
Ashley Montagu Books PDF
(0)
Books number: 12
Explore all available books and works by Ashley Montagu , including popular novels, complete collections, and translated titles. This page is regularly updated with new releases and featured works.
Ashley Montagu was a British-born American anthropologist, author, educator, and public intellectual whose work helped shape twentieth-century conversations about race, human development, gender, touch, aggression, and the social foundations of personality. Born Israel Ehrenberg in London in 1905 and later known professionally as Ashley Montagu, he became widely recognized for bringing anthropology beyond the university and into public debate, using science as a tool to challenge prejudice and defend human dignity. His career was rooted in physical anthropology, but his writing consistently moved across disciplinary boundaries, drawing on biology, psychology, sociology, education, medicine, philosophy, and cultural history. Montagu’s most influential book, Man’s Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race, remains closely associated with his lifelong opposition to racism and racial determinism. In that work, and in many essays and lectures, he argued that “race” as commonly used in politics and popular culture was a misleading and harmful category, one that had been used to rationalize inequality rather than to explain human diversity accurately. His approach reflected a broader humanist conviction: human beings are not reducible to inherited labels, and scientific language must not be allowed to disguise social injustice as natural fact. Montagu also attracted wide attention for The Natural Superiority of Women, a provocative book that questioned entrenched assumptions about sex, gender, strength, intelligence, and social roles. Whether readers agreed with every argument or not, the book demonstrated his willingness to confront inherited beliefs and to use accessible prose to push public conversation in new directions. Among his other notable works are Touching: The Human Significance of the Skin, The Elephant Man: A Study in Human Dignity, The Direction of Human Development, and writings on childhood, love, aging, aggression, and cooperation. A recurring theme across these books is the idea that human beings are profoundly shaped by care, affection, social learning, and cultural environment. For Montagu, the infant’s need for touch, the child’s need for nurture, and the adult’s need for meaningful connection were not sentimental topics; they were central facts about human biology and civilization. His prose combined scholarly range with direct moral urgency, making his books useful for students, researchers, teachers, and general readers interested in anthropology, social justice, psychology, and the history of ideas. Montagu studied in Britain and the United States and engaged with major currents in modern anthropology, especially those that resisted simplistic biological explanations of human difference. He taught, lectured, wrote prolifically, and became a familiar public voice in mid-century intellectual life, appearing in media discussions and contributing to debates on education, family life, race relations, and human nature. His reputation rests not only on his academic knowledge but also on his ability to translate that knowledge into arguments that mattered outside the academy. He wrote at a time when the misuse of science had helped justify colonialism, segregation, eugenics, and fascism, and he insisted that responsible science must expose rather than reinforce such myths. Ashley Montagu’s legacy is therefore both scholarly and ethical. He remains an important author for readers seeking clear, humane, and historically significant writing about what it means to be human, how societies create difference, and why compassion, learning, and cooperation are essential to any serious understanding of human life.
1706
English
The Natural Superiority of Women
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1501
English
On Being Human
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1460
English
Science and Creationism
Ashley Montagu
Thematic articles
(0)
1434
English
The Elephant Man: A Study in Human Dignity
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1422
English
Touching: The Human Significance of the Skin
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1421
English
The Nature of Human Aggression
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1406
English
Man's Most Dangerous Myth: The Fallacy of Race
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1401
English
Race and IQ
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1297
English
Growing Young
Ashley Montagu
Human Development
(0)
1255
English
The Dehumanization Of Man
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)
1011
English
Darwin: Competition & Cooperation
Ashley Montagu
Anthropology
(0)