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Title: Lecture 4 on Nature


1
Lecture 4 on Nature
  • People in the Land, Land in the People

2
Things
  • Artifact Presentation/s Begin this week
  • Reminder you may choose your own artifact,
    especially if you want to do your mid-term paper
    on it and/or if you already know about it for
    example, one student will present on the social
    artifact, JEANS, because she knows about it and
    wants to do her mid-term paper on this.
  • Artifacts are distributed to the students ONE
    WEEK (on the Monday) before their presentation
  • Syllabus Correction
  • Reading for next week Wednesday, January 30
  • SMUO Bye, C.G. (2004). I like to hoe my own row
    A Saskatchewan farm womans notions about work
    and womanhood during the great depression.
    Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies, 25 (3),
    135-167. It should read 26. Apologies.

3
  • This is Leap Year Sadie Hawkins Day, February 29
  • Chinese Baby Calendar
  • Paper You can either write it knowing there are
    strong gender implications OR just start writing
    about something and if there are gender
    implications, explore them, but dont force the
    issue and exhaust yourself in looking for
    something that just isnt there. If you couldnt
    find any, mention it in your paperthat is a
    finding.
  • Paper ideas
  • Inventions and discoveries wheel, fire,
    cartography
  • Personal reflections on your place in nature as
    you grew up.
  • Gender IN nature Survivor and other TV shows,
    including Medicine Woman Gilligans Island
  • Final Exam Ill be giving you explicit guidance
    about sections of the articles you should be
    familiar with.

4
Today
  • Participation Marks Recalling your own
    experiences of the nature-culture assumption
  • Discussion CP Strathern, M. (1995). No nature,
    no culture The Hagen case. In C. MacCormack and
    Marilyn Strathern (Eds.), Nature,Culture and
    Gender (pp. 175-222). New York, NY Cambridge
    University Press.

5
THE MUDDY WATERS OF GENDER, SEX, AND NATURE
6
  • Layers of meaning
  • - We are not raised in a social vacuum many
    ideological forces at work

7
Some say culture is the opposite of nature.What
do you think?What is/where is culture?Consider
some ideological forces in the following?
8
  • www.kellogg.northwestern.edu

9
(No Transcript)
10
  • cubswin5 (1) 02/27/2007 Canada's best
    contribution to society. 0 comment(s) - Reply to
    this Review - Email to a Friend
  • An Americans entry in a chat room on The TP
    Boys. (www.rateitall.com)

11
Is there an idea of a natural cultural ideal
here?
  • (www.nancarrow-webdesk.com )

12
Some definitions
  • CULTURE      The generally shared knowledge,
    beliefs and values of members of society. Culture
    is conveyed from generation to generation through
    the process of socialization. While culture is
    made up of ideas, some sociologists also argue
    that it is not exclusively ideational but can be
    found in human-made material objects. They define
    a separate "material culture". This distinction
    appears weak, since human-made material objects
    must embody human ideas. Culture and social
    structure are considered as the two key
    components of society and are therefore the
    foundation concepts of sociology.
    (socialsciencedictionary.nelson.com)
  • Socialization Learning the patterns and
    behaviours of a cultures way of life.
  • Culture  The totality of learned, socially
    transmitted behavior.(highered.mcgraw-hill.com)

13
  • All too often, natural landscapes, including
    animals and raw materials, are NOT included in
    definitions of culture or the ways we think about
    culture and our gender/sex/sexuality norms.

14
Your Nature-Culture Timeline
  • Handout participation marks
  • Think back to your relationship with what we take
    for granted as the natural world
  • Start plotting on the timeline, writing words to
    represent what brought you into that world or
    kept you out of it
  • Think about school trips, parties, summer
    camp/cottages, when you first started driving,
    rituals/initiations, summer jobs

15
TODAYS READING to help us 1. read between the
lines for research assumptions around gender,
nature, and culture 2. cultural comparison of
the nature-culture divide Strathern, M.
(1995). No nature, no culture The Hagen case. In
C. MacCormack and Marilyn Strathern (Eds.),
Nature, Culture and Gender (pp. 175-222). New
York, NY Cambridge University Press.
  • Papua New Guinea Highlands
  • Hagen People as you read this article, what
    ideas did you form about their culture, their
    natural world?
  • Was it this?Or this?
  • Or this?
  • Or this?
  • What were the assumptions you made?
  • How would you describe your culture to others?

16
  • Strathern offers us an ethnographic perspective
    of how the Hagen people of these Highlands
    symbolize/make meaning of their culture according
    to two pairs of contrasts wild and domestic AND
    male and female.
  • Consider how you learn about opposites
  • School games like
  • Hot potato where teachers line up children in
    girl boy girl boy patterns
  • Songs and Books for children
  • Parties
  • Chat Rooms
  • Drawing from the conclusions of other researchers
    on the topic, Strathern also considers whether it
    is the people, themselves (the experts in their
    own reality D. Smith), who are making that
    meaning, or if those studying them are
    constructing meanings not intended to be there in
    that culture.

