Revision as of 18:14, 6 December 2008 editKaldari (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Extended confirmed users, File movers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers68,434 edits reverting. The discussion of matriarchy wasn't removed, it was moved to the appropriate section, as I stated on the talk page. New content in sociology section isn't relavent to sociology.← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 13:56, 24 December 2024 edit undoJolielover (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers4,852 editsm Reverted edit by 173.238.225.109 (talk) to last version by SangdeboeufTag: Rollback | ||
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{{Short description|Social system with male rule}} | |||
] | |||
{{About|the social system}} | |||
{{otheruses|Patriarchy (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Redirect|Macho politics|the concept of pride in male domination|Machismo}} | |||
'''Patriarchy''' is the structuring of ] on the basis of ] units, where fathers have primary ] for the welfare of, and authority over, their families. The concept of ''patriarchy'' is often used, by extension (in ] and ], for example), to refer to the expectation that ] take primary responsibility for the welfare of the ] as a whole, acting as representatives via ]. | |||
{{redirect|Patriarchal system|the political hierarchy of the Western Zhou|Patriarchal system (Western Zhou)}} | |||
{{distinguish|Patriarchate}} | |||
{{Political anthropology|expanded=Basic concepts|Gender Studies=}} | |||
{{use dmy dates|date=November 2017}} | |||
'''Patriarchy''' is a ] in which positions of authority are primarily held by men. The term ''patriarchy'' is used both in ] to describe a family or ] controlled by the father or eldest male or group of males, and in ] to describe a broader social structure in which men as a group ] society.{{r|Lerner p238|Walby 1989}}<ref name="Hunnicutt 2009">{{cite journal |last1=Hunnicutt |first1=Gwen |date=2009 |title=Varieties of Patriarchy and Violence Against Women: Resurrecting 'Patriarchy' as a Theoretical Tool |journal=Violence Against Women |volume=15 |issue=5 |pages=553–573 |doi=10.1177/1077801208331246 |issn=1077-8012 |pmid=19182049 |s2cid=206667077 |quote=The core concept of patriarchy of male domination and female subordination Although patriarchy has been variously defined, for purposes of this article, it means social arrangements that privilege males, where men as a group dominate women as a group, both structurally and ideologically man power!}}</ref> | |||
Patriarchal ] acts to explain and rationalize patriarchy by attributing ] to inherent ], divine commandment, or other fixed structures.{{r|Green 2010}} ]s tend to disagree with some of the predominantly biological explanations of patriarchy and contend that ] processes are primarily responsible for establishing ]s.{{r|Henslin 2001}} ]s compare human gender roles to sexed behavior in other primates and some{{Who|date=December 2023}} argue that gender inequality comes primarily from genetic and reproductive differences between men and women. ] contest this argument, arguing that gender roles and gender inequity are instruments of power and have become social norms to maintain control over women. | |||
The feminine form of ''patriarchy'' is '']''. However, there are no known examples of matriarchal societies.<ref>"Once we abandon the concept of women as historical victims, acted upon by violent men, inexplicable 'forces', and societal institutions, we must explain the central puzzle—woman's participation in the construction of the system that subordinates her. I suggest that abandoning the search for an empowering past—the search for matriarchy—is the first step in the right direction. The creation of compensatory myths of the distant past of women will not emancipate women in the present and the future." | |||
], ''The Creation of Patriarchy'', (Oxford: ], 1986), p. 36.</ref><ref> | |||
Cynthia Eller, '']: '', (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001).]</ref> | |||
Historically, patriarchy has manifested itself in the social, legal, political, religious, and economic organization of a range of different cultures.<ref>{{cite book |last=Malti-Douglas |first=Fedwa|author-link=Fedwa Malti-Douglas |title=Encyclopedia of Sex and Gender |year=2007 |publisher=Macmillan |location=Detroit |isbn=978-0-02-865960-2}}</ref> Most contemporary societies are, in practice, patriarchal, unless the criteria of complete exclusion of women in authority is applied.<ref name="Lockard p88">{{Cite book |title=Societies, Networks, and Transitions: A Global History |edition=3rd |last=Lockard |first=Craig |publisher=Cengage Learning |location=Stamford, Conn. |year=2015 |isbn=978-1-285-78312-3 |page=88 |quote=Today, as in the past, men generally hold political, economic, and religious power in most societies thanks to patriarchy, a system whereby men largely control women and children, shape ideas about appropriate gender behavior, and generally dominate society.}}</ref><ref name="Pateman 2016">{{cite encyclopedia |editor-first=Nancy A. |editor-last=Naples |encyclopedia=The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Gender and Sexuality Studies, Volume 5 |first1=Carole |last1=Pateman |author-link=Carole Pateman|chapter=Sexual Contract |publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Ltd |year=2016 |isbn=978-1-4051-9694-9 |chapter-url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/9781118663219.wbegss468 |doi=10.1002/9781118663219.wbegss468 |quote=The heyday of the patriarchal structures analyzed in ''The Sexual Contract'' extended from the 1840s to the late 1970s Nevertheless, men's government of women is one of the most deeply entrenched of all power structures |pages=1–3}}</ref> | |||
==Etymology and related terms== | |||
{{see|Pater familias|Patriarch|Archon|Tribal chief|Dominus (title)}} | |||
The word ''patriarchy'' entered English in the 16th century, from the post-classical Latin ''patriarchia'' "office of a ]". It is a loan from ] {{lang|grc|πατριαρχια}} "office of a patriarch", in use since the 6th or 7th century for the Christian office, but attested in the 4th century for the headship of a Jewish community, from the ] term for such a community leader, {{lang|grc|πατριαρχης}}.<ref>] s.v. "patriarchy".</ref> | |||
==Terminology== | |||
Greek {{lang|grc|πατριαρχης}} "patriarch, community leader" is a compound of {{lang|grc|πατήρ}} "father" and ''{{lang|grc|-άρχης}}'', from {{lang|grc|ἀρχός}} ''archos'' "chief" (see ], ]). The Greek {{lang|grc|-ια}} suffix forms nominal abstratcs. Greek {{lang|grc|-αρχ-ια}} was Latinized as ''-archia'' and hence directly English '']''. | |||
