity), to utilize effective mechanisms of niche invasion and expansion (e.g., cooperation, social learning, fire, tools, migration, war), and to impose profound, deleterious effects on global biogeochemistry demand systematic treatments of hominin ecology, phylogeny, and evolution (Hill et al., 2011). Herein, a tentative attempt is made to identify selected human characteristics associated with interruption, delay, or prevention of reproductive (genetic) barriers (e.g., incompatible habitats, “isolation by distance”, pre- or post-copulation mate selection, or geographic barriers such as rivers, mountains, and soil gradients) sufficient to transition from between-population gene exchange, to (genetic) differentiation of populations (“population divergence”), to the creation of genetic barriers and a completed process of speciation. Behavior and social organization are likely to interest a significant proportion of this journal’s readers. Thus, the present discussion emphasizes phenotypic diversity and population structure, as well as, learning to explain the systematic status of Homo sapiens. This paper introduces a novel interpretation and application of the single-species status of extant Homo inferred from Frank’s (2013) treatment of the mechanisms “smoothing” a “rugged” fitness landscape. Questions regarding the nature of sub-species or racial identities in Homo sapiens are referred to Anthropologists.
Genetic differentiation within and between human populations: incipient speciation?
Genetic differentiation and, possibly, incipient speciation of human populations have been documented. Numerous studies exist identifying clusters (“neighborhoods”) of “single-nucleotide polymorphisms” (SNPs) in human populations, a pattern of results suggesting a past, possibly, continuing, process of adaptation to local abiotic (e.g., soil gradient) or biotic (e.g., plant gradient) regimes (“local adaptation”), a phenomenon similar to “habitat selection”. For example, Xing et al. (2009; also, see ISWG, 2001) identified “shared [genetic] variation” among 27 human populations in Africa, Asia, and Europe, including, “caste and tribal samples” in India, demonstrating a degree of genetic continuity across geographical regions. Further statistical analyses of “SNP microarrays” (“haplotypes”: closely-associated alleles on one chromosome), however, revealed genetic structure between sampled sites, and notably, most individual subjects were accurately assigned to the correct population. All individuals were accurately mapped to continents, though genetic structure was not detected for some “closely-related populations”. Xing et al. (2009) concluded that their results confirmed a statistically significant association between geography and genetics, including social sub-groups (“caste and tribal” sub-populations). Despite the strong patterns revealed by the previous study, it is important to note that the authors’ findings pertain to differences in genetic structure within and between populations, and do not specify the functions (genotypes expressed as phenotypes) of those discernible genotypes.
What mechanisms might determine genetic structuring and differentiation of human populations?
Fowler et al. (2011; also, see Henry et al., 2011; Brent et al., 2013) considered “genetic stratification” within and between human populations to be a function of mate selectivity or kin preferences. These authors investigated whether or not variations in specific genes were associated with social networks of “friends”, where friendship was defined as “stable, non-reproductive [non-sexual] unions”. Using microarray analyses, Fowler et al. (2011) demonstrated that one allele, DRD2, was associated with homophily (assortment of similar types), while, another allele, CYP2A6, was associated with heterophily (assortment of different types). The aforementioned study assessed virtually every possible interpretation and implication of the report, concluding, that “phenotypic similarities between individuals connected in a social network are reflected in their genotypes”. This hypothetical construct, derived from empirical data, advanced the idea that some social traits are correlated with genotype, an association requiring some direct or indirect mechanism of individual recognition. A straightforward extension of the Fowler et al. (2011; also, see Fu et al., 2012) report is that, where (genetically-correlated) homophily recurs over time, reproductive isolation of similar genotypes is expected to occur, that, left unimpeded, has potential to induce barriers to gene flow decreasing likelihoods of genetic “mixing” within and between populations. The latter scenario proposes a necessary, though not sufficient, condition for speciation to occur. The present paper addresses some of the behavioral mechanisms and processes limiting reproductive isolation and preventing speciation in Homo sapiens, emphasizing the ways in which human technology and other innovations (e.g., tools, fire, language, ritualized warfare) have ameliorated the potentially disruptive effects of “rugged” landscapes that might enhance a process leading to speciation.
