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Anthropology of Gender ANTH 200, Spring 2006 March 8

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refers to the socially constructed differences between male and female behavior ... Di Leonardo's work on greeting cards. Different, shifting 'domestic/public' divide ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Anthropology of Gender ANTH 200, Spring 2006 March 8


1
Anthropology of Gender ANTH 200, Spring
2006March 8
2
Sex and Gender
  • Sex
  • Refers to biological differences between men and
    women
  • Gender
  • refers to the socially constructed differences
    between male and female behavior
  • Sex/Gender systems
  • E.g. Binary vs. fluid, multiple

3
Gender
  • Range of terminology
  • Anthropology of Women
  • Early on literally focus on study of Women to
    fill gaps in knowledge
  • Feminist anthropology
  • way of indicating commonality with aims of
    Women's Studies
  • Anthropology of Gender
  • focus on structures of inequality which affect
    women's and men's roles in society---NOT just
    about women
  • History of Anth of Gender
  • complex history of roads traveled and then
    abandoned"
  • Di Leonardo, Micaela. 1991. Introduction to
    Gender at the Crossroads of Knowledge Feminist
    Anthropology in the Post-modern Era. Ed. Micaela
    di Leonardo. Berkeley University of California
    Press. Pp.1-48.

4
3 Waves of Feminist Theory First Wave and Sex
Roles
  • "First Wave characteristics
  • vote, education, but not challenging
  • Sexual divisions of labor
  • WAY knowledge was produced, or how society
    structured
  • Intellectual Precursers to "Gender
  • Victorian evolutionary ideas
  • Matriarch, why men rule theories
  • Abandoned in N. American and British schools
  • Early American women Anthropologists
  • Personality and Culture School Sex roles
  • Mead Benedict

5
Between the Waves, 1930s-1960s
  • Structural Functionalists
  • No interests in sex roles or personality and
    culture
  • human society as organism
  • Parts key---kinship, religion, social
    organization, political org,
  • Stability
  • Institutions
  • Naturalized sexual difference
  • No attention to how power operated, how status
    is
  • structured
  • maintained
  • transformed
  • or how men and women are socialized

6
Second WaveAnthropology of women, the 1970s
  • Beginnings of study of Gender
  • Range of work
  • Elizabeth Fernea, Guests of the Sheik An
    Ethnography of an Iraqi Village (1969)
  • Margery Wolf, The House of Lim A Study of
    Chinese Farm Family (1968)
  • Marilyn Strathern, Women In Between Female
    Roles in a Male World (1972)
  • Briggs Never in Anger Portrait of an Eskimo
    Family (1970)
  • Scholarship as rooted in an era, 1960s-1970s
  • Reaffirmation of Marxist theory
  • Thomas Kuhn's emphasis on situated knowledge
  • Thomas Kuhn. 1962. Structures of Scientific
    Revolutions.
  • Radical revision of Freud's theories
  • New liberal pluralism emerging

7
Second Wave Premises and Methods
  • PREMISES of "Anthropology of Women
  • Organize women
  • Expose sexism in public and private life
  • Alter male-bias in study of human society
  • Question all knowledge about the lives of all
    female humans
  • Connect Politics and Knowledge---"Personal is
    political
  • Parallels with French Revolution
  • Feminist Anthropology and methods in 1970s
  • tied to women's empowerment, political
    transformation
  • Gather evidence of inequality, study of Other
    places
  • Search for human universals and cross-cultural
    differences
  • Examples
  • Peggy Reeves Sanday on Rape free and Rape
    prone societies
  • 1981. Female Power and Male Dominance On the
    Origins of Sexual Inequality. New York
    Cambridge University Press.