''Patriarchy'' literally means "the rule of the father"<ref name="Ferguson 1999">{{cite book |last=Ferguson|first= Kathy E.|author-link=Kathy Ferguson |chapter=Patriarchy |editor=Tierney, Helen |title=Women's Studies Encyclopedia, Volume 2 |publisher=Greenwood Publishing |year=1999 |edition=revised and expanded |isbn=978-0-313-31072-0 |page=1048 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/womensstudiesenc0000unse_l3o9/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=limited}}</ref><ref name="Green 2010">{{cite book |last=Green |first=Fiona Joy |chapter=Patriarchal Ideology of Motherhood |editor=O'Reilly, Andrea |title=Encyclopedia of Motherhood, Volume 3 |publisher=SAGE Publications |location=Thousand Oaks, Calif. |year=2010 |isbn=978-1-4129-6846-1 |pages=969–970}}</ref> and comes from the ] {{lang|grc|πατριάρχης}} (''patriarkhēs''),<ref>{{cite web |title=patriarchy |url=https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/patriarchy |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181103003358/https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/patriarchy |url-status=dead |archive-date=3 November 2018 |website=Oxford Dictionaries |access-date=4 January 2019}}</ref><ref>{{OEtymD|patriarchy}}</ref> "father or chief of a race",<ref>{{LSJ|patria/rxhs|πατριάρχης|ref}}.</ref> which is a ] of {{lang|grc|πατριά}} (''patria''), "lineage, descent, family, fatherland"<ref>{{LSJ|patria/|πατριά|ref}}.</ref> (from {{lang|grc|πατήρ}} ''patēr'', "father")<ref>{{LSJ|path/r|πατήρ|ref}}.</ref> and {{lang|grc|ἀρχή}} (''arkhē''), "domination, authority, sovereignty".<ref>{{LSJ|a)rxh/|ἀρχή|ref}}.</ref> | |||
Historically, the term ''patriarchy'' has been used to refer to ] rule by the male head of a family; however, since the late 20th century it has also been used to refer to ]s in which power is primarily held by adult men.<ref name="Cannell 1996">{{cite book |last1=Cannell |first1=Fenella |last2=Green |first2=Sarah |editor1-last=Kuper |editor1-first=Adam |editor2-last=Kuper |editor2-first=Jessica |title=The Social Science Encyclopedia |date=1996 |edition=2nd |publisher=Taylor & Francis |isbn=978-0-41-510829-4 |pages=592–593 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/socialscienceenc0002unse/page/592/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration |chapter=Patriarchy}}</ref><ref name="Meagher 2011">{{Cite book |last=Meagher |first=Michelle|author-link=Michelle Meagher |chapter=Patriarchy |editor1-last=Ritzer |editor1-first=George |editor2-last=Ryan |editor2-first=J. Michael |title=The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |year=2011 |isbn=978-1-4051-8353-6 |pages=441–442}}</ref><ref name="Hennessy 2012">{{cite book |last1=Hennessy |first1=Rosemary |editor1-last=Harrington |editor1-first=A. |editor2-last=Marshall |editor2-first=B.L. |editor3-last=Muller |editor3-first=H. |title=Encyclopedia of Social Theory |date=2012 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-13-678694-5 |pages=420–422 |chapter=Patriarchy}}</ref> The term was particularly used by writers associated with ] such as ]; these writers sought to use an understanding of patriarchal social relations to liberate women from male domination.<ref name="Gardiner 1999">{{cite book |last=Gardiner |first=Jean |editor1-last=O'Hara |editor1-first=Phillip A. |title=Encyclopedia of Political Economy, Volume 2: L–Z |date=1999 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-0-41-518718-3 |pages=843–846 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofpo02ohar/page/843 |chapter-url-access=registration |chapter=Patriarchy}}</ref><ref name="Fitzpatrick 2013">{{cite book |display-editors=etal |editor1-last=Fitzpatrick |editor1-first=Tony |title=International Encyclopedia of Social Policy |date=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-13-661004-2 |pages=987 ff |chapter=Patriarchy}}</ref> This concept of patriarchy was developed to explain male dominance as a social, rather than biological, phenomenon.{{r|Meagher 2011}} | |||
The English term is first used in the sense of the societal organization rather than the Church office in the 17th century, by ].<ref> "The first is Paternity or Patriarchy, which was when a family growing so great as it could not containe it selfe within one habitation, some branches of the descendents were forced to plant themselves into new families." ''Concerning the Post-Nati of Scotland'' (1626), in ''Three Speeches'' (1641) (cited after ]).</ref> | |||
==Overview== | |||
The term '']'', from post-classical Latin ''patriarcha'' "] of a family or tribe", ] ''patriarche'' was the title of the bishop of any of the chief sees of the ]. | |||
Patriarchy is a social system in which men are the primary ] figures in the areas of ]ship, ] and control of ].<ref name="Catalano p187">{{cite book |last1=Catalano |first1=D. Chase J. |last2=Griffin |first2=Pat |editor1-last=Adams |editor1-first=Maurianne |editor2-last=Bell |editor2-first=Lee Anne |title=Teaching for Diversity and Social Justice |date=2016 |publisher=Routledge |location=New York |isbn=978-1-317-68869-3 |page=187 |edition=3rd |doi=10.4324/9781315775852-8 |chapter=Sexism, Heterosexism, and Trans* Oppression: An Integrated Perspective}}</ref> | |||
The ] are the heads of the Israelite tribe before Moses. In late medieval use, it could more generically refer to any venerable old man. | |||
Sociologist ] defines patriarchy as "a system of social structures and practices in which men dominate, oppress, and exploit women".<ref name="Walby 1989">{{Cite journal |last=Walby |first=Sylvia |title=Theorising Patriarchy |date=1989 |journal=Sociology |volume=23 |issue=2 |pages=213–234 |doi=10.1177/0038038589023002004 |jstor=42853921 |s2cid=220676988 |quote=I shall define patriarchy as a system of social structures, and practices in which men dominate, oppress and exploit women.}}</ref> | |||
] along gender lines, with power predominantly held by men, has been observed in most, but not all societies.{{r|Lockard p88|Meagher 2011|Hennessy 2012}} | |||
The adjective for ''patriarchy'' is ''patriarchal''; and ''patriarchalism'', or more commonly '']'', refer to the practice or defence of patriarchy. | |||
