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Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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Nama (Papua New Guinea) ... New Guinea: high population leads to depletion of resources ... New Guinea: male hunters, warriors. monopolize meat (pork) Malnutrition: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies


1
Women's Status in Agricultural Societies
  • Text extracted from
  • Our Kind
  • By Marvin Harris

2
(No Transcript)
3
Men are larger, stronger than women
  • Women 4.6 inches shorter than men on average
  • Women have lighter bones and more fat
  • Women 2/3 to 3/4 as strong as men

4
Men specialized in hunting large game
  • Men were the big game hunters in 95 of
    band-and-village societies
  • Male advantage in height, weight, brawn in use of
    hand-held hunting weapons
  • Women less mobile when pregnant, lactating
  • hunt smaller game, gather food (majority of diet)

5
Men usually specialists in weapons
  • Men monopolized lethal weapons since paleolithic
    times
  • spears
  • bow and arrows
  • harpoons
  • clubs
  • boomerangs
  • Men thus more dangerous, and more coercive in
    conflict
  • "I'm a man.  I've got my arrows.  I'm not afraid
    to die" -- !Kung hunter

6
Men trained to be warriors
  • Warriors aggressive and fearless
  • More capable of hunting and killing other human
    beings without pity or remorse
  • Women warriors only significant in recent times
    with firearms not muscle powered
  • In Band and village societies, the more warfare
    there was, the more women suffered from male
    oppression.

7
Amount of war correlates to oppression of women
8
Bands of hunters and gatherers
  •  !Kung (Kalahari desert, Africa) have little
    warfare
  • Low population density hunters and gatherers
  • Women have almost equal status as men

9
Aborigines (Australia) 
  • More warfare between bands
  • Fairly low population density hunters and
    gatherers
  • Captives from war cooked, eaten mostly women and
    children
  • Males get best food
  • Men beat or kill wives for adultery
  • Wives cannot do the same to men for adultery

10
Aborigine Women
  • Aboriginal women do all the hard work
  • Gather fruits, dig roots, chop larvae out of
    tree-stems
  • Carry child on shoulders whole day
  • Prepare food beating, roasting, soaking fruits
    and roots
  • Makes hut, gathers materials
  • Provide water and fuel
  • Women carry all baggage when travel including
    children
  • Men only carry light weapons, out in front when
    travel

11
Village Societies of Agriculturalists
Yanomami (Rainforest of Brazil, Venezuela)
  • Boys train for war at early age, learn cruelty by
    practicing on animals
  • Raids between villages common 33 males die from
    armed combat
  • competition for resources due to population
    pressure
  • Polygynous
  • men can have many wives
  • Wives beat or maimed for disobedience or adultery

  • burned , ears chopped off

12
Village Societies of Agriculturalists
Nama  (Papua New Guinea)
  • Male initiation cult trains men as warriors
  • and to dominate women
  • Warfare between villages rampant
  • competition for resources due to population

13
Nama (Papua New Guinea)
  • Males given bride at initiation
  • shoot her in the thigh with arrow
  • to demonstrate "unyielding power over her"
  • Women work in gardens, raise pigs, do all dirty
    work
  • Men stand around gossiping

14
Nama  (Papua New Guinea)
  • "Women were severely punished for adultery by
    having burning sticks thrust into their vagina,
    or they were killed by their husbands they were
    whipped with a cane if they spoke out of turn or
    presumed to offer their opinions at public
    gatherings and were physically abused in marital
    arguments. 
  • Men could never be seen to be weak or soft in
    dealings with women.  Men do not require specific
    incidents or reasons to abuse or mistreat women
    it is part of the normal course of events
    indeed, in ritual and myth, it is portrayed as
    the essential order of things." 
  • --Daryl Feil, University of Sydney

15
Why Intense Warfare in Agricultural Village
Societies?
  • New Guinea high population leads to depletion of
    resources
  • Forests depleted, burned, replaced by fields
  • yams and pork replace wild animals and plants
  • Selection for warfare take over neighboring
    resources

