Title: Gender and Social Stratification
1Gender and Social Stratification
2Gender and Anthropology
- interest in hierarchical relations between men
and women has been a feature of anthropology
since its earliest days - 19th century evolutionists and their explanations
for the rise of culture - promiscuous horde gives way to socially organized
marriage and kinship, for example
3Gender and Anthropology
- anthropology of gender has been key in
establishing that sexual inequality is not a
biological fact but instead and cultural and
historical one
4development of the study of sex, sexuality and
gender in anthropology
- Anthropology of Women early 1970's attention to
the lack of women in standard ethnographies - Anthropology of Gender challenged the basis for
understanding social roles of male and female - Feminist Anthropology challenged the biological
basis of sex and sexuality - and the foundations of anthropology as it had
been done
5SEX, SEXUALITY, GENDER
- not the same thing
- all societies distinguish between males and
females - a very few societies recognize a third, sexually
intermediate category
6SEX
- differences in biology
- Socially culturally marked
- the body is "simultaneously a physical and
symbolic artifact, both naturally and culturally
produced, anchored in a particular historical
moment" (Scheper-Hughes Lock)
7The Four Bodies
- Individual body
- The social body
- The body politic
- The mindful body
8The Individual Body
- lived experience of the body-self, body, mind,
matter, psyche, soul
9The Social Body
- representational uses of the body as a natural
symbol with which to think about nature, society,
culture
10The Body Politic
- regulation, surveillance, control of bodies
(individual collective) in reproduction
sexuality, in work leisure, in sickness other
forms of deviance
11The Mindful Body
- the most immediate, the proximate terrain where
social truths and social contradictions are
played out - a locus of personal and social resistance,
creativity, and struggle - emotions form the mediatrix between the
individual, social and political body, unified
through the concept of the 'mindful body.'
12SEXUALITY (reproduction)
- all societies regulate sexuality
- lots of variation cross-culturally
- degree of restrictiveness not always consistent
through life span - adolescence vs. adulthood
- Varieties of normative sexual orientation
- Heterosexual, homosexual, transexual
- Sexuality in societies change over time
13GENDER
- GENDER - the cultural construction of male
female characteristics - vs. the biological nature of men women
- SEX differences are biological - GENDER
differences are cultural - behavioral attitudinal differences from social
cultural rather than biological point of view
14GENDER ROLES, STEREOTYPES, STRATIFICATION
- gender roles - tasks activities that a culture
assigns to sexes - gender stereotypes - oversimplified strongly held
ideas about the characteristics of men women
third sex-third gender - gender stratification - unequal distribution of
rewards (socially valued resources, power,
prestige, personal freedom) between men women
reflecting their position in the social hierarchy
15universals versus particulars
- universal subordination of women is often cited
as one of the true cross-cultural universals, a
pan-cultural fact - Engels called it the world historical defeat of
women - even so the particulars of womens roles,
statuses, power, and value differ tremendously by
culture
16Friedl and Leacock argument
- variation among foragers
- male dominance is based on exchange, public
exchange - versus that exchanged privately by women
- Exchange of scarce resources in egalitarian
societies, gender stratification, and universal
subordination of women
17DOMESTIC - PUBLIC DICHOTOMY (M. Rosaldo)
- opposition between domestic (reproduction)
public (production) provides the basis of a
framework necessary to identify and explore the
place of male female in psycho, cultural,
social and economic aspects of life - degree to which the contrast between public
domestic (private) sphere is drawn promotes
gender stratification-rewards, prestige, power
18domestic sphere
- clearly drawn in societies where division of
labor encompasses more than age sex
differentiation (complex societies) - inequality in material rewards for labor
- less clearly drawn in societies where division of
labor beyond age sex is minimal (egalitarian) - rewards are highly valued social roles with
prestige rather than material goods
19Domestic Public Spheres
- mobility gender
- Domestic public dichotomy not only
distinguishes activities, but culturally encodes
space
20M. Rosaldo and the Ilongot of the Philippines
- positive cultural value placed adventure, travel,
knowledge of experience with the outside world - Ilongot men as headhunters visited distant
places, amassed experiences returned to express
their knowledge-receive acclaim - Ilongot women - these activities not available to
them
21Mobility, Public Domestic (Private), and Gender
Straitification
- mobility not just through geographic space but