The concept of patriarchy is also related to ] in a anthropological sense, although not exclusively.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2019-08-26 |title=Can the patriarchy be matrilineal? An anthropologist calls for clarity {{!}} Santa Fe Institute |url=https://www.santafe.edu/news-center/news/can-patriarchy-be-matrilineal-anthropoligst-calls-clarity |access-date=2024-06-04 |website=www.santafe.edu |language=en |agency=]}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Fortunato |first=Laura |date=2019-09-02 |title=Lineal kinship organization in cross-specific perspective |journal=Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences |language=en |volume=374 |issue=1780 |pages=20190005 |doi=10.1098/rstb.2019.0005 |issn=0962-8436 |pmc=6664128 |pmid=31303167}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Lewis |first=Jone Johnson |title=Patrilineal vs. Matrilineal Succession: How Does Inheritance Work? |url=https://www.thoughtco.com/patrilineal-vs-matrilineal-succession-3529192 |access-date=2024-06-04 |website=ThoughtCo |language=en |quote=Sometimes, men in matrilineal societies were the ones who inherited, but they did so through their mother’s brothers, and passed their own inheritances along to their sisters’ children.}}</ref>{{Explain|date=August 2024}} | |||
] is from Latin ''patronus'', and via the use in ] came to be used generically (not gender specific) in English. | |||
The verb form ''patronize'' can be used positively, to describe the activity of patrons, or negatively, to describe adopting a superior attitude. If the superior attitude is adopted by a man, he can be called ''paternalistic''. | |||
==History== | |||
''Patrimonalism'' uses the Greek word ''monos'' (μόνος, sole) to describe the view of a ] as the extended household of a ] (sole ruler, ''archē'' as above) or ]. There are records of patrimonalism almost as far back as the earliest ] itself (about 5000 years ago). This is probably because patrimonalism directly facilitated the invention of writing — the first hereditary monarchs gained so much wealth as to need to keep ], and enough to pay those ]s. The earliest records of patrimonalism come from ]ern legal documents, the best known being the ] and the Torah. Some aspects of patrimonalism can still be found in the few remaining ] in the world today, for example, ] concerning ] (see ]s), especially in ]. For more detail regarding patrimonalism see ]. | |||
===Pre-history=== | |||
] | |||
====Sexual division of labour==== | |||
Some preconditions for the eventual development of patriarchy were the emergence of increased ] in the offspring, also referred to as ], and of a ]. Several researchers have stated that the first signs of a sexual division of labour dates from around 2 million years ago, deep within humanity's evolutionary past.<ref name="Wrangham 2009" /><ref name="Betuel 2020" /><ref name="Alger 2020" /> It has been connected to an evolutionary process during a period of resource scarcity in Africa approximately 2 million years ago.<ref name="Betuel 2020">{{cite web |last=Betuel |first=Emma |title=Why ancient men had to evolve from carousers to doting dads — or die |url=https://www.inverse.com/mind-body/the-first-stay-at-home-dad |website=Inverse |access-date=11 December 2023 |date=21 June 2020}}</ref><ref name="Alger 2020">{{Cite magazine |last1=Alger |first1=Ingela |last2=Hooper |first2=Paul L. |last3=Cox |first3=Donald |last4=Stieglitz |first4=Jonathan |last5=Kaplan |first5=Hillard S. |date=2020-05-19 |title=Paternal provisioning results from ecological change |magazine=Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences |language=en |volume=117 |issue=20 |pages=10746–10754 |doi=10.1073/pnas.1917166117 |issn=0027-8424 |pmc=7245097 |pmid=32358187 |doi-access=free}}</ref> In the 2009 book '']'',<ref name="Wrangham 2009">{{Cite book |last=Wrangham |first=Richard |title=Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human |publisher=Basic Books |year=2009 |isbn=978-0-465-01362-3}}</ref> British ] ] suggests that the origin of the ] between males and females may have originated with the invention of cooking,<ref>{{cite web |last1=Bradt |first1=Steve |title=Invention of cooking drove evolution of the human species, new book argues |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2009/06/invention-of-cooking-drove-evolution-of-the-human-species-new-book-argues/ |website=The Harvard Gazette |access-date=11 December 2023 |date=1 June 2009}}</ref><ref name="Rehg 2010">{{Cite journal |last=Rehg |first=Jennifer |date=2010 |title=Review of 'Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human' |url=https://thekeep.eiu.edu/the_councilor/vol71/iss1/1 |journal=The Councilor: A Journal of the Social Studies |volume=71 |issue=1 |at=Article 1}}</ref> which is estimated to have happened simultaneously with ] between 1 and 2 million years ago.<ref name="Herculano-Houzel 2016">{{Cite book |last=Herculano-Houzel |first=Suzana |date=2016 |title=The Human Advantage: A New Understanding of How Our Brain Became Remarkable |publisher=The MIT Press |doi=10.7551/mitpress/9780262034258.001.0001 |isbn=978-0-262-03425-8}}{{page needed|date=December 2023}}</ref> The idea was early proposed by ] in an ]. | |||
====Sex hierarchies==== | |||
], ] and ] evidence suggests that most ] societies were relatively ],{{r|Lockard p88}} and suggests that patriarchal social structures did not develop until after the end of the ] epoch, following social and technological developments such as ] and ].<ref>{{cite book |chapter=Women in Ancient Civilizations |editor=Adas, Michael |title=Agricultural and pastoral societies in ancient and classical history |publisher=Temple University Press |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-56639-832-9 |pages=118–119 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qcSsoJ0IXawC&pg=PA118 |author1=Hughes, Sarah Shaver |author2=Hughes Brady |name-list-style=amp}}</ref><ref name="Eagly 1999">{{cite journal |author1=Eagly, Alice H. |author2=Wood, Wendy |name-list-style=amp |title=The Origins of Sex Differences in Human Behavior: Evolved Dispositions Versus Social Roles |journal=American Psychologist |volume=54 |issue=6 |date=July 1999 |pages=408–423 |url=http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/anthro/faculty/fiske/facets/eagly&wood.htm |archive-url=https://archive.today/20120527003250/http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/anthro/faculty/fiske/facets/eagly&wood.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=27 May 2012 |doi=10.1037/0003-066x.54.6.408}}</ref><ref name="Erdal 1996">{{cite book |last1=Erdal |first1=David |title=Modelling the early human mind |last2=Whiten |first2=Andrew |date=1996 |publisher=McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, University of Cambridge |isbn=978-0-9519420-1-7 |editor-last1=Mellars |editor-first1=Paul |series=Cambridge McDonald Monograph Series |location=Cambridge Oakville, Connecticut |chapter=Egalitarianism and Machiavellian intelligence in human evolution |editor-last2=Gibson |editor-first2=Kathleen Rita |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-okQAQAAIAAJ}}</ref> According to ], historical research has not yet found a specific "initiating event".