Patriarchy (anthropology)
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Patriarchy (from Greek: patria meaning father and arché meaning rule) is the anthropological term used to define the condition where male members of a society tend to predominate in positions of power; with the more powerful the position, the more likely it is that a male will hold that position. The term "patriarchy' is distinct from patrilineality and patrilocality. "Patrilineal" defines societies where the derivation of inheritance (financial or otherwise) originates from the father's line; a society with matrilineal traits such as Judaism, for example, provides that in order to be considered a Jew, a person must be born of a Jewish mother. "Patrilocal" defines a locus of control coming from the father's geographic/cultural community. In a matrilocal society, a woman will live with her father and/or brothers after marriage, and those males will hold a higher influence on the women's offspring to the detriment of the children's father. Most societies are predominantly patrilineal and patrilocal,[verification needed] however all societies have been patriarchal.[verification needed][citation needed] Britannica claims that there have been many attempts to disprove this but that the consensus is that it is unsupported by evidence;[1][unreliable source?] instead a peer reviewed anthropological article, reviewing current literature on the subject, says that drawing from anthropological studies, it can now be concluded that "patriarchy is not a universal feature of human societies."[2]
Human societies can be described in anthropology in terms of being patriarchal, matriarchal or equiarchal (where gender is unrelated to attainment) systems. Most known societies have been defined as patriarchal by some researcher[citation needed], varying in the degree that the society allows variance from the norm.
Despite the paucity of evidence for the existence of matriarchal societies and the worldwide preponderance of patriarchal ones[citation needed], anthropologists have documented cases of egalitarianism, such as in Vanatinai.[3][4][5] Such cases disprove the claim that patriarchy is universal. Furthermore, the use of discreet, dichotomous categories (such as patriarchy and matriarchy) is in decline among anthropologists today since these categories are incompatible with the overlapping and sometimes contradictory gender ideologies and gendered practices existing in many societies.[6]
Still, the majority of the higher economic, political, industrial, financial, religious, and social positions of the world today are held by men. There are no known exceptions to this rule recognized by the American Anthropological Association. Anthropologist Donald Brown has claimed patriarchy to be a "human universal" (Brown 1991, p. 137), which includes characteristics such as age gradation, personal hygiene, aesthetics, food sharing, rape, and other sociological aspects, claiming that patriarchy is innate to the human condition.
All advanced industrial societies are variations of patriarchy.[citation needed] In countries such as Saudi Arabia, patriarchy is distinctly visible, and in the European nations patriarchy remains the underlying social structure[citation needed] in spite of some changes creating wider possibilities for both women and men. In both cultures, men still dominate public life.[citation needed] In Marxist cultures, there has also been an attempt to create an impression of egalitarian organizations based on gender equality.
In China, for example, the National People's Congress consists of an equal number of men and women. There are, however, no women within the ruling Politburo of the Communist Party of China. Prior to its dissolution, the Soviet Union's Congress of People's Deputies likewise consisted, by law, of equal numbers of men and women. However, the successor Russian Duma, which unlike the predecessor Congress actually has power and is not a rubber-stamp organization, presently has only 35 woman deputies among the 450 members.[7]
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[edit] History
According to English language professor Robert M. Strozier, historical research has not yet found an "initiating event" of the origin of patriarchy.[8] Strozier in his work notes the logical consequence of such missing.[verification needed]
Several researchers outside the field of anthropology have accepted the absence of matriarchy within history.[citation needed] However, others outside anthropology have speculated, contra anthropological consensus,[citation needed] that six thousand years ago (4000 B.C.E.), that the notion of fatherhood was "invented" making possible the "spread" of patriarchy.[9][10] [11] [12]Feminist[citation needed] writers have also supported the analysis of ancient societies as patriarchal.
