Difference between revisions of "Patriarchy (anthropology)"

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'''Patriarchy''' (''rule by fathers'') is a social system in which the male is the primary authority figure [[androcentrism|central]] in social organization and in the roles of political leadership, moral authority, and control of property. Fathers hold authority over women and children. It involves institutions of male rule and privilege, entailing [[Kyriarchy|female subordination]]. Many patriarchal societies are also [[patrilineal]], meaning that property and title are inherited by the male lineage. The female equivalent is [[matriarchy]].
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'''Patriarchy''' (''rule by fathers'') is a social system in which the male is the primary authority figure [[androcentrism|central]] in social organization and in the roles of political leadership, moral authority, and control of property. Fathers hold authority over women and children. It involves institutions of male rule and privilege, entailing female subordination. Many patriarchal societies are also [[patrilineal]], meaning that property and title are inherited by the male lineage.
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The female equivalent is [[matriarchy]].
   
 
==Definition and usage==
 
==Definition and usage==
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One [[evolutionary psychology]] explanation for the origin of patriarchy starts with the view that females almost always invest more energy into producing offspring than males, and therefore in most [[species]] females are a limiting resource over which males will compete. This is sometimes referred to as [[Bateman's principle]]. One important female preference will be for males who control more resources which can help her and her children. This in turn has caused a [[selection pressure]] on men to be competitive and succeed in gaining resources and power in competition with other men. There has not been a similarly strong selection pressure on females.<ref name="BussSchmitt2011">{{cite journal|last1=Buss|first1=David Michael|last2=Schmitt|first2=David P.|title=Evolutionary Psychology and Feminism|journal=Sex Roles|volume=64|issue=9-10|year=2011|pages=768–787|issn=0360-0025|doi=10.1007/s11199-011-9987-3}}</ref>
 
One [[evolutionary psychology]] explanation for the origin of patriarchy starts with the view that females almost always invest more energy into producing offspring than males, and therefore in most [[species]] females are a limiting resource over which males will compete. This is sometimes referred to as [[Bateman's principle]]. One important female preference will be for males who control more resources which can help her and her children. This in turn has caused a [[selection pressure]] on men to be competitive and succeed in gaining resources and power in competition with other men. There has not been a similarly strong selection pressure on females.<ref name="BussSchmitt2011">{{cite journal|last1=Buss|first1=David Michael|last2=Schmitt|first2=David P.|title=Evolutionary Psychology and Feminism|journal=Sex Roles|volume=64|issue=9-10|year=2011|pages=768–787|issn=0360-0025|doi=10.1007/s11199-011-9987-3}}</ref>
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  +
==Psychoanalytic theories==
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Although the term ''patriarchy'' is loosely used to stand for "male domination", as has been pointed out above, it more crucially means—as others have stated here: "The rule of The Father"<ref>[[Juliet Mitchell]], ''Psychoanalysis and Feminism''. London: Penguin, 1974. p. 409.</ref> or "The Responsibility of the Father". So patriarchy does not refer to a simple binary pattern of male power over women, but power exerted more complexly by age as well as gender, and by older men over women, children, and younger men. Some of these younger men may inherit and therefore have a stake in patriarchy's continuing conventions. Others may rebel.<ref>Barbara Eherenreich. “Life Without Father”, in L. McDowell and R. Pringle (1992) ''Defining Women''. London: Polity/Open University</ref><ref>Cynthia Cockburn (1993) ''Brothers: Male Dominance and Technological Change''. London: Pluto.</ref> This psychoanalytic model is based upon revisions of Freud's description of the normally neurotic family using the analogy of the story of Oedipus.<ref>[[Jaques Lacan]] (1949) 'The mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience', in (1977) ''Ecrits: A Selection'' trans. A. Sheridan. London: Tavistock.</ref><ref>[[Laura Mulvey]] (1989) “The Oedipus Myth: Beyond the Riddles of the Sphinx”, in ''Visual and Other Pleasures''. Macmillan.</ref> Those who fall outside the Oedipal triad of mother/father/child are less subject to patriarchal authority.<ref>[[Judith Butler]] (2000) ''Antigone's Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death''.</ref> This has been taken as a position of symbolic power for queer identities. The operations of power in patriarchy are usually enacted unconsciously. All are subject, even fathers are bound by its strictures.<ref>Pen Dalton. (2008) “Complex Family Relations” in ''Family and Other Relations: A Thesis Examining the Extent to Which Family Relationships Shape the Relations of Art''. http://ethos.bl.uk "</ref> It is represented in unspoken traditions and conventions performed in everyday behaviors, customs, and habits.<ref>Mitchell op cit p. 409.</ref> The patriarchal triangular relationship of a father, a mother and an inheriting eldest son frequently form the dynamic and emotional narratives of popular culture and are enacted performatively in rituals of courtship and marriage.<ref>Dalton, P. 2000. “Patriarchy as Discourse” in ''The Gendering of Art Education''.</ref> They provide conceptual models for organising power relations in spheres that have nothing to do with the family, for example, politics and business.<ref>Geert Hofstede (1994) ''Cultures and Organizations''. London: Harper Collins. M. Tierney. “Negotiating a Software Career: Informal Work Practices and 'The Lads' in a Software Installation”, in K. Grint and R. Gill (eds) (1995) ''The Gender Technology Relation''. London: Taylor and Francis. M. Roper (1989) ''Masculinity and British Organizational Man''. Oxford: Oxford University Press.</ref>
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==See also==
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  +
===Related notions===
  +
* [[Feminism]]
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* [[Gender role]]
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* [[Homemaker]]
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* [[Masculinity]]
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* [[Nature versus nurture]]
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* [[Sociology of fatherhood]]
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* [[Family economics]]
  +
  +
===Comparable social models===
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* [[Androcracy]]
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* [[Gynarchy]]
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* [[Kyriarchy]]
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* [[Matriarchy]]
  +
  +
==References==
  +
{{Reflist|3}}