<ref name="Strozier 2002">Strozier, Robert M. (2002) '''' p. 46</ref> Historian ] asserts in her 1986 book '']'' that there was no single event, and documents that patriarchy as a social system arose in different parts of the world at different times.<ref name="Lerner p8">{{cite book |last=Lerner |first=Gerda |date=1986 |url=https://archive.org/details/creationofpatria0000lern/page/8/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |title=The Creation of Patriarchy |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |series=Women and History, Volume 1 |isbn=978-0-19-503996-2 |pages=8–11}}</ref> Some scholars point to social and technological events, notably the emergence of ], about six thousand years ago (4000 ]).<ref>{{cite journal |author=Kraemer, Sebastian |title=The Origins of Fatherhood: An Ancient Family Process |volume=30 |issue=4 |year=1991 |journal=] |pages=377–392 |doi=10.1111/j.1545-5300.1991.00377.x |pmid=1790784}}</ref><ref>; Harris, M. (1993) ''The Evolution of Human Gender Hierarchies''; Leibowitz, 1983; Lerner, 1986; Sanday, 1981</ref> | |||
] theory, as articulated mainly by ] in '']'' (1884), assigns the origin of patriarchy to the emergence of ], which has traditionally been controlled by men. In this view, men directed household production and sought to control women in order to ensure the passing of family property to their own (male) offspring, while women were limited to household labor and producing children.{{r|Cannell 1996|Gardiner 1999}}<ref name="Bryson 2000">{{cite book |last=Bryson |first=Valerie |editor1=Kramarae, Cheris |editor2=Spender, Dale |title=Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women's Issues and Knowledge, Volume 2 |date=2000 |location=New York |isbn=978-0-415-92088-9 |page=791 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=QAOUAgAAQBAJ&q=%22this+understanding+was+developed+by+frederick+engels%22 |chapter=Feminism: Marxist}}</ref> Lerner disputes this idea, arguing that patriarchy emerged before the development of class-based society and the concept of private property.<ref name="Lerner p53">{{Cite book |last=Lerner |first=Gerda |title=The Creation of Patriarchy |date=1986 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-503996-2 |location=New York |series=Women and History, Volume 1 |pages=50–53 |quote=But in a situation in which ecological conditions and irregularities in biological reproduction threatened the survival of the group, people would search for more reproducers — that is, women. Thus, the first appropriation of private property consists of the appropriation of the labor of women as ''reproducers''. Aaby concludes: 'The connection between the reification of women on the one hand and the state and private property on the other is exactly the opposite of that posed by Engels and his followers. Without the reification of women as a historically given socio-structural feature, the origin of private property and the state will remain inexplicable.' If we follow Aaby’s argument, which I find persuasive, we must conclude that in the course of the agricultural revolution the exploitation of human labor and the sexual exploitation of women become inextricably linked. |url=https://archive.org/details/creationofpatria00lern/page/50/mode/1up?ref=ol&view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref> | |||
Some social customs reflect what is termed '']'' or '']''. | |||
Domination by men of women is found in the ] 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".<ref name="Strozier 2002"/> According to some researchers, with the appearance of the ], there is also "the exclusion of woman from the God-humanity covenant".<ref name="Strozier 2002"/><ref name="Lerner p8"/> | |||
''Patrilineal'' describes customs where family responsibilities and assets pass from father to son. By contrast, contemporary Judaism considers people to be ]ish if their mothers were Jewish, which makes this aspect of contemporary Judaism ]. Biblical Judaism is, however, a classical example of a patrilineal society. ''Matrilineal'' is a particularly useful term in ], where some genetic features are more or less passed via the maternal line, notably ] and severe ] genetic conditions. An X ] from the mother is always passed to offspring, male and female. However, daughters do not receive a ], and sons do not receive an ] from their fathers (see ], ] and ]). | |||
The archaeologist ] argues that waves of ]-building invaders from the ] into the early agricultural cultures of ] in the Aegean, the Balkans and southern Italy instituted male hierarchies that led to the rise of patriarchy in ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Gimbutas |first=Marija |chapter=The end of Old Europe: the intrusion of Steppe Pastoralists from South Russia and the transformation of Europe |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ktftAAAAMAAJ |title=The Civilization of the Goddess: The World of Old Europe |pages=351–510 |publisher=Harper Collins |location=San Francisco, California |year=1992 |isbn=978-0-06-250337-4}}</ref> Steven Taylor argues that the rise of patriarchal domination was associated with the appearance of socially stratified hierarchical polities, institutionalised violence and the separated individuated ego associated with a period of climatic stress.<ref>{{cite book |last=Taylor |first=Steven |chapter=What's wrong with human beings? |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mSPtBAAAQBAJ&pg=PT12 |title=The Fall: The Insanity of the Ego in Human History |pages=17–19 |publisher=O Books |location=Winchester |year=2005 |isbn=978-1-905047-20-8}}</ref> | |||
''Patrilocal'' describes the custom of ]s relocating to the geographic community of the husband and his father's family. In a ] society, a husband will relocate to the home community of his wife and her mother (see also ]). Matrilocality can substantially increase the social influence of women in a culture, however, given that tribal and family leaders are still men in all known matrilocal societies{{Fact|date=August 2008}}, matrilocality is not equivalent to matriarchy, see main entry ]. | |||
===Ancient Western history=== | |||
By contrast with these other customs, patriarchy can be seen to be distinctly about gender and the ], gender and public office, and about female-male relationships in general. | |||