social space (forms of association) - veiling Islamic women
- factory women in Malaysia
- US Canada - WW2 factory women for war effort
- 1960s, 70s, 80s - changing gender composition of
economy
22persistence of dualisms in ideologies of gender
- a particular view of men and women as opposite
kinds of creatures both biologically and
culturally - nature/culture
- domestic/public
- reproduction/production
23Reproduction and Social Roles
- roles - those minimal institutions and modes of
activity that are organized immediately around
one or more mothers and their children - women everywhere lactate give birth to children
- likely to be associated with child rearing
responsibilities of the home
24Production and Social Roles
- roles - activities, institutions, and forms of
association that link, rank, organize, or subsume
particular mother-child groups
25a long running controversy in anthropology
- Sherry Ortners famous article Is Female to Male
as Nature is to Culture - argument is that across cultures, women are more
often associated with nature and the natural and
are therefore denigrated - Ortner - in reality women are no further nor
closer to nature than men - cultural valuations
make women appear closer to nature than men
26The Third Gender
- essentialism of western ideas of sexual
dimorphism - dichotomized into natural then
moral entities of male female that are given to
all persons, one or the other - committed western view of sex and gender as
dichotomous, ascribed, unchanging - other categories - every society including our
own is at some time or other faced with people
who do not fit into its sex gender categories
27The Third Gender
- a significant number of people are born with
genitalia that is neither clearly male or female - Hermaphrodites
- persons who change their biological sex
- persons who exhibit behavior deemed appropriate
for the opposite sex - persons who take on other gender roles other than
those indicated by their genitals
28Third Gender Western Bias
- multiple cultural historical worlds in which
people of divergent gender sexual desire exist - margins or borders of society
- may pass as normal to remain hidden in the
official ideology everyday commerce of social
life - when discovered - iconic matter out of place -
"monsters of the cultural imagination - third gender as sexual deviance a common theme in
US - evolution religious doctrine
- heterosexuality the highest form, the most moral
way of life, its natural
29Third Gender Cross-Culturally
- provokes us to reexamine our own assumptions
regarding our gender system - emphasizes gender role alternatives as
adaptations to economic and political conditions
rather than as "deviant" and idiosyncratic
behavior - rigid dichotomozation of genders is a means of
perpetuating the domination of females by males
and patriarchal institutions.
30THEORIES OF GENDER INEQUALITY
31F. Engels
- theory of the origin of female subordination
- tied to the male control of wealth
- built on 19th cent. assumption of communal
societies as matrilineal - men overthrew matrilineality formed patriarchal
family leading to monogamous family - differential ownership of wealth led to
inequality within the family thus between the
sexes - gender differences arose from technological
developments that led to changes in relations of
production
32E. Leacock - (expands on Engels)
- subjugation of women due to breakdown of communal
ownership of property isolation of individual
family as economic unit - transformation of relations of production
- Association of female labor with domestic unit or
private sphere - male production directed towards distribution
outside the domestic group (public sphere) - occurs with development of private property
class society
33K. Sacks
- political power that results from the ability to
give receive goods in exchange (redistribution) - allows for sexual stratification in non-class
societies
34Sanday Reeves
- female status dependent on degree to which men
women participate in activities of reproduction,
warfare, subsistence
35Friedl and Leacock
- not rights control over production but rights
of distribution control over channels of
distribution critical for gender stratification
36RETHINKING SUBORDINATION
- Ardener - muted models that underlie male
discourse - diversity of one life or many lives
- gender roles, stereotypes, stratification
- changes over time
- changes with position in lifecycle
- status of men women i.e. in male dominant
societies - decision making roles belong to men but as women
reach menopause change with marriage status,
virgins, wives, widows (and men)
37RETHINKING SUBORDINATION
- women, like men, are social actors who work in
structured ways to achieve desired ends - formal authority structure of a society may
declare that women are impotent irrelevant - but attention to women's strategies motives,
sorts of choices, relationships established, ends
achieved indicates women have good deal of power - strategies appear deviant disruptive
- actual components of how social life proceeds