17
Strathern does a meta-analysis to grapple with
those two pairs of contrastsor at least what
westerners consider contrasts
18
For example, Strathern draws from Langness
  • It seems plain that the distinction between the
    domestic and the wildis widespread in the New
    Guinea Highlands (p. 174).
  • Does this seem reasonable? That is, did you
    believe it when you read it?

19
Another example, Strathern draws from Lindenbaum
on what we consider domestic and wild
  • The dichotomy between domestic and wild has to
    do with control and safety which comes from
    regulation and management, in contrast to the
    danger which lies in the uncontrolled,
    unpredictable, and unregulated. Just as South
    Fore groups depend on regulated access to forest
    resources, so they depend on regulated access to
    womenWomens sexuality is the dangerous wild
    which men must bring under control (p. 175)
  • Domestic versus wild
  • Controlled versus uncontrolled
  • Predictable versus unpredictable
  • Regulated versus unregulated
  • Men versus forests/wild
  • Men versus women/wild

20
Strathern shows that researchers like Langness
and Lindenbaum make many assumptions
  • They assume universal concepts of nature and
    culture
  • What makes a concept universal?

21
Strathern suggests
  • A non-western wild-domestic dichotomy triggers
    off an interpretation in terms of
    natureculture in the presence of explicit
    themes of environmental control or of malefemale
    symbolism.
  • It is even arguable that a male-female
    distinction in western thought systems plays a
    crucial role as symbolic operator in certain
    transformations between the terms
    nature-cultureaccounting for absurd
    extrapolations that we were talking about
    nature-culture (p. 176) (original emphasis)
  • During our first class, we considered what
    naturalness and unnaturalness werelast week, we
    jolted the commonsense views about doing gender
    and doing sexuality
  • Do Womens Studies programs, or courses such as
    Psychology of Women further the dichotomy between
    genders? Or, do they play a role in a better
    understanding?

22
  • Strathern illustrates (p. 177) two problems in
    research
  • 1. Researchers gaze through their own biases
  • 2. These biases not only are in the form of
    assumed categories, such as male and female, but
    those labels contain assumptions about what is
    essential or inherent about the people falling
    into those categories

23
Strathern raises concerns about the
natureculture dichotomy evident in western
ideology
  • 1. There is no such thing as nature or culture.
    Each is a highly relatived concept (p. 177). Do
    you agree? In whose interest is it to have
    categories called nature and culture?
  • 2. Social sciences themselves commonly employ
    certain constituents of the nature-culture
    matrix, including those concerned with ecological
    systems and their environments. This
    perpetuates otherness (p. 177). She claims that
    this otherness has created and maintained
    anthropology.

24
  • 3. We ascribe certain attributes as human
    nature. Then, we divide that into categories
    such as animal nature through an
    anthropomorphic lens (p. 178). A real animal
    Sex Kitten others?
  • 4. We often accept that history is built on how
    humans have adapted in their geographical
    environments (p. 179). What would sociology look
    like if men gave birth?

25
  • 5. We consider culture as something man made
    out of nature, and nature as something there to
    be moulded. This can be dangerous when women
    are considered to be closer to nature (p. 180).
    Why?
  • 6. We assume that men and women are two halves of
    the whole human species (p. 182). Weve learned
    last week that there are more than two genders.
  • At Saint Marys University, what are women that
    men are not? What are men that women are not? See
    the mud?

26
  • 7. In order for the categories of Men and Women
    to function in society, we need to constantly
    shift the definition of what it means to be male
    and female (p. 183).
  • This means we are always shifting meaning within
    cultural norms.
  • What are your parents occupations? Your
    grandparents occupations? in just one
    generation, a lot has changed. Why?

27
  • 8. Strathern notes that Levi-Strauss claims the
    contrast of nature and culture should be seen as
    an artificial creation of culture (p. 187).
  • Dorothy Smith believes that we are each experts
    of our own reality. What, then, is reality if we
    construct it artificially?
  • Is there, then, anything real about reality?

28
  • 9. For many in the westernized world, gender is
    given the instant we are born if not before.
  • For the Hagen people, gender is used symbolically
    .
  • Mbo in general terms, things that are planted,
    bred, growing, a clan.
  • Romi in general terms, wild nature, including
    control.
  • These are not generally opposites in Hagen
    culture. Women and men are considered sometimes
    more social than wild and vice versa.

29
But, even the Hagen have their opposites in
symbolism, though not always necessarily positive
or negative as we might think
  • (p. 204)
  • MALE FEMALE
  • Wealth, oratory Poverty speechlessness
  • Prestigious Rubbish
  • Transaction Production
  • Public Domestic
  • Clan Family
  • Social interest Self-interest
  • Life Death
  • Wild Domesticated
  • Birds Pigs

30
Stratherns Conclusion
  • We cannot assume that other cultures dichotomies
    between female and male are parts of the same
    whole that we think of in the west.
  • For example, Hagen categories of female and male,
    wild and domestic, and so on do not always and
    necessarily correspond to what we consider as
    those cultural norms.

31
Next class reading
  • CP Archer, R.L. (1964). Jean Jacques Rousseau
    His educational theories selected from Emile,
    Julie, and other writings (pp. 217-235). New
    York, NY Barrons Educational Series, Inc.
  • Be perturbed.
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