A prominent Greek general ], in the Platonic dialogue of the same name, sums up the prevailing sentiment in ] about the respective virtues of men and women. He says:<ref>{{cite book |author=W.R.M. Lamb |title=Plato in Twelve Volumes |volume=3 |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |publisher=Harvard University Press |date=1967 |chapter=71E: Meno |chapter-url=https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0178:text=Meno:section=71e |access-date=9 February 2015}}</ref> | |||
{{blockquote | First of all, if you take the virtue of a man, it is easily stated that a man's virtue is this—that he be competent to manage the affairs of his city, and to manage them so as to benefit his friends and harm his enemies, and to take care to avoid suffering harm himself. Or take a woman's virtue: there is no difficulty in describing it as the duty of ordering the house well, looking after the property indoors, and obeying her husband. | Meno | Plato in Twelve Volumes}} | |||
The works of ] 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 to serve men in the household; and saw male domination of women as natural and virtuous.<ref>{{cite book |author=Fishbein, Harold D. |title=Peer prejudice and discrimination: the origins of prejudice |edition=2nd |publisher=Psychology Press |date=2002 |isbn=978-0-8058-3772-8 |page=27 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HBwAYLFPP3sC&pg=PA27}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Dubber, Markus Dirk |title=The police power: patriarchy and the foundations of American government |publisher=Columbia University Press |date=2005 |isbn=978-0-231-13207-7 |pages=5–7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cjdbRF8PXhUC&pg=PA5}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |author=Bar On, Bat-Ami |title=Engendering origins: critical feminist readings in Plato and Aristotle |publisher=SUNY Press |date=1994 |isbn=978-0-7914-1643-3 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=6UVq3z2Kd6cC}}</ref> | |||
==Scientific views== | |||
===Biology=== | |||
] courting peahen]] | |||
{{Main|Biology of gender}} | |||
Not all of the great Greek thinkers believed that women were inferior. Aristotle's teacher ] laid out his vision of the most just society in his work ]. In it, Plato argues that women would have complete educational and political equality in such a society, and would serve in the military. The ] also valued the participation of women, who were treated as intellectual equals. | |||
The biology of gender is scientific analysis of the physical basis for behavioural differences between men and women. It is more specific than ], which covers physical and behavioural differences between males and females of any sexually reproducing species, or ], where physical and behavioural differences between men and women are described. Biological research of ] has explored such areas as: ] physicalities, ], ] and ]. | |||
Lerner 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. ] 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 he perceived as male). Aristotle had a hierarchical ruling structure in his theories. Lerner claims that through this patriarchal belief system, passed down generation to generation, people have been 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.<ref name="Lerner p199">{{cite book |last=Lerner |first=Gerda |date=1986 |title=The Creation of Patriarchy |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=New York |series=Women and History, Volume 1 |pages=199–211 |isbn=978-0-19-503996-2 |chapter=Symbols |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/creationofpatria0000lern/page/199/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration}}{{page range too broad|date=December 2023}}</ref> | |||
It has long been known that there are ]s between the biological sex of ]s and their ].<ref>Charles Darwin, ''On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life'', (London: John Murray, 1859).</ref><ref>Charles Darwin, ''The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex'', 2 volumes, (London: John Murray, 1871).</ref><ref>Helena Cronin, ''The Ant and the Peacock: Altruism and Sexual Selection from Darwin to Today'', (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).</ref> Many of these correlations have been studied in scientific research. | |||
] | |||
{{cquote|Genes on the ]s can directly influence sexual dimorphism in ] and behaviour, ] of the action of sex steroids.}}<ref>{{cite journal|last=Skuse|first=David H|title=Sexual dimorphism in cognition and behaviour: the role of X-linked genes|journal=European Journal of ]|volume=155|pages=99–106|date=2006|doi=10.1530/eje.1.02263}}</ref> | |||
] left no philosophical record, but ] left a record of his shock at the contrast between the roles of Egyptian women and the women of ]. He observed that Egyptian women attended market and were employed in ]. In ancient Egypt, ] women were eligible to sit on a local ], engage in ] transactions, and inherit or bequeath ]. Women also secured loans, and witnessed legal documents. ] were denied such rights.<ref>Ptahhotep, trans. John A. Wilson. ''Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to The Old Testament''. James B. Pritchard, ed. Princeton University Press, 1950. p. 412</ref><!-- Amazon lists 2nd and 3rd ed. with this title, editor and publisher, e.g. 1969, 3rd ed., isbn=978-0691035031; Perhaps this is also in the even more available {{cite book |editor=James B. Pritchard |title=The Ancient Near East: An Anthology of Texts and Pictures |publisher=Princeton University Press; |date=2010 |isbn=978-0691147260}} --> | |||
Some specific relevant ]s are as follows. The brains of many animals are ] different for ]s and ]s of the ].<ref name = SexDiffBrain></ref> Both ] and ]s affect the formation of many animal brains before "]" (or ]), and also behaviour of adult individuals. Hormones significantly affect human brain formation, and also brain development at puberty. Both kinds of brain difference affect male and female behaviour. | |||
] than the green or blue curves, but the same average. This reflects the differences in logical and geometric reasoning between women and men. The purple curve has a lower average as well. This reflects the differences in sensory processing abilities between men and women.<ref name=SexDiffMath>Camilla Persson Benbow and Julian C Stanley, 'Sex Differences in Mathematical Reasoning Ability: More Facts', ''Science'' '''222''' (1983): 1029-1031.</ref>]] | |||