Already in 3100 B.C.E. of Ancient Near East, some scholars see evidence of sexual domination on women, a restriction on their reproductive capacity, and their exclusion from "the process of representing the construction of history".[8] With the appearance of the Hebrew cult, there is also "the exclusion of woman from the God-humanity covenant".[8][13]
Neo-Marxist scholars have argued that the global emergence of patriarchy as a seemingly hegemonic pattern of social organization is a function of the capitalist mode of production[14], while structuralists have attributed it to a universal tendency for societies to organize themselves around a binary of nature/culture that is mirrored in an opposition between female and male, the former being subjugated to the latter as nature is thought to be subjugated to culture.[15] However, this structuralist position has been revised[16], as evidence against the universality of gender inequality has surfaced.[17][18][19]
The worldwide preponderance of patriarchy[citation needed] is also often linked, among the others mentioned above, with the Kurgan hypothesis, by now widely accepted among scholars. At present, however, the historical reconstruction of this phenomenon remains contested among scholars.[citation needed]
[edit] Definition
Anthropological studies now defines patriarchy as a multidimensional condition of power/status. Whyte's 1978 comprehensive study examined 52 indicators of patriarchy, to which corresponded 10 relatively independent dimensions. The ten dimensions are:[20][21]
- (lack of) property control by women
- power of women in kinship contexts
- value placed on the lives of women
- value placed on the labor of women
- domestic authority of women
- ritualized female solidarity
- absence of control over women's marital and sexual lives
- absence of ritualized fear of women
- male-female joint participation in warfare, work, and community decision making
- women's indirect influence on decision makers
[edit] Appendix
Patriarchies in dispute
| This article or section may contain unpublished synthesis of published material that conveys ideas not attributable to the original sources. See the talk page for details. (November 2007) |
This appendix provides one table and one list. The table shows all patriarchal societies that have been alleged at one time or another to be matriarchal. The list gives, where available, quotes from the anthropologists who originally studied them (ethnographers). In nearly every case it is clear from what the women and men who studied them report, that the societies were patriarchal not matriarchal, even before changes brought by contact with western culture. What some of the societies do typify, however, is matrilinearity or matrilocality, not matriarchy, because of clear features of male dominance. This is the evidence that verifies the statements made by Encyclopaedia Britannica, Margaret Mead, Cynthia Eller and Steven Goldberg elsewhere in this article, and has been mainly located using their bibliographies. There are a lot of cultural groups in this appendix. No bias is intended against the more than 1,000 uncontroversially[citation needed] patriarchal cultural groups, nor against the few matrilocal or matrilineal cultural groups not mentioned here.
[edit] Table
| Autonym | Continent | Country | Marriage | Property | Government | Ethnographer | Date | F/M |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alor | Asia | Indonesia | patriarchy | Cora du Bois | 1944 | female | ||
| Bamenda | Africa | Cameroon | patrilocal | only Kom matrilineal | patriarchy | Phyllis Kaberry | 1952 | female |
| Bantoc | Asia | Philippines | patriarchy | Albert S Bacadayan | 1974 | male | ||
| Batek | Asia | Malaysia | patrilocal | patriarchy | Kirk Michael Endicott | 1974 | male | |
| Boyowan | Australasia | Papua New Guinea | patrilocal | matrilineal | patriarchy | Bronisław Malinowski | 1916 | male |
| Bribri | North America | Costa Rica | matrilocal | matrilineal | patriarchy | William Moore Grabb | 1875 | male |
| Çatalhöyük | Asia | Turkey | na | na | na | James Mellaart | 1961 | male |
| Chambri | Australasia | Papua New Guinea | patriarchy | Margaret Mead | 1935 | female | ||
| Filipino | Asia | Philippines | patriarchy | Chester L Hunt | 1959 | male | ||
| Gahuku-Gama | Australasia | Papua New Guinea | patriarchy | Shirley Glasse (Lindenbaum) | 1963 | female | ||
| Hopi | North America | United States of America | matrilocal | both | patriarchy | Barbara Freire-Marreco | 1914 | female |
