Updated On: 07 May, 2023 10:30 AM IST | Mumbai | Jane Borges
A new book takes us through the complex history of male domination, and why it’s also vulnerable to change

Tribal Khasi maidens dressed in traditional costume in Shillong, Meghalaya. The Khasi people are matrilineal. Pic/Getty Images
Science journalist Angela Saini’s spirit of enquiry is unceasing. And for good reason. When in 2017 she wrote Inferior: How Science Got Women Wrong, there was a chapter that looked at male domination and “the idea that this is how things have always been”.
Saini tells mid-day over a video call from New York “that this is a widely held view... That there is something in our biology that led to societies becoming the way they are now. But, there is very little evidence to back this. Anthropologists quite universally agree that humans haven’t always been patriarchal in the way that we are now.”