Brain differences also have a statistically measurable effect on an array of ]. In particular, on average, women are more capable in nearly everything to do with ] processing.{{Fact|date=August 2008}} For an illustrated description of clear differences between female and male brain response to pain see Laura Stanton and Brenna Maloney, ''.<ref>Laura Stanton and Brenna Maloney, '', ''Washington Post'' 19 December, 2006.</ref> On the other hand, male brains seem to be "pushed" towards extremes of low ability or high ability in various forms of mental abstraction, especially those related to space and logic. This means the average scores of young women and men in mathematics, for example, will be close, but there will be more men than women in the very low scores and in the very high scores (see the diagram at the right for an illustration).<ref name=SexDiffMath/> There is evidence to suggest that forms of ] may be essentially extreme expressions of certain typically male characteristics.<ref></ref><ref>Simon Baron-Cohen. ''Mindblindness: An Essay on Autism and Theory of Mind''. (Boston: The MIT Press, 1997).</ref> Hormones have also been linked with male ] and female power motivation.<ref></ref><ref>http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522075940.htm</ref> ] (confirming Goldberg above) claims that observed male aggression would predict a tendency towards the patriarchy that has also been observed.<ref name=Smuts>, 'Raising Darwin's Consciousness: Female Sexuality and the prehominid origins of patriarchy.' ''] '''8''' (1997): 1-49.</ref>. | |||
] spread, however, with the conquests of ], who was educated by Aristotle.<ref>{{cite book |last=Bristow |first=John Temple |title=What Paul Really Said About Women: an Apostle's liberating views on equality in marriage, leadership, and love |location=New York |date=1991 |publisher=HarperOne |isbn=978-0-06-061063-0}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
Alexandra M. Lopes and others recently published that: | |||
{{cquote|A sexual dimorphism in levels of ] in brain ] was observed by ] ] ], with females presenting an up to 2-fold excess in the abundance of PCDH11X ]. We relate these findings to sexually dimorphic ] in the human brain. Interestingly, PCDH11X/Y gene pair is unique to ''Homo sapiens'', since the X-linked gene was ] to the Y chromosome after the human–] ] split.<ref>Alexandra M. Lopes and others,'Inactivation status of PCDH11X: sexual dimorphisms in gene expression levels in brain', ''Human Genetics'' 119 (2006): 1–9.</ref>}} | |||
=== |
===Modern Western history=== | ||
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 ]. Sometime before 1653, Filmer completed a work entitled '']''. However, it was not published until after his death. In it, he defended the ] as having title inherited from ], the first man of the human species, according to ] tradition.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |last=Gordon |first=Schochet |title=Patriarchy and Paternalism |encyclopedia=Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World |date=2004 |publisher=Charles Scribner's Sons |isbn=978-0-684-31200-2}}</ref> | |||
] | |||
{{Main|Why Men Rule}} | |||
To date, feminists have failed to achieve some of their goals (for example, those related to executive positions and average income, see ]). This was predicted in 1973 (the early days of ]) by ] (born 1941). "In every society a basic male motivation is the feeling that the women and children must be protected. But the feminist cannot have it both ways: if she wishes to sacrifice all this, all that she will get in return is the right to meet men on male terms. She will lose."<ref>], '']'', (London: Temple Smith, 1977), p. 196.</ref> | |||
Goldberg was chairman of the department of sociology at ], and has written two books on patriarchy. In the second he wrote: | |||
{{cquote|There is nothing in this book concerned with the desirability or undesirability of the institutions whose universality the book attempts to explain. For instance, this book is not concerned with the question of whether male domination of hierarchies is morally or politically 'good' or 'bad'. Moral values and political policies, by their nature, consist of more than just empirical facts and their explanation. 'What is' can never entail 'what should be', so science knows nothing of 'should'. 'Answers' to questions of 'should' require subjective elements that science cannot provide. Similarly, there is no implication that one sex is 'superior' in general to the other; 'general superiority' and 'general inferiority' are scientifically meaningless concepts.<ref>], '']'', (Chicago, Illinois: ], 1993), p. 1.</ref>}} | |||
] | |||
However, in the latter half of the 18th century, clerical sentiments of patriarchy were meeting challenges from intellectual authorities – ]'s '']'' denies inheritance of paternal authority stating, "... reason shows us that mothers have rights and authority equal to those of fathers; for the obligations imposed on children originate equally from the mother and the father, as both are equally responsible for bringing them into the world. Thus the positive laws of God that relate to the obedience of children join the father and the mother without any differentiation; both possess a kind of ascendancy and jurisdiction over their children...."<ref>{{cite journal |title=Encyclopedie, Paternal Authority |journal=Encyclopedia of Diderot & d'Alembert – Collaborative Translation Project |url=http://quod.lib.umich.edu/d/did/did2222.0000.040/--paternal-authority?rgn=main;view=fulltext;q1=education |access-date=1 April 2015 |date=February 2003 |last1=Louis |first1=Chevalier de Jaucourt (Biography)}}</ref> | |||
In Goldberg's first book, he seeks an explanation for three specific aspects of male dominance behaviour in human societies. Patriarchy is the first of these. He also considers the phenomenon of male ] seeking, which he calls "male attainment." He is influenced by Margaret Mead in identifying this phenomenon. She says, "Men may cook, or weave or dress dolls or hunt hummingbirds, but if such activities are appropriate behavior for men, then the whole society, men and women alike, votes them as important. When the same occupations are performed by women, they are regarded as less important."<ref>Margaret Mead. ''Male and Female''. London: Penguin, 1950.</ref> Finally, he claims that men seem to dominate in one-to-one relationships with women, marriage being one example of such relationships. Goldberg comments, "A woman’s feeling that she must get around a man is the hallmark of male dominance."<ref>Steven Goldberg, ''Why Men Rule'', (Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company, 1993), p. 11.</ref> | |||
In the 19th century, various women began to question the commonly accepted patriarchal interpretation of ]. ] ] 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.<ref>{{cite book |last=Durso |first=Pamela R. |title=The Power of Woman: The Life and writings of Sarah Moore Grimké |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=aQFTJJgK8esC |date=2003 |publisher=Mercer University Press |location=Macon, Ga. |isbn=978-0-86554-876-3 |pages=130–138 |edition=1st}}</ref> | |||