16
Male Domination in Agricultural Village Societies
  • Male domination leads to female infanticide
  • Females can't become warriors
  • sex ratios skewed toward males
  • Female infanticide ultimately lowers population
    growth rate

17
Male Domination of Food
  • New Guinea male hunters, warriors
  • monopolize meat (pork)
  • Malnutrition
  • especially women, children and older men
  • Women and children
  • Eat more insects, frogs, mice, placenta, maggots


18
Patrilocality
  • Patrilocality  women leave their family, village
    and move in with man's family
  • Allows male raiding parties to be made up of
    blood relatives 
  • trust in combat teams
  • But who will look after land when men away? 
  • Women
  • especially sisters loyal

19
Matrilocality
  • Matrilocality men leave their family, village
  • move in with woman's family
  • Occurs in some chiefdoms where men gone on long
    raiding parties
  • up to a year
  • Example Iroquois
  • Women were in charge of home and fields
  • harvesting and storing crops
  • Women in longhouse could withhold food for men's
    raids
  • if didn't approve

Iroquois longhouse
20
Matrilocality
  • Women's power not the opposite of mens
  • not equally cruel or humiliating.  Why?
  • Not because women less vicious
  • women often participate in torture
  • Women cannot boss and degrade men
  • when men have the weapons of war and warrior
    training.

Mohawk Warrior
21
Large Stratified Societies
  • Effect of warfare less direct
  • most men not trained to be warriors
  • Most men unarmed peasants
  • also terrified of professional warriors

22
Type of Agriculture affects women's status
  • West Africa
  • Agriculture not dependent on men
  • Women empowered
  • North India
  • Mens strength required for plowing
  • Women unempowered
  • South India
  • Women control agriculture
  • Women empowered

23
West Africa
  • Yoruba, Ibo, Igbo, and Dahomey peoples
  • Women's status strong
  • can own fields and crops
  • Dominate local market
  • Acquire wealth from trade
  • Short-handled hoe used in agriculture
  • No animal-plowed fields due to tse-tse fly
  • Therefore women not dependent on men for
    agriculture

24
West Africa
  • Men must pay bride-price to get married Women
    valuable
  • Male polygyny only with permission of senior wife

  • Women participate in village councils and high
    state office
  • Women mobilize as group to seek redress against
    mistreatment by men

25
North India
  • Men have monopoly on ox-drawn plows
  • Greater body strength 15-20 more efficient than
    women
  • Advantage may mean difference between survival
    and starvation
  • Even young men not strong enough to plow all day

  • short window of weather opportunity for plowing

26
North India
  • Female infanticide common
  • Dowries from women required for marriage
  • Widows powerless sometimes throw themselves on
    husbands funeral pyre
  • Increasing incidence of intentional acid
    spraying

Acid Burn Victim, Bangladesh
27
South India (Kerala)
  • Rice paddy agriculture doesn't need men's
    strength
  • Women in charge of much agriculture
  • Women have more freedom, status, social power
  • True in other rice producing areas of Southeast
    Asia, Indonesia
  •  

28
How did male dominance evolve in large
agriculture societies?
  • Men in charge of large plow animals
  • Men thus drive animal-drawn carts when wheel
    invented, in charge of trade

29
How did male dominance evolve in large
agriculture societies?
  • Men thus in charge of bookkeeping, records
  • Men thus became the scribes, accountants,
    literate
  • Men thus became the philosophers, theologians,
    and mathematicians

30
How did male dominance evolve in large
agriculture societies?
  • Men also controlled warfare
  • Men thus gained control over governments and
    state religions

31
  • "At the dawn of modern times men dominated
    politics, religion, art, science, law, industry,
    commerce, and the armed forces wherever people
    depended on animal-drawn plows for their basic
    food supply"
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