In Undoing Monogamy Angela Willey analyzes the contemporary science of monogamy, demanding a critical reorientation toward understandings of monogamy in the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities. Refusing to answer the naturalization of monogamy with a naturalization of non-monogamy, Angela Willey is deeply committed to biosocial and biocultural approaches to understanding the phenomenon of pair bonding, love, and affect. She shows how monogamy is entangled with the politics of race and nation, visits a neuroscience lab that researches monogamous voles, examines scientific and cultural debates about polyamory and efforts to naturalize non-monogamy, and reads the work of Alison Bechdel and Audre Lorde to provide queer feminist ways to reconsider monogamy. Throughout this radically interdisciplinary book, Willey illuminates how challenging the lens through which human nature is seen as monogamous or non-monogamous forces us to reconsider our investments in coupling and in disciplinary notions of biological bodies.