The aforementioned extension of the research reported by Fowler et al. (2011) provides a plausible explanation for the latter authors’ findings as well as for the findings of Xing et al. (2009). The extension is amenable to quantitative (“individual”- or “agent-based”) modeling as well as empirical testing with opportunistic, “natural experiments” of concurrent mate choice/genotype trait analyses using human subjects in natural conditions. The “green beard effect” is a possible candidate as a sexually-selected mechanism of homophily, including, interindividual recognition (Brooks & Griffith 2010; Gardner & West, 2010), possibly an element of a primate social “toolkit”. For example, suggesting a mechanism for a “greenbeard effect”, Mahajan et al. (2011) identified “inter-group bias” (homophily) in Rhesus macaques (Macaca mulatta). These monkeys, residing in semi-natural conditions, discriminated between in-group and out-group members, demonstrating a reliable choice for particular individuals in their social groups.
Interindividual recognition of the sort reported by Mahajan et al. (2011) probably characterizes all primates whose brains categorize and compartmentalize information into simpler units (Sporns, 2011). Thus, it is no surprise that environmental patterns are classified systematically by a variety of rules, including similarity, proximity, or other assortative features (e.g., psychophysical operations: Matsuno & Fujita, 2009). Recent work by Yun et al. (2012) demonstrates another possible “green beard” (interindividual recognition) mechanism: synchrony of motor patterns between interacting individuals (e.g., gestures: Pollick & DeWaal, 2007; also, see Brooks & Griffith, 2010, Nagasaka et al. 2013). “Greenbeard” traits may be genetically correlated, and the latter in addition to other features (e.g., skin color, morphology) may have facilitated speciation in one genus (Macaca), but interrupted the process in humans, depending upon differential genotype x environment and phenotype x phenotype interactions..
For example, human groups may be more permeable than non-human primate groups, or humans may use a broader range of characters when making decisions about who to associate with. Furthermore, on average, humans may receive greater benefits from associating with different types compared to speciose primate genera. The latter case might be expected where intra-group competition is more intense than inter-group competition (West et al., 2002). Peculiar features of our species, then, may have broadened the areal effect of an individual’s reproductive success in “rugged” landscapes (“fitness landscape”), and phenotypes bearing these features are proposed to have directly or indirectly promoted gene flow within- and between-groups, -populations, and -regions limiting the potential for population divergence, reproductive isolation, and speciation. Other primate genera characterized by a single species are presumed to exhibit traits that spread because of their success in managing thresholds of intra-group competition, subsequently decreasing the likelihood of speciation events by facilitating gene flow, preventing reproductive isolation.
Notwithstanding evidence for clustering of genotypes within and between populations, human behavioral diversity appears to enhance gene flow
Using Frank’s (2011) theoretical framework, I posit that numerous genetically correlated or uncorrelated behavioral and social traits characteristic of human phenotypes mediated genotype-environment and phenotype-phenotype interactions (“reaction norms”). Human technological and other innovations (e.g., language, metacognition) are proposed to have increased the proportional area on an idealized (theoretical, multidimensional: Frank, 2011) or realized (a 3-dimensional abiotic and biotic environment: this paper) “landscape” upon which a genotype, expressed as a phenotype, is more reproductively successful relative to the mean lifetime reproductive success of other genotypes in a population. This perspective can be visualized by imagining a grid superimposed on a space subdivided into areas defined by shared features (e.g., a habitat, a watering hole, a grove of fruiting trees, other singular or clumped resources).
Frank’s (2011) treatment allows us to conceptualize a landscape on which reproductively successful phenotypic innovations generated and spread by mutation, developmental plasticity, or learning increased the proportion of cells on the grid upon which a phenotype is effectively successful. In other words, an individual’s “fitness landscape” will be, proportionally, increased relative to the mean fitness of others in a population not exhibiting the successful traits. In Frank’s (2011) terminology, the aforementioned process is a “smoothing” operation reflecting a phenotype’s capacities to decrease stressful environmental events where degrees of stress can be conceptualized as the extent to which the landscape approximates a very rugged (challenging) or a relatively even (less challenging) space in which to survive and reproduce.
