Prehistory Meetings: Bruna Tadolini

Prehistory Meetings: Bruna Tadolini

The second of the PREHISTORY MEETINGS on Friday 21 March 2025.
Brown Tadolini, author of the text Female Evolution: The Contribution of Females to Human Evolution

Bruna Tadolini graduated in Biological Sciences in Bologna and completed her university career first at the Faculties of Medicine and Pharmacy of this University and then at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Sassari.
She dedicated herself to scientific research, also carrying out activities abroad at the Ben May Laboratory for Cancer Research (University of Chicago).
She is the author and co-author of 76 scientific publications in international journals, many of which are the result of research projects funded by both national and European funds.
She has carried out teaching activities holding courses in Biochemistry, Molecular Biology; furthermore, she was Director of the School of Specialization in Clinical Biochemistry, Coordinator of the PhD in Biochemistry and of the PhD in Biochemistry, Biology and Molecular Biotechnology at the University of Sassari.
A science communicator, she has held conferences on topics related to Biology and, in particular, evolution.
In 2017 he published the book Female Evolution: The Contribution of Females to the Evolution of Homo Sapiens, Publisher Pendragon.

Why did we move from a primitive society in which females were worth a lot to an “evolved” society in which females are worth very little and are simply breeders of a commodity that is abundant and used as work meat in times of peace or for slaughter in times of war? Is there a biological reason for this subordination?