Goldberg proposes the ] that the statistical averages of all these forms of behaviour are partly explained by the ] (but not sufficient) condition of ] effects – namely, ]. The title of his first book makes his hypothesis very clear, it was called '']: Why the Biological Difference between Men and Women always Produces Male Domination''. At the time he wrote (1973), there were only very limited results from ] ]ers to support or contradict his hypothesis. The situation has changed a lot since then. | |||
] used Grimké's criticism of biblical sources to establish a basis for feminist thought. She published '']'', 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.<ref>{{cite book |author=Castro, Ginette |title=American Feminism: a contemporary history |url=https://archive.org/details/americanfeminism00castrich/page/31/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |publisher=NYU Press |date=1990 |page=31}}</ref> In 2020, social theorist and theologian ] retold the stories of thirty biblical women in her book ''Women in a Patriarchal World'' and applied the challenges they faced to women today. Working from both the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament, she analysed different variations of patriarchy, and outlined the paradox of Rahab, a prostitute in the Old Testament who became a role-model in the New Testament Epistle of James, and Epistle to the Hebrews.<ref>{{cite book |last=Storkey |first=Elaine |title=Women in a Patriarchal World; Twenty five empowering stories from the Bible |date=2020 |publisher=SPCK Publishing |location=London, UK. |pages=144 |edition=1st}}</ref> In his essay "A Judicial Patriarchy: Family Law at the Turn of the Century", Michael Grossberg coined the phrase "judicial patriarchy", stating that "The judge became the buffer between the family and the state", and that "Judicial patriarchs dominated family law because within these institutional and intraclass rivalries judges succeeded in protecting their power over the law governing the hearth."<ref>{{cite book |last=Gossberg |first=Michael |chapter=A judicial patriarchy: family law at the turn of the century |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bCHkkM1dRYgC&pg=PA289 |editor-last=Grossberg |editor-first=Michael |title=Governing the hearth: law and the family in nineteenth-century America |pages=289–307 |publisher=The University of North Carolina Press |location=Chapel Hill London |date=1985 |isbn=978-0-8078-6336-7}} | |||
For other writers who make similar points to Goldberg see ] and ] in the ] below. | |||
:''See also'': {{cite journal |last=Gossberg |first=Michael |title=Crossing boundaries: nineteenth-century domestic relations law and the merger of family and legal history |journal=] |volume=10 |pages=799–847 |url=http://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub/2153 |date=1985 |issue=4 |doi=10.1111/j.1747-4469.1985.tb00520.x}}</ref>{{rp|290–291}} | |||
===Asian history=== | |||
For current feminists and writers with considerably more biological knowledge than Goldberg, who accept his hypothesis, but consider issues beyond the biological, see ] and ]. | |||
In ancient ], power in society was more evenly distributed, particularly in the religious domain, where ]ism worships the goddess ], and ancient writings were replete with references to great priestesses and magicians. However, at the time contemporary with ] in the West, "the emperor of Japan changed Japanese modes of worship", giving supremacy to male deities and suppressing belief in female spiritual power in what feminist scholars in the field of religious studies have called a "patriarchal revolution."<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ellwood |first=Robert |date=1986 |title=Patriarchal Revolution in Ancient Japan: Episodes from the "Nihonshoki" Sūjin Chronicle |url=http://www.jstor.org/stable/25002039 |journal=Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion |volume=2 |issue=2 |pages=23–37 |jstor=25002039 |issn=8755-4178}}</ref> | |||
{{cquote|It all stems from muddling science and politics. It's as if people believe that if you don't like what you think are the ideological implications of the science then you're free to reject the science – and to cobble together your own version of it instead. Now, I know that sounds ridiculous when it's spelled out explicitly. Science doesn't have ideological implications; it simply tells you how the world is – not how it ought to be. So, if a justification or a moral judgement or any such 'ought' statement pops up as a conclusion from purely scientific premises, then obviously the thing to do is to challenge the logic of the argument, not to reject the premises. But, unfortunately, this isn't often spelled out. And so, again and again, people end up rejecting the science rather than the fallacy.<ref>John Brockman, 'Getting Human Nature Right: A Talk with Helena Cronin', ''Edge'' 73 (2000): 2.</ref>}} | |||
{{cquote|"To state categorically that there can be no biological component would seem to be foolish. We do not know yet how male hormones (acting indeed before birth and the possibility of different socialization) may affect the male psyche. But that there might be a biological component does not lead me to conclude that men then should do what is 'natural' to them, for there must be complementarity between the sexes. It makes me think that humanity is faced with a deeper problem than we knew." Margaret Daphne Hampson<ref>Margaret Daphne Hampson, (Oxford: ], 1990), p. x.</ref>}} | |||
In ancient China, gender roles and patriarchy were shaped by ]. Adopted as the official religion in the ], Confucianism has strong dictates regarding the behavior of women, declaring a woman's place in society, as well as outlining virtuous behavior.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Adler |first=Joseph A. |date=Winter 2006 |title=Daughter/Wife/Mother or Sage/Immortal/Bodhisattva? Women in the Teaching of Chinese Religions |url=https://www2.kenyon.edu/Depts/Religion/Fac/Adler/Writings/Women.htm |journal=ASIANetwork Exchange |volume=XIV |issue=2}}</ref> '']'', a Confucian text, places a woman's value on her loyalty and obedience. It explains that an obedient woman is to obey their father before her marriage, her husband after marriage, and her first son if widowed, and that a virtuous woman must practice sexual propriety, proper speech, modest appearance, and hard work.