Frank’s (2011) treatment suggests that phenotypic diversity will be induced by novel (e.g., disappearance of a limiting resource) or extreme (e.g., severe drought) environmental events and that responses may be genetic (mutation), cellular (physiological and developmental), or learned (by trial-and-error or by “Hebbian” association). Applied to humans, the present treatment posits that characteristics such as cooperation, tool use, the application of fire for processing food, the manufacture of clothing, language, long-distance dispersal, social learning, and the like, effectively switched an environment (“landscape”) from a stressful (difficult, dangerous, risky, extreme, novel), “rugged” one, to a less stressful, more even, or “smoother” one. Reproductively successful innovative human phenotypes, it is proposed, extended networks within- and between-groups and –populations, connecting networks to one or more resource patches, including, other human individuals and groups, thereby, broadening the effective spaces of phenotypes, decreasing deleterious consequences of environmental challenges for (relative) individual reproductive rates, growth rates of groups, and mean fitness of populations..
Traits characteristic of non-human primates and humans interrupt or prevent population divergence
Empirical examples drawn from the primate literature characterize Frank’s (2011) concept of mechanisms functioning to “smooth” a challenging (“rugged”) landscape. Analyzing species distribution patterns of black howler monkeys (Alouatta pigra) and Central American spider monkeys (Ateles geoffroyi) in Belize, Jones & Jost (2007) showed that black howlers, but not spider monkeys, had successfully traversed the Mayan Mountains/Cockscombe Range in southern Belize. Howler monkeys are adapted to a folivorous diet, an evenly distributed supply of food compared to fruit upon which spider monkeys are heavily dependent. As a consequence of the heterogeneous and often unpredictable availability of their food supplies, Ateles is expected to be more sensitive to environmental perpurbations (Terborgh & Winter, 1980). The ability to consume old leaves is thought to facilitate colonization (Jones & Jost, 2007), providing a relatively accessible food resource in most habitats, allowing flexible “switching” from howlers’ preferred diet (new leaves, flowers, fluit) to less nutritious and physiologically stressful foods (mature leaves) during periods when favored food items are unavailable or scarce (Milton, 1980; Crockett, 1998; Hamilton, 2010).
On the other hand, a diet of fruit presents many challenges because of its low nutritional value and patchy distribution (Terborgh & Winter, 1980; Fleming et al., 1987), factors that may limit or retard the geographical spread of species if appropriate food types or habitats are not encountered. This comparison demonstrates one behavioral mechanism, enhanced niche width, whereby the configuration of landscapes is modified by spatiotemporal effects. The capacity to process old leaves facilitated construction of a comparatively “smooth” landscape for the widely distributed, speciose, hardy genus, Alouatta. Another “smoothing” effect occasioned by a folivorous diet may be reduction of costs from predation, since toxins ingested from leaves may decrease the palatability of howler tissues, a hypothesis supported by one study’s findings that human hunters considered spider monkeys (frugivores) a tastier meat than that of howlers (Jones & Jost, 2007). Differential attractiveness, then, may “smooth” prey landscapes while increasing the ruggedness of predators’. However, the speciose genus, Alouatta, is considered to have differentiated via a process of dietary and geographical partitioning, or, possibly, hybridization (Bicca-Marques et al., 2008). Human adaptations, combined with learning capacities, including cultural exchange, presumably avoided many dietary challenges (e.g., fire, tools, weapons), outweighing deleterious effects, including, tradeoffs, that might have been associated with the innovations (e.g., increased inter-group competition).
