TABOO AND GENETICS 171 



A voluminous literature which stated the virtues 

 and duties of the Model Woman blossomed 

 out in the latter part of the eighteenth and first 

 half of the nineteenth century. (43.) The 

 Puritan ideals also embodied this concept. It 

 was by this attempt to make woman conform 

 to a standardized ideal that man sought to solve 

 the conflict between his natural human instincts 

 and desires and the early Christian teaching 

 concerning the sex life and womanhood. 



BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR CHAPTER II 



1. Frazer, J. G. The Golden Bough. A Study in Magic 



and Rehgion. Part I. The Magic Art. 2 vols. 

 Macmillan. London, igii. Part V. Spirits of 

 the Com and of the Wild. 2 vols. London, 1912. 



2. Farnell, L. R. Evolution of Religion. 235 pp. 



Williams and Norgate. London, 1905. Crown 

 Theological Library, Vol 12. 



3. Frazer, J. G. Part IV. of The Golden Bough ; Adonis, 



Attis, and Osiris. Chaps. Ill and IV. Macmillan. 



London, 1907. 

 Sumner, W. G. Folkways. 692 pp. Ginn & Co. 



Boston, 1907. Chap. XVI, Sacral Harlotry. 

 Lombroso, Cesare, and Lombroso-Ferrero, G. La 



donna dehnquente. 508 pp. FrateUi Bocca. 



Milano, 1915. 



4. Farnell, L. R. Sociological Hypotheses Concermng 



the Position of Woman in Ancient Religion. Archiv 

 fiir Religions wissenschaft. Siebenter Band, 1904. 



5. Fowler, W. Warde. The Rehgious Experiences of the 



Roman People. 504 pp. Macmillan. London, 1911. 



6. For a description of these sibyls with a list of the works 



in which they are mentioned, see : 