Latest revision as of 02:49, 18 May 2020

Patriarchy (rule by fathers) is a social system in which the male is the primary authority figure central in social organization and in the roles of political leadership, moral authority, and control of property. Fathers hold authority over women and children. It involves institutions of male rule and privilege, entailing female subordination. Many patriarchal societies are also patrilineal, meaning that property and title are inherited by the male lineage.

The female equivalent is matriarchy.

Definition and usage

Patriarchy literally means "the rule of the father"[1][2] and comes from the Greek πατριάρχης (patriarkhēs), "father of a race" or "chief of a race, patriarch",[3][4] which is a compound of πατριά (patria), " lineage, descent"[5] (from πατήρ - patēr, "father") and ἄρχω (arxō), "I rule".[6]

Historically, the term patriarchy referred to autocratic rule by the male head of a family. However, in modern times, it more generally refers to social systems in which power is primarily held by adult men.[7][8][9][10]

History

Anthropological evidence suggests that most prehistoric hunter-gatherer societies were relatively egalitarian, and that patriarchal social structures did not develop until many years after the end of the Pleistocene era, following social and technological innovations such as agriculture and domestication.[11][12][13] However, according to Robert M. Strozier, historical research has not yet found a specific "initiating event".[14] Some scholars point to about six thousand years ago (4000 BCE), when the concept of fatherhood took root, as the beginning of the spread of patriarchy.

[15]

[16]

Domination by men of women is found in the Ancient Near East as far back as 3100 BCE, as are restrictions on a woman's reproductive capacity and exclusion from "the process of representing or the construction of history".[14] With the appearance of the Hebrews, there is also "the exclusion of woman from the God-humanity covenant".[14][17]

A prominent Greek general Meno, in the Platonic dialogue of the same name, sums up the prevailing Greek sentiment about the respective virtues of men and women. He says:

Let us take first the virtue of a man—he should know how to administer the state, and in the administration of it to benefit his friends and harm his enemies; and he must also be careful not to suffer harm himself. A woman's virtue, if you wish to know about that, may also be easily described: her duty is to order her house, and keep what is indoors, and obey her husband."[18]

The works of Aristotle portrayed women as morally, intellectually, and physically inferior to men; saw women as the property of men; claimed that women's role in society was to reproduce and serve men in the household; and saw male domination of women as natural and virtuous.[19][20][21]

In Symbols by Gerda Lerner, she states that Aristotle believed that women had colder blood than men, which made women not evolve into men, the sex that Aristotle believed to be perfect and superior. Maryanne Cline Horowotz stated that Aristotle believed that "soul contributes the form and model of creation." This implies that any imperfection that is caused in the world must be caused by a woman because one cannot acquire an imperfection from perfection (which was perceived as male). Aristotle had a hierarchical ruling structure in his theories. Just as he believed that the Greeks were greater than the barbarians, he also duly believed that men were greater than women.