Concepts advanced by Frank (2011) are implicit in field research conducted in Mexico by Chaves and his colleagues (2012; also, see Scherbaum & Estrada, 2013). These authors studied Ateles geoffroyi in two conditions of rainforest habitat, continuous canopy and fragmented patches, in order to compare and contrast utilization of available food resources. Consistent with expectation, niche width of monkeys inhabiting fragmented forest was wider than that for monkeys in undisturbed forest, including a higher proportion of leaves. Chaves et al. (2012, pp 109-111) concluded, “It is unlikely that [small fragment size] can maintain viable populations in the long term, they may function as stepping-stones [italics added], facilitating inter-fragment movements and, ultimately, enhancing seed dispersal in fragmented landscapes.” Combined, where necessary, with descent from trees and ground movement, increased niche breadth enhances the behavioral repertoire of spider monkeys, facilitating “initial survival of a genotype in response to novel or extreme environmental challenges, providing an opportunity for subsequent adaptation.” (Frank, 2011, pp 2318-2319). Additionally, variations in other non-human primate traits may function to “smooth” landscapes in feeding and foraging contexts, for example, body size (Wheatley, 1982), “time-energy [“fitness”] budgets” (Grueter et al., 2012), “decision and choice” (Scherbaum & Estrada 2012), social behavior among females (Hanya et al., 2008), “co-residence patterns” and other hunter-gatherer features (Hill et al., 2011), “egalitarian” and other prosocial tendencies (Gavrilets, 2012).
The previous paragraphs in this section presage human habits serving similar functions. Jones & Young (2004), for example, surveyed hunters in Belize, demonstrating that, among non-volant terrestrial or semi-terrestrial vertebrates, niche width varied with food availability, implying an opportunistic (“utilitarian”) strategy based on a hierarchy of preferences. Thirty-four hunters ranked their favorite prey, yielding eight vertebrate species, with paca (Agouti paca) reported to be the most favored bushmeat, “hicatee”, the Central American river turtle (Dermatemys mawii), the least. Prey characteristics (predominantly medium-sized, crepuscular or diurnal, and terrestrial) suggested that energetic factors influenced hunting behavior by Creole men at this site, possibly influenced by gustatory preferences, as suggested above. Indeed, paca’s rich, non-“gamey”-tasting flesh, is considered a national delicacy. Hunting practices of indigenous Belizeans are strongly influenced by cultural practices, in addition to economic ones (Jones & Young, 2004; also, see Wilkie & Godoy, 2001), consistent with Frank’s (2011) emphasis on phenotypic variation (e.g., niche breadth) and learning (e.g., imitation, observational learning, cultural rules) as factors “smoothing a fitness landscape with multiple peaks and valleys”. Combined with spatial “concentration and dispersion” of human populations facilitating the evolution of multilevel population structure, phenotypic diversity in humans broadens a phenotype’s success in a given landscape, while, concurrently, increasing gene flow between populations, effects limiting the potential for population divergence and reproductive isolation.
Humans benefit from phenotypic diversity and learning
Following Frank’s (2011) conceptual framework, the present article posits that numerous traits characterizing Homo sapiens served to decrease environmental challenges deleterious to lifetime reproductive success of individuals. These technological and other innovations, once spread through groups, populations, and regions via sex and social learning increased social and breeding networks, mitigating environmental and social challenges. Tanaka’s (1976) studies of the ≠Kade San (“bushmen”), hunter-gatherers in the Kalahari (southern African desert) clearly demonstrate ways in which a cultural innovation limits mortality and, by extension, enhances reproductive success. The ≠Kade San, comprised of mobile and mobile-subsistence units, inhabit a “marginal” environment characterized by drought (Tanaka, 1976, Fig. 4.1, p 105) and seasonal patterns of food availability (Tanaka, 1976, Fig. 4.2, p 108), a spatiotemporal regime not unlike the heterogeneous environments in which humans are thought to have evolved (Hill et al., 2011). On one occasion, Tanaka (1976) observed chacma baboons (Papio ursinus) foraging in the Kalahari, noting that this primate’s home range was limited by their inability to cross arid land. This researcher compared the monkeys’ habits with those of the ≠Kade San, capable of inhabiting the extreme desert environment as a result of digging through the soil surface to locate and utilize the limiting resource. This cultural practice permits a “band” to expand inherent capacities, “smoothing” effects decreasing likelihoods of sub-lethal or lethal outcomes, and increasing the likelihood of contacts with other “bands” (see below). Such phenotypic diversity is expected to impact individual life-histories (survival and mortality), enhancing mean fitness of populations via increased reproductive rates (Frank, 2011), with consequent effects on higher levels of ecological organization (communities, ecosystems, biomes).