| Iban | Asia | Borneo | both | neither | patriarchy | Edwin H Gomes | 1911 | male |
| Imazighen | Africa | North Sahara | patriarchy | George Peter Murdock | 1959 | male | ||
| Iroqois | North America | North East North America | matrilocal | matrilineal | patriarchy | Lewis Henry Morgan | 1901 | male |
| Jivaro | South America | West Amazon | patriarchy | R Karstan | 1926 | male | ||
| Kenuzi | Africa | Sudan | patriarchy | Ernest Godard | 1867 | male | ||
| Kibutzim | Asia | Israel | neither | neither | patriarchy | Judith Buber Agassi | 1989 | female |
| !Kung San | Africa | Southern Africa | patriarchy | Marjorie Shostak | 1976 | female | ||
| Maliku | Asia | India | separate | matrilineal | patriarchy | Ellen Kattner | 1996 | female |
| Minangkabau | Asia | Indonesia | both | patriarchy | PJ Veth | 1882 | male | |
| Naxi | Asia | China | only Mosuo separate | only Mosuo matrilineal | patriarchy | Joseph Francis Charles Rock | 1924 | male |
| Nayar | Asia | India | patriarchy | E Kathleen Gough | 1954 | female | ||
| Tlingit | North America | United States of America | matrilocal | matrilineal | patriarchy | Aurel Krause | 1885 | male |
| Wemale | Southeast Asia | Indonesia | patriarchy | Adolf E Jensen | 1939 | male | ||
| Woorani | South America | Ecuador | patriarchy | John Man | 1982 | male | ||
| Yegali | Africa | Madagascar | na | na | na | na | na | na |
[edit] See also
- Anthropology
- Antifeminism
- Chinese patriarchy
- Gender role
- Homemaker
- Masculinity
- Nature versus nurture
- Pater familias
- Patriarch magazines
- Patriarchs (Bible)
- Sociology of fatherhood
[edit] External links
- Regional Masculinities Bibliography Project
- Cattle ownership makes it a man's world New Scientist (1. October 2003): Early female-dominated societies lost their power to men when they started herding cattle, a new study demonstrates
- Debate Between Mark Ridley and Steven Goldberg on the The Inevitability of Patriarchy
[edit] References
- ^ Britannica 2007.
- ^ Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood (2002) p.711
- ^ * Lepowsky, Maria. 1993. Fruit of the Motherland: Gender in an Egalitarian Society. New York: Columbia University Press.
- ^ Ortner, Sherry. Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture. Bonston: Beacon, 1996.
- ^ Du, Shanshan. Chopsticks Only Work in Pairs: Gender Unity and Gender Equality Among the Lahu of Southwest China. Columbia UP, 2002.
- ^ Ortner, Sherry. Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture. Boston: Beacon, 1996.
- ^ http://www.eng.yabloko.ru/Forums/Main/posts/1376.html
- ^ a b c Strozier, Robert M. (2002) Foucault, Subjectivity, and Identity: : Historical Constructions of Subject and Self p.46
- ^ SEBASTIAN KRAEMER B.A., M.R.C.P., F.R.C.Psych (1991) The Origins of Fatherhood: An Ancient Family Process Family Process 30 (4), 377–392. doi:10.1111/j.1545-5300.1991.00377.x
- ^ Wilhelm Reich [1936] The Sexual Revolution
- ^ Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood (1999) The Origins of Sex Differences in Human Behavior: Evolved Dispositions Versus Social Roles American Psychologist, v54 n6 p408-23 Jun 1999
- ^ Ehrenberg, 1989; Harris, M. (1993) The Evolution of Human Gender Hierarchies; Leibowitz, 1983; Lerner, 1986; Sanday, 1981
- ^ Lerner, Gerda (1986) The Creation of Patriarchy 8-11
- ^ Leacock, Eleanor. Myths of Male Dominance: Collected Articles on Women Cross-Culturally. New York: Monthly Review Press, 1981.
- ^ Ortner, Sherry. Is Female to Male as Nature is to Culture? In M Rosaldo and L Lamphere, eds. Woman, Culture, and Society. Stanford: Stanford UP, 1974, pp.67-87.
- ^ Ortner, Sherry. So, Is Female to Male As Nature is to Culture. Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture. Boston: Beacon, 1996, pp.173-180.
- ^ Lepowsky, Maria. 1993. Fruit of the Motherland: Gender in an Egalitarian Society. New York: Columbia University Press.
- ^ Ortner, Sherry. Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture. Bonston: Beacon, 1996.
- ^ Du, Shanshan. Chopsticks Only Work in Pairs: Gender Unity and Gender Equality Among the Lahu of Southwest China. Columbia UP, 2002.
- ^ Wood and Eagly 2002, p.711-2
- ^ Whyte (1978) The status of women in preindustrial societies
- Alice H. Eagly and Wendy Wood (2002) A Cross-Cultural Analysis of the Behavior of Women and Men: Implications for the Origins of Sex Differences [1] Psychological Bulletin 2002, Vol. 128, No. 5, 699–727
- Brown, Robert. (1991). Human Universals. Philadelphia: Temple University Press
- Mead, Margaret. (1950). Male and Female, Penguin, London.