Lerner claims that through this patriarchy that has been passed down generation to generation, people have conditioned to believe that men are superior to women. These symbols are benchmarks which children learn about when they grow up, and the cycle of patriarchy continues much past the Greeks.[22]

Egypt left no philosophical record, but Herodotus left a record of his shock at the contrast between the roles of Egyptian women and the women of Athens. He observed that Egyptian women attended market and were employed in trade. In ancient Egypt a middle-class woman might sit on a local tribunal, engage in real estate transactions, and inherit or bequeath property. Women also secured loans, and witnessed legal documents.[23]

Greek influence spread, however, with the conquests of Alexander the Great, who was educated by Aristotle.[24]

In medieval Europe, female Empresses (such as Theodora) and Matriarchs (such as Helena, the mother of Constantine) enjoyed privilege, political rule, and societal honor.[25]

From the time of Martin Luther, Protestantism regularly used the commandment in Exodus 20:12 to justify the duties owed to all superiors. ‘Honor thy father,’ was taken to apply not only to fathers, but elders, and the king.

Although many 16th and 17th Century theorists agreed with Aristotle’s views concerning the place of women in society, none of them tried to prove political obligation on the basis of the patriarchal family until sometime after 1680. The patriarchal political theory is closely associated with Sir Robert Filmer. Sometime before 1653, Filmer completed a work entitled Patriarcha. However, it was not published until after his death. In it, he defended the divine right of kings as having title inherited from Adam, the first man of the human race, according to Judeo-Christian tradition.[26]

In the 19th Century, various women began to question the commonly accepted patriarchal interpretation of Christian scripture. One of the foremost of these was Sarah Grimké, who voiced skepticism about the ability of men to translate and interpret passages relating to the roles of the sexes without bias. She proposed alternative translations and interpretations of passages relating to women, and she applied historical and cultural criticism to a number of verses, arguing that their admonitions applied to specific historical situations, and were not to be viewed as universal commands.[27] Elizabeth Cady Stanton used Grimké’s criticism of biblical sources to establish a basis for feminist thought. She published The Woman's Bible, which proposed a feminist reading of the Old and New Testament. This tendency was enlarged by feminist theory, which denounced the patriarchal Judeo-Christian tradition.[28]

Feminist theory

Most forms of feminism characterize patriarchy as an unjust social system that is oppressive to women. As feminist and political theorist Carole Pateman writes, "The patriarchal construction of the difference between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection."[29] In feminist theory the concept of patriarchy often includes all the social mechanisms that reproduce and exert male dominance over women. Feminist theory typically characterizes patriarchy as a social construction, which can be overcome by revealing and critically analyzing its manifestations.[30]

Modern Jungian theory

In this analysis patriarchy may be seen as an expression of a stunted, immature form of masculinity and thus as attack on masculinity in its fullness as well as on femininity in its fullness.[31]

Biological vs. social theories

Most sociologists reject predominantly biological explanations of patriarchy and contend that social and cultural conditioning is primarily responsible for establishing male and female gender roles.[32][33] According to standard sociological theory, patriarchy is the result of sociological constructions that are passed down from generation to generation.[32] These constructions are most pronounced in societies with traditional cultures and less economic development.[34] Even in modern developed societies, however, gender messages conveyed by family, mass media, and other institutions largely favor males having a dominant status.[33]