Bands” of “bushmen” from a variety of cultural groups share the desert environment, sometimes interacting with one another (cf. Lee, 1976, Map 3.2, p 85; Map 3.3, p 87; Map 3.4, p 93; also, see Tanaka, 1976; Hill et al., 2011). These flexible land-use patterns (“spatial organization”), limited by availability of water, are one component of a “rugged landscape”, ensuring relatively frequent contact with other cultural groups. As Tanaka’s (1976; also, see Lee’s chapter in the same volume) chapter highlights, fluid patterns of interaction increase potential for conflicts which the bands prevent or resolve via cultural innovations such as reciprocity, cooperation, common ceremonies, and the like, minimizing conflict and aggression, permitting shared access to resources, cooperative manufacture of tools and weapons, and overlapping ranges. Though Tanaka’s (1976) report does not address the nature of intimate relations among “bands” (see Lee, 1976), transfer of individuals between groups and opportunities for sexual congress probably occurred, leading to gene flow sufficient to prevent reproductive isolation and speciation events. This scenario is consistent with the interpretations of hunter-gatherer data reviewed by Hill et al. (2011).
The evolution of human prosocial behaviors and constraints on speciation
Two recent papers provided a detailed empirical review of “co-resident patterns in hunter-gatherer societies” (Hill et al., 2011) and a preliminary quantitative (mathematical) treatment of “the egalitarian syndrome” characterizing Homo sapiens (Gavrilets, 2012; see Crook, 1971). Hill et al. (2011) analyzed datasets for 32 extant hunter-gatherer societies with a mean “band” size of 28.2 individuals. These authors documented a profile including bisexual dispersal from natal groups, similar to other apes and Neotropical Atelines. Though opposite-sex [adult] siblings resided, with some frequency, in the same reproductive unit, group membership comprising non-kin prevailed across “bands”. Patterns of kinship and group architecture resulting from dispersal, resulted in nested networks of relatives and non-relatives from “bands” embedded in local (“patch”) contexts to higher levels of sociosexual organization. These “multilevel” (“hierarchical”) societies exhibited relatively “open” structures, permitting selective immigration and emigration, and have been described for other mammalian taxa (e.g., some cetaceans, elephants, geladas; Hamadryas baboons, Papio hamadryas).
In “hierarchical” and other complex societies, problems associated with temporal and spatial coordination and control must be managed, and the theoretical literature on “scheduling” indicates that such challenges are solved via within- and between-group “queuing” (Andrews, 2004; also, see Alberts et al., 2003; Fruteau et al., 2013). Within- and between-levels, hunter-gatherers exhibit a broad array of mechanisms, effectively, (1) increasing the similarity of shared fitness optima (“fitness-sharing”: Sareni & Krähenbühl, 1998) and (2) decreasing asymmetries (“egalitarian syndrome”: Gavrilets, 2012). Hill et al. (2011), and most other students of human behavior and social organization (e.g., Crook, 1971; 1972; Eibl-Eibesfeldt, 1989; West et al., 2006), characterize these mechanisms as one or another manifestation of “cooperation” (and/or collaboration). However, despite the benefits provided by cooperation, queuing, and similar features in many conditions, limits on “prosocial” behavior in humans must, also be addressed (Jones, 2005a, b; Burton-West et al., 2006; Chellew & West, 2013).
The two aforementioned mechanisms are consistent with Frank’s (2011) “smoothing” paradigm, operating to “solve” environmental challenges, to repress selfishness and competition, to enhance access to resources, and to decrease inter-individual and inter-group conflicts. In these instances, social traits benefiting a conspecific’s fitness are posited to limit morbidity and mortality, as well as to enhance relative reproductive rates compared to benefits that might accrue from alternative, selfish interactions (e.g., “non-damaging” and “damaging” aggression). Discussing hunter-gatherer “spatial organization”, Lee (1976) employed maps to show how patterns of “concentration and dispersion” promote inter-unit cooperation (“reciprocal access to resources”), flexible access to abundant and scarce resources via communication networks, and conflict-management via “social” separation. Lee (1976) found that “concentration and dispersion” increased unit size, on average, an effect that he showed was correlated with higher rates of population increase.