8
Second Wave New Theoretical Issues
  • New Theoretical Issues Raised
  • Sally Slocum. 1975. Women the Gatherer Male
    Bias in Anthropology. In Toward an Anthropology
    of Women. Ed. Rayna R. Reiter. New York
    Monthly Review Press.
  • Rosaldo, Michelle and Louise Lamphere. 1974.
    Women, Culture, Society. Stanford Stanford
    University Press.
  • Have men evolved to be dominant x-culturally?
  • Gatherer and Hunting research
  • How can we theorize about Male Domination and
    oppression?
  • Avoid conflict
  • Elizabeth Fernea. 1969. Guests of the Sheik
  • Universal Frameworks
  • influence of Engels
  • Sacks, Karen. 1974. Engels Revisited Women,
    the Organization of Production, and Private
    Property. In Women, Culture, and Society.
    Michelle Zimbalist Rosaldo and Louise Lamphere,
    eds. Pp.207-222.

9
Second Wave Theoretical Issues
  • How to theorize about Male Domination and
    oppression? (continued)
  • Universal Frameworks
  • Nature and Culture How are these parts of
    binary related?
  • Sherry Ortner. 1974. Is Female to Male as
    Nature is to Culture? In Women, Culture, and
    Society. Michelle Zimbalist Rosaldo and Louise
    Lamphere, eds. Pp.67-88.
  • Domestic and Public How do these vary across
    time?
  • Michelle Rosaldo. 1974. Women, Culture, Society
  • Universal Psychological explanation---Rereading
    Freud
  • Nancy Chodorow. 1978. The Reproduction of
    Mothering Psychoanalysis and the sociology of
    Gender. Berkeley University of California
    Press.

10
Second Wave Methods Against Grand Theory
  • Two groups seek new style
  • against Marxist evolutionism and "grand theory
  • Weber's Social-scientific Versteshen and
    womens lives
  • Margery Wolf (1974)---on Taiwanese women
  • Lois Paul (1974)---on Guatemalan peasant women
  • Liza Dalby (1983)---on Geishas in Japan
  • Embracing some Marxist theory
  • Women's lives as focus---Especially in groups
    circumscribed by class, ethnicity,
    hist-pol-economic context

11
Critiques of Second Wave
  • Evolutionist-Marxist approaches
  • Too rigid, assumes universal unilineal
    development
  • Ortner's Nature/Culture
  • Binary categories not universal, at least not
    with same meaning
  • Marilyn Strathern. 1980. Nature, Culture,
    Gender.
  • Domestic/Public
  • NOT universal, not so separate, and not static
  • Rhetoric of "domestic"----to achieve public
    Aims
  • Di Leonardos work on greeting cards
  • Different, shifting "domestic/public" divide
  • Domestic workers--confounding this "divide
  • Not single explanatory force
  • Chodorow's rereading of Freud
  • Universality, how apply x-culturally ?
  • Ahistorical, static

12
Third Wave Feminism and Approaches
  • Approaches of 3rd Wave Feminism
  • "What it means to be a woman in this or that
    situation must rest to some extent on the
    cultural logic by which gender is constructed"
    (Strathern 1981683)
  • Example Annette Weiner and Marilyn Strathern
    debate
  • Turn toward
  • Meaning
  • Interpretation
  • No universal models
  • Local----Cultural institutions have different
    MEANINGS

13
Third Wave Primary Concerns
  • New Foci
  • Differences between women class, race, colonial
    histories
  • Interactions between powerful and powerless
  • Agency combined with politics
  • Social constructionism critiques of woman,
    status, etc.
  • Embedded social relations gender just one of
    many factors
  • Patterned Inequality--how womens status part of
    global econ
  • Hierarchies of difference-- power not binary
  • Interest in relations between men and women not
    just about women
  • Example
  • Nicole Constable, Cross Border Marriages Gender
    and Mobility in Transnational Asia (2005)

14
Fourth Wave?
  • Performance of Gender
  • Situated and fluid, not matter of binaries
  • Queer theory
  • Butler, Gender Trouble Feminism and the
    Subversion of Identity (1999)
  • Men and masculinity as increasingly studied
    Gender encompasses both men and women
  • Mathew Guttmanns work in Mexico (1998)
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