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Women's Status in Agricultural Societies Text extracted from Our Kind By Marvin Harris http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/ 512HK3QSD3L._SL160_OU01_SS160_.jpg

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Women's Status in Agricultural Societies. Text extracted from Our Kind By Marvin Harris. http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512HK3QSD3L._SL160_OU01_SS160_.jpg. Women’s Status. Women have less status than men in agricultural societies Social Political Economic Educational Religious - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Text extracted from

Our Kind

By Marvin Harris

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/512HK3QSD3L._SL160_OU01_SS160_.jpg

Page 2: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Women’s Status

• Women have less status than men in agricultural societies– Social– Political– Economic– Educational– Religious

• Two main causes– Men dominate weapons and war– Men dominate plow-based

agriculturehttp://img.dailymail.co.uk/i/pix/2007/11_02/muslimDM1511_468x310.jpg

Page 3: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

http://www.geocities.com/MotorCity/Factory/1940/wood2.jpg

Page 4: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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)

http://www.alaskool.org/LANGUAGE/manytongues/Images/Hunter.jpg

Page 5: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 http://www.museum.state.il.us/muslink/nat_amer/pre/images/dmm_p02_200.jpg

Page 6: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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. http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/06/Assyrian_spearman_%C2%B7_HHWI469.svg/300px-Assyrian_spearman_%C2%B7_HHWI469.svg.png

Page 7: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Oppression of Women

• Amount of war correlates to the oppression of women

http://www.rrtraders.com/Shields/kikuyu-tribe.jpg

Page 8: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Bands of hunters and gatherers:

•  !Kung– Kalahari desert, Africa

– Low population density hunters and gatherers

• Little warfare• Women have almost equal

status as men

http://www.der.org/films/images/kung-instrument.jpeg

Page 9: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 – Double standard

http://theology1.tripod.com/images/aborigines.jpg

Page 10: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

                                                                     

Page 11: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Village Societies of Agriculturalists

• 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

Yanomami (Rainforest of Brazil, Venezuela)

Page 12: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Village Societies of Agriculturalists

• Male initiation cult trains men as warriors – and to dominate

women

• Warfare between villages rampant: – competition for

resources due to population

Nama  (Papua New Guinea)

New Guinea warriors http://www.infobrasil.org/fotos/fotos/Corel/images/1218.jpg

Page 13: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

http://www.world-traveler.eu/travels-papua-new-guinea-Dateien/papua-new-guinea-highlands-warrior.jpg

New Guinea Warrior

Page 14: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

Page 15: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 http://www.theage.com.au/ffximage/2006/09/17/18W_PNG_narrowweb__300x334,0.jpg

Page 16: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

http://www.infobrasil.org/fotos/fotos/Corel/images/1208.jpg

Page 17: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

http://www.ebible.org/mpj/gallery/MamaNaPikininiLongBulal.jpg

Page 18: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Patrilocality

• Patrilocality: – women leave their family,

village – 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: loyalhttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/b/b8/Orma_Village_Kenya.jpg/800px-Orma_Village_Kenya.jpg

Page 19: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

http://www.historyforkids.org/learn/northamerica/before1500/history/pictures/tiogapointmuseum.jpg

Page 20: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 Warriorhttp://dsccrafts.com/ProductImages/_american_indians/51872_Mohawk_Warrior_Pg3_WEB.jpg

Page 21: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Large Stratified Societies

• Effect of warfare less direct: – most men not trained

to be warriors

• Most men unarmed peasants – also terrified of

professional warriors

Page 22: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

Type of Agriculture affects women's status

• West Africa– Agriculture not dependent

on men– Women empowered

• North India– Men’s strength required

for plowing– Women unempowered

• South India– Women control agriculture– Women empowered

http://www.thp.org/activist/105/hoe500.jpg

Page 23: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

West Africa

• People:– Yoruba, Igbo, and Dahomey

• Women's status strong: – can own fields and crops – Dominate local market – Acquire wealth from trade

• No animal-plowed fields– due to tse-tse fly – Short-handled hoe used in farming – Therefore women not dependent

on men for agriculture http://www.hobotraveler.com/blogphotos01/207-266-hoe-farming-africa-girl.jpg

Page 24: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

Page 25: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 http://www.gonomad.com/tours/0512/images/india-plowing.jpg

Page 26: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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 sprayingAcid Burn Victim,

Bangladesh

http://news.bbc.co.uk/media/images/36204000/jpg/_36204440_acidvictimbbc300.jpg

Page 27: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

South India

• 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– Southeast Asia, Indonesia

  http://frank.itlab.us/India_2002/dec_25_planting_rice.jpg

Page 28: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

How did male dominance evolve in large agriculture societies?

• Men in charge of large plow animals – From ancient times

• Men thus drive animal-drawn carts when wheel invented– In charge of trade

                                   

                                      

http://www.greathall.com/photoalbum/photos/itl_plow.jpg

Page 29: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

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

Page 30: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

How did male dominance evolve in large agriculture societies?

• Men also controlled warfare

• Men thus gained control over governments– and state religions

Page 31: Women's Status in Agricultural Societies

"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"

http://www.visitingdc.com/images/george-washington-picture.jpg http://thescroogereport.files.wordpress.com/2007/07/pope.jpg

http://www.smh.com.au/ffximage/2004/05/25/michelangelodavid,0.jpghttp://www.fourmilab.ch/documents/figures/einstein.png http://richmondthenandnow.com/Images/Famous-Visitors/Thomas-Jefferson-big.jpg

http://a.abcnews.com/images/WNT/ap_bill_gates_060921_ssh.jpg http://img.slate.com/media/1/123125/2158911/2159086/2159087/070221_CL_HitlerEX.jpg