Clustering of “bands” at “patchy” sources of water and food may have induced social competition, leading to social selection favoring the evolution of collaboration, cooperation and behavioral diversity (e.g., social learning, imitation, tool use). Increased inter-individual contact with associated gene flow would be a byproduct of this model, discussed using primate examples, by Crook (1971, 1972; also, see Lee, 1976; Tanaka, 1976; Yellin, 1976). As a result, likelihoods of gene flow between reproductive units (“bands”) would increase, decreasing rates of population divergence and opportunities for speciation events. The fitness strategies discussed in this paragraph constitute adaptive mechanisms responding to environmental challenges, transforming a rugged landscape to a smoother one, enhancing lifetime reproductive success of individuals. Interpretations of the literature advanced in this article are testable empirically and quantitatively, and initial agent-based treatments might be conducted employing the data presented in Hill et al. (2011). It would also be beneficial to compare populations and regions exhibiting high, moderate, and low degrees of genetic differentiation in an attempt to discern similarities and differences among humans and their networks in each condition. For instance, is network strength greater or lesser across these conditions, and do these conditions and their features correlate with measures of success (e.g., income, education, rules governing immigration and emigration).
DISCUSSION
Frank’s (2011) treatment of the ways in which phenotypic diversity and phenotypic novelty serve individual interests by facilitating lifetime reproductive success provides a schema that can be applied to most human tactics and strategies. In particular, the model permits researchers to evaluate the extent to which human responses to environmental challenges promote problem-solving in a variety of ways. The mechanisms addressed herein, as well as other responses not discussed (altruism, spite, role-reversal, facultative division-of-labor), are expected to facilitate the individual’s avoidance, circumvention, delay, or confrontation with challenges sufficiently severe, risky, rare, or difficult to compromise lifetime reproductive success, including, the effects of morbidity and mortality. Mortality records for extant hunter-gatherers require quantitative treatments since humans are iteroparous breeders with a typical litter-size of one, characteristics associated with predictable environments in which adult survivorship is uncertain (Stearns, 1982; Millar & Zammuto, 1983). Breeding positions of individuals in mammal groups with the aforementioned characteristics are generally precarious (Millar & Zammuto, 1983), and the diverse phenotypic adaptations and novelties reviewed herein may increase environmental predictability by increasing individuals’ abilities to cope with stressors.
Following Hill (1976), humans appear to combine iteroparity with a high fertility rate and notably high “reproductive effort”. This combination of traits is not usually associated with mammals in heterogeneous (“rugged”) regimes (Millar & Zammuto, 1983). Similarly, most mammals are poor colonizers, and social mammals are generally constrained by their dependence upon conspecifics and group life (Cody, 1986), challenges that humans have overcome via the “concentration and dispersion” spatiotemporal patterns and multilevel societies described by Lee (1976), Tanaka (1976), Yellin (1976), and others (Hill et al. 1976), in combination with rule-governed repression of selfish behavior (“culture”). Investigating patterns of juvenile and female mortality should reveal relative survivorship, indicating whether or not “bet-hedging” strategies were featured among early Homo. This information, once modeled, may expose in greater detail thresholds of reproductive benefits that may have accrued to humans from responses designed to solve problems presented in lethal or sub-lethal regimes, mechanisms with byproducts decreasing likelihoods of reproductive isolation and the potential for speciation. Finally, students of mammalian taxa exhibiting noteworthy phenotypic diversity (e.g., mammals exhibiting multilevel social organization) must bear in mind that “plastic” traits will not yield the highest relative fitness in many regimes (Jones, 2005a, 2005b; Pigliucci, 2010, Frank, 2011, pp 2312-2313). Thus, differential reproductive costs and benefits of genotype x environment interactions require systematic investigation for the human case.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS:
I am grateful to Steven A. Frank for commenting on an earlier version of this paper. Jesse Marczyk’s extensive critique significantly improved the manuscript.

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Citation: Jones CB. 2013. Constraints On Speciation In Human Populations: Phenotypic Diversity Matters. Hum Bio Rev, 2 (3), 263-279.