2654:7
Table of Contents
Feminist anthropology and kinship
Feminist anthropology and kinship
Ryan Schram
ANTH 2654: Forms of Families
10 September 2015
Available at http://anthro.rschram.org/2654/7
Lecture outline
- The matrilineal puzzle, according to Audrey Richards.
- Why is this puzzling? What do you have to assume is true?
- Gender in anthropology
- Margaret Mead: Gender is not universal
- Feminist anthropology: Ethnography has a male bias
- In many societies, women are not available to talk to anthropologists
- Key informants tend to be men, since in many societies, men travel more.
- Male ethnographers may not be permitted to talk to women. Even female anthropologists may be treated as if they were men.
- Anthropological theory assumed that male kinship statuses were more important, and hence male informants would know more about society.
- Early feminist anthropology sought to draw attention to and redress this bias.
- Feminist anthropology: Male domination
- Patriarchy itself is a social fact, and can be explained as such.
- Patriarchy defined:
- Ideologies of male superiority or female inferiority.
- Symbols of gender in which female is associated with danger.
- Exclusion of women from power and valued social positions.
- Men seem to stand for society as a whole.
- Criticism of Ortner
- Not all societies are hierarchical. Egalitarian societies tend to have more fluid divisions of labor and more personal autonomy for men and women.
- The myth of matriarchy. Just because men rule does not mean that men believe that they have a natural right to rule.
- Women's power is invisible. Women are supreme in the “female domain.”
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