Biologist Richard Lewontin asserts that patriarchy persists through social and political reasons rather than purely scientific reasons. In The Determined Patriarchy, Lewontin reflects feminist concerns for the future of patriarchy and how to rid society of it by uprooting the source. People who oppose feminism have argued that patriarchy has its birth in biological reasons. This is called biological determinism, which looks at humanity from a strictly biological point of view. These people believe that because of a woman's biology, she is more fit to do what society perceives as womanly roles, such as cooking and cleaning. However, Lewontin and other feminists argue that biological determinism unjustly limits women. In his study, he states females behave a certain way not because they are biologically inclined to, but rather because they are judged by "how well they conform to the stereotypical local image of femininity" (Lewontin 137). Feminists believe that people have had gendered biases since others around them have set apart a social standard for people to follow. For instance, an American doctor said that women cannot make rational decisions during their menopausal periods. This claim may cloak the fact that men also have periods of time where they can be aggressive and irrational. Women's biological traits, such as their ability to get pregnant, are often used against them as an attribute of weakness. However, even as biology is used against women, it is often that the perceived biological bias towards them is not correct. For example, it has been asserted for over a century that women are not as intellectually competent as men because they have slightly smaller brains on average.[35] However, no substantiated significant difference in average intelligence has been found between the sexes.[36]</ref> Furthermore, no discrepancy in intelligence is assumed between men of different heights, even though on average taller men have been found to have slightly larger brains.[35] Feminists assert that although women may excel in certain areas and men in others, they are just as competent as men in every field.[37]

Some sociobiologists, such as Steven Goldberg, argue that social behavior is primarily determined by genetics, and thus that patriarchy arises more as a result of inherent biology than social conditioning. Goldberg also contends that patriarchy is a universal feature of human culture. In 1973, Goldberg wrote, "The ethnographic studies of every society that has ever been observed explicitly state that these feelings were present, there is literally no variation at all."[38] Goldberg has critics among anthropologists. Concerning Goldberg's claims about the "feelings of both men and women" Eleanor Leacock countered in 1974 that the data on women's attitudes are "sparse and contradictory", and that the data on male attitudes about male-female relations are "ambiguous". Also, the effects of colonialism on the cultures represented in the studies were not considered.[39]

There is considerable variation in the role that gender plays in human societies. Although there are no known human examples of strictly matriarchal cultures,[40] there are a number of societies that have been shown to be matrilinear or matrilocal and gynocentric, especially among indigenous tribal groups.[41] Some hunter-gatherer groups have been characterized as largely egalitarian.[13]

One evolutionary psychology explanation for the origin of patriarchy starts with the view that females almost always invest more energy into producing offspring than males, and therefore in most species females are a limiting resource over which males will compete. This is sometimes referred to as Bateman's principle. One important female preference will be for males who control more resources which can help her and her children. This in turn has caused a selection pressure on men to be competitive and succeed in gaining resources and power in competition with other men. There has not been a similarly strong selection pressure on females.[42]

Psychoanalytic theories

Although the term patriarchy is loosely used to stand for "male domination", as has been pointed out above, it more crucially means—as others have stated here: "The rule of The Father"[43] or "The Responsibility of the Father". So patriarchy does not refer to a simple binary pattern of male power over women, but power exerted more complexly by age as well as gender, and by older men over women, children, and younger men. Some of these younger men may inherit and therefore have a stake in patriarchy's continuing conventions. Others may rebel.[44][45] This psychoanalytic model is based upon revisions of Freud's description of the normally neurotic family using the analogy of the story of Oedipus.[46][47] Those who fall outside the Oedipal triad of mother/father/child are less subject to patriarchal authority.[48] This has been taken as a position of symbolic power for queer identities. The operations of power in patriarchy are usually enacted unconsciously. All are subject, even fathers are bound by its strictures.[49] It is represented in unspoken traditions and conventions performed in everyday behaviors, customs, and habits.[50] The patriarchal triangular relationship of a father, a mother and an inheriting eldest son frequently form the dynamic and emotional narratives of popular culture and are enacted performatively in rituals of courtship and marriage.[51] They provide conceptual models for organising power relations in spheres that have nothing to do with the family, for example, politics and business.[52]

