The Archaeology of Gender

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The Archaeology of Gender

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Title: The Archaeology of Gender


1
The Archaeology of Gender
  • Man the Hunter, Woman the Gatherer?

2
Humans as Primates
  • Primates Prosimians, Monkeys, Apes and Humans
  • Unique human characteristics
  • Habitual Bipedalism
  • Brain-culture complex (tools, society and
    language)
  • Lack of estrus in females
  • Naked-no body hair

3
Homo habilis
4
Man the Hunter
  • Theory of human origins, first presented in the
    late 1950s
  • Major Points of Argument
  • Most primates are omnivores only humans hunt
    animals larger than themselves
  • Human traits adaptive for male hunting
  • Bipedalism endurance, display
  • Brain-culture complex tools to aid male hunting
    Society male bonding behavior
  • Language teaching male hunting skills to young,
    communication during hunt
  • Lack of estrus/sexual dimorphism women less able
    to hunt full-time pair bond for the female to a
    male provider
  • Nakedness related to the importance of sex and
    sexual symbols in male-female relations

5
Critique of Man The Hunter
  • Female dependence based on modern biases
  • In many societies men are involved in caring for
    the young
  • Pregnancy is not a debilitating state modern
    bias
  • Ignores womens role in socialization
  • Ignores importance of gathering
  • No biological reason why men hunt, not women
  • Problems with early hunting sites
  • Could be evidence of scavenging carnivore kills,
    not hunting

6
Man the Hunter?
7
Woman the Gatherer
  • Alternative theory of human evolution
  • Bipedalism women had to walk long distances in
    gathering frees hands
  • Brain-culture complex tools directly related
    to female gathering Society related from
    female sharing
  • Language important for social communication for
    gathering
  • caring and sharing model base camps
  • Lack of Estrus byproduct of bipedalism
  • Nakedness women control sex
  • Essentially, basic androcentric arguments of
    the Man the Hunter Model, can all be turned on
    their head

8
Point of Example
  • Not to explain human evolution as either due to
    male, or to female, contributions to subsistence
    (probably both equally important)
  • Point is to illustrate the pervasive tendency for
    androcentric explanations of the human past
  • Up until the critical period in the 1980s, most
    explanations of past human behavior either
    ignored gender, or emphasized male behaviors over
    female
  • 1980s increasing trend towards gendered
    archaeology, as well as feminist archaeology

9
Gender in Archaeology
  • Sex male vs. female biological differences
  • Male larger, stronger, more aggressive (?)
  • Female more gracile, child bearing
  • Gender social differences based on sex
  • Men and Women different social roles
  • Not limited to only two genders
  • Nature of those roles are largely arbitrary, but
    do take into account biological differences

10
Gender in Archaeology
  • Most basic social relations based on
  • Gender
  • Kinship (itself a result of relations between
    genders)
  • Any archaeological reconstruction of past social
    relationships has to take gender into account or
    it is incomplete, or worse, biased and inaccurate
  • How to approach gender archaeologically
  • Iconography representations of gender
  • Material Culture define gender-associated
    artifacts or areas on a site
  • Mortuary Analysis identify differential burial
    treatments for different genders

11
Iconography Women in the Neolithic
  • Marija Gimbutas (1960s-1970s)
  • Focusing on female figurines of Neolithic and
    Copper Age, southeast Europe and Anatolia
  • Argued that figurines reflect female status
  • Peaceful, feminine values
  • Fertility, goddess-based religions
  • Example Çatalhöyük evidence of cooperative
    social organization based on female principles
  • Peaceful societies of Neolithic replaced by
    male-dominated bronze age societies with
    masculine deities and typical male values
  • War, aggression, social repression, hierarchy

12
Neolithic Goddess Figures
13
Critique of Gimbutas
  • Gimbutass work an important, early attempt to
    emphasize female contributions to past societies
  • But, has been heavily critiqued and is now
    largely discounted
  • Ian Hodder (Çatalhöyük) female figurines argues
    that the figurines express the objectification
    and subordination of women
  • Images faceless, lack any identity
  • Numerous lines of evidence that Neolithic period
    characterized by as much if not more warfare and
    violence as later prehistoric periods
  • Fortifications weapons skeletal evidence of
    violent death

14
Critique of Gimbutas
  • Gimbutas, a priori logic found goddess religions
    wherever she looked, regardless of evidence
  • Bull Hornsvulva, uterine symbolism (turning a
    probable male symbol into a female goddess since
    it fits her theory better that way)
  • Lynn Meskell (feminist anthropologist)
  • As biased as androcentric recreations of the past
  • historical fiction
  • Reifies many of the modern biases that a gendered
    archaeology should be criticizing
  • Polar dichotomy between male and female
    oversimplified even in our own society

15
Material Culture Women in the Ancient Andes
  • Joan Gero (1980s-present)
  • Highlands of Peru
  • Early Intermediate Period (EIP), ca. 200 BC-AD
    600
  • Pre-Inca, contemporary with North American
    Early-Middle Woodland, European Iron Age/Roman
    Period
  • Beginnings of social complexity in region (simple
    hierarchy)
  • Developing technology (copper, textiles, ceramics)

16
Women in the Ancient Andes
  • Queyash Alto (highland Peru)
  • Several rooms, courtyards
  • Three activity areas, one domestic, two
    non-domestic
  • Domestic area high status (exotic artifacts) and
    female oriented
  • Copper tupu pins (associated with women in
    later Inca Period)
  • Spindle whorls (cloth production traditionally
    female in region)
  • Female burials only
  • Non-domestic area evidence of feasting practices
    (vessels, food remains) also of beer storage and
    production
  • Interpreted as venue for social feasting in
    competitive political climate, where status was
    related to ability to conduct such feasts
  • High status males and females both actively
    involved (depicted in equal status on ceramics)

17
Queyash Alto
18
Andean Women
Spindle Whorl
Copper Tupu
19
Women in the Ancient Andes
  • Geros interpretation
  • Complex gender interactions involved in origins
    of political complexity in pre-Inca Peru
  • Female roles especially important as evidence of
    high-status female spaces in EIP structures, and
    importance of female-produced products (cloth,
    beer)

20
Gender and Mortuary Archaeology
  • Gender is one major social role that is often
    symbolized in mortuary treatments
  • Often only situation where potentially
    gender-specific artifacts are associated with
    individuals of identifiable sex
  • Must distinguish what potential burial artifacts
    or treatments are associated with gender, as
    opposed to age, status etc.
  • Must beware of potential for bias (applying ones
    own view of gender on past burials)
  • Problem for all of gender analysis in archaeology
  • Also tendency to misidentify female skeletons as
    male

21
Mortuary Analysis The Princess of Vix
  • Iron Age Celtic Burial (roughly contemporary
    with Hochdorf)
  • Eastern France, 5th century BC
  • Skeletal remains obviously female
  • Artifacts in burial typically associated with
    male burials for that period
  • Initially interpreted as Transvestite Priest
  • Inconceivable that a woman would have had such
    artifacts and such a rich burial
  • Bettina Arnold reexamines artifacts, burial
    assemblage, confirms female sex
  • Argues that Vix points to potentially high female
    status in what has usually been thought of as a
    masculine culture, pre-Roman Celtic Europe
  • Questions whether bipolar gender distinctions
    are appropriate for that period (previous
    interpretations obviously based on modern bias)

22
The Princess of Vix
The Tomb
23
The Princess of Vix
The Artifacts
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