See also

Related notions

Comparable social models

References

Template:Reflist

  1. Template:Cite book
  2. Template:Cite book
  3. πατριάρχης, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  4. patriarchy, on Oxford Dictionaries
  5. πατριά, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  6. ἄρχω, Henry George Liddell, Robert Scott, A Greek-English Lexicon, on Perseus
  7. Template:Cite book
  8. Template:Cite book
  9. Template:Cite book
  10. Template:Cite book
  11. Template:Cite book
  12. Template:Cite journal
  13. 13.0 13.1 Erdal, D. & Whiten, A. (1996) "Egalitarianism and Machiavellian Intelligence in Human Evolution" in Mellars, P. & Gibson, K. (eds) Modelling the Early Human Mind. Cambridge Macdonald Monograph Series.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Strozier, Robert M. (2002) Foucault, Subjectivity, and Identity: : Historical Constructions of Subject and Self p.46
  15. Template:Cite journal
  16. Ehrenberg, 1989; Harris, M. (1993) The Evolution of Human Gender Hierarchies; Leibowitz, 1983; Lerner, 1986; Sanday, 1981
  17. Lerner, Gerda (1986) The Creation of Patriarchy 8-11
  18. Meno 71e-f)
  19. Template:Cite book
  20. Template:Cite book
  21. Template:Cite book
  22. Lerner, Gerda. The Creation of Patriarchy. New York: Oxford University Press, 1986. “Symbols,” Chapter 10
  23. Ptahhotep, trans. John A. Wilson. Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to The Old Testament. James B. Pritchard, ed. Princeton University Press, 1950. 412
  24. Bristow, John Temple. What Paul Really Said About Women: an Apostle's liberating views on equality in marriage, leadership, and love, HarperCollins, New York, 1991.
  25. See the historical fiction novel by Evelyn Waugh, Helena and the True Cross. Reviewed by Jan Willem Drijvers. Classics Ireland. Vol. 7, (2000), pp. 25-50. Published by: Classical Association of Ireland.
  26. Template:Cite encyclopedia
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  29. Pateman, Carole (1988). The Sexual Contract, Stanford: Stanford University Press, p. 207.
  30. Template:Cite book
  31. King, warrior, magician, lover; R Moore and D Gillette, 1990, pxvii
  32. 32.0 32.1 Template:Cite book
  33. 33.0 33.1 Template:Cite book
  34. Template:Cite book
  35. 35.0 35.1 Template:Cite book
  36. Template:Cite journal
  37. Lewontin, Richard, Steven Rose, and Leon Kamin. Not in Our Genes: Biology, Ideology and Human Nature. New York: Pantheon Books, 1984. “The Determined Patriarchy,” Chapter 6
  38. Goldberg, Steven (1973). The inevitability of Patriarchy, William Morrow, New York.
  39. "Review of The inevitability of patriarchy by Steven Goldberg", American Anthropologist, New Series, Vol. 76, No. 2 (Jun., 1974), pp. 363-365, Blackwell publishing.
  40. Template:Cite encyclopedia
  41. Template:Cite book
  42. Template:Cite journal
  43. Juliet Mitchell, Psychoanalysis and Feminism. London: Penguin, 1974. p. 409.
  44. Barbara Eherenreich. “Life Without Father”, in L. McDowell and R. Pringle (1992) Defining Women. London: Polity/Open University
  45. Cynthia Cockburn (1993) Brothers: Male Dominance and Technological Change. London: Pluto.
  46. Jaques Lacan (1949) 'The mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience', in (1977) Ecrits: A Selection trans. A. Sheridan. London: Tavistock.
  47. Laura Mulvey (1989) “The Oedipus Myth: Beyond the Riddles of the Sphinx”, in Visual and Other Pleasures. Macmillan.
  48. Judith Butler (2000) Antigone's Claim: Kinship Between Life and Death.
  49. Pen Dalton. (2008) “Complex Family Relations” in Family and Other Relations: A Thesis Examining the Extent to Which Family Relationships Shape the Relations of Art. http://ethos.bl.uk "
  50. Mitchell op cit p. 409.
  51. Dalton, P. 2000. “Patriarchy as Discourse” in The Gendering of Art Education.
  52. Geert Hofstede (1994) Cultures and Organizations. London: Harper Collins. M. Tierney. “Negotiating a Software Career: Informal Work Practices and 'The Lads' in a Software Installation”, in K. Grint and R. Gill (eds) (1995) The Gender Technology Relation. London: Taylor and Francis. M. Roper (1989) Masculinity and British Organizational Man. Oxford: Oxford University Press.