<ref>{{cite book |last=Largen |first=Kristin Johnston |title=Finding God Among Our Neighbors: An Interfaith Systematic Theology |date=2017 |publisher=Augsburg Fortress |isbn=978-1-5064-2330-2 |location=Minneapolis |pages=61–88 |chapter=A Brief Introduction to Confucianism |doi=10.2307/j.ctt1ggjhm3.7 |jstor=j.ctt1ggjhm3.7}}</ref> ], a Confucian disciple, writes in her book '']'' that a woman's primary concern is to subordinate themselves before patriarchal figures, such as a husband or father, and that they need not concern themselves with intelligence or talent.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Gao |first=Xiongya |year=2003 |title=Women Existing for Men: Confucianism and Social Injustice against Women in China |journal=Race, Gender & Class |volume=10 |issue=3 |pages=114–125 |jstor=41675091}}</ref> Ban Zhao is considered by some historians as an early champion for women's education in China; however, her extensive writing on the value of a woman's mediocrity and servile behavior leaves others feeling that this narrative is the result of a misplaced desire to cast her in a contemporary feminist light.<ref>{{cite book |last=Goldin |first=Paul R. |title=After Confucius: Studies in Early Chinese Philosophy |date=2005 |publisher=University of Hawai'i Press |isbn=978-0-8248-2842-4 |location=Honolulu |pages=112–118 |chapter=Ban Zhao in Her Time and in Ours |jstor=j.ctt1wn0qtj.11}}</ref> Similarly to ''Three Obediences and Four Virtues'', ''Precepts for Women'' was meant as a moral guide for proper feminine behavior, and was widely accepted as such for centuries.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bray |first=Francesca |title=Technology and Gender: Fabrics of Power in Late Imperial China |date=1997 |publisher=University of California Press |isbn=978-0-520-91900-6 |location=Berkeley |oclc=42922667}}</ref> | |||
===Sociology=== | |||
Most sociologists reject Goldberg's ideas, and contend that social and cultural conditioning is primarily responsible for establishing male and female gender roles.<ref name="Sanderson">{{cite book|title=The Evolution of Human Sociality|first=Stephen K.|last=Sanderson|publisher=Rowman & Littlefield|year=2001|page=198}}</ref> According to standard sociological theory, patriarchy is the result of sociological constructions that are passed down from generation to generation.<ref name="Sanderson"/> | |||
In China's ], widowed women were expected to never remarry, and unmarried women were expected to remain chaste for the duration of their lives.<ref>{{Cite book |title=My Country and My People |last=Lin |first=Yutang |author-link=Lin Yutang |year=2011 |publisher=Oxford City Press |orig-date=1935 |isbn=978-1-84902-664-2 |oclc=744466115}}</ref> '']'', a book containing biographies of women who lived according to the Confucian ideals of virtuous womanhood, popularized an entire genre of similar writing during the Ming dynasty. Women who lived according to this ] ideal were celebrated in official documents, and some had structures erected in their honor.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Waltner |first=Ann |title=Widows and Remarriage in Ming and Early Qing China |journal=Historical Reflections / Réflexions Historiques |volume=8 |issue=3 |year=1981 |pages=129–146 |jstor=41298764}}</ref> | |||
==Issues== | |||
In China's ], laws governing morality, sexuality, and gender-relations continued to be based on Confucian teachings. Men and women were both subject to strict laws regarding sexual behavior, however men were punished infrequently in comparison to women. Additionally, women's punishment often carried strong ], "rendering unmarriageable", a stigma which did not follow men.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Ruskola |first=Teemu |title=Law, Sexual Morality, and Gender Equality in Qing and Communist China |journal=The Yale Law Journal |volume=103 |issue=8 |year=1994 |pages=2531–2565 |jstor=797055 |doi=10.2307/797055 |url=https://digitalcommons.law.yale.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=7574&context=ylj}}</ref> Similarly, in the ], laws governing morality which were written as egalitarian were selectively enforced favoring men, with insufficient enforcement against ] in various areas, while infanticide of any form was, by the letter of the law, prohibited.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Jimmerson |first=Julie |date=Winter 1991 |title=Female Infanticide in China: An Examination of Cultural and Legal Norms |url=https://escholarship.org/uc/item/80n7k798 |journal=Pacific Basin Law Journal |volume=8 |pages=33 |via=eScholarship.org}}</ref> | |||
===Benefits of patriarchy=== | |||
Patriarchy is advanced as being beneficial for human ] and social organization on many grounds, crossing several ]. Although ] may explain its existence (see below), arguments for its social ] have been made since ancient times. These include elements of Greek ] and the Roman social structure based on the '']'',<ref>"Research into the nature of marriage in the Greco-Roman world ... shows ... in Stoic traditions marriage promoted the full responsibility of a husband as a householder, father, and citizen and stability in society." ], ''First Corinthians: A Shorter Exegetical and Pastoral Commentary'', (Grand Rapids: ], 2006), p. 102.</ref> but are also found in ] records of Babylonian and Assyrian laws. ] proposes an ancient dichotomy of "Strict Father" as opposed to "Nurturing Parent" models of ethical theory (SFM and NPM).<ref>George Lakoff, ''Moral Politics'', (Univ of Chicago Press, 1996) and ''Philosophy in the Flesh'', (UCP, 1999).</ref> In general, the main lines of argument are either ]—namely, the ] advantages of male-as-provider—<ref> ], '', '']'', 2006.</ref> or ]—that any perceived male authority is ] upon underlying perceptions of ]. | |||
== |
==Social theories== | ||
{{Further|Sex differences in humans|Social construction of gender difference}} | |||
] | |||
] | |||
{{Main|Patriarchy in feminism}} | |||
The 20th century ] movement criticized the social domination of males in modern ] as unjust. ] was introduced in all Western democracies by the end of the 20th century (see ]) and ] and ] became commonplace as a consequence. The Women's Rights movement is also known as ]. | |||
Sociologists{{Clarify|reason=which sociologists? Sociology is a broad field of study |date=April 2024}} tend to reject predominantly biological explanations of patriarchy<ref name="Macionis 2012">Macionis, John J. (2012). ''Sociology'' (13th ed.). Prentice Hall. {{ISBN|0-205-18109-0}}</ref> and contend that socialization processes are primarily responsible for establishing ].<ref name="Henslin 2001">{{cite book |title=Essentials of Sociology |first=James M. |last=Henslin |publisher=Taylor & Francis |date=2001 |pages=65–67, 240 |isbn=978-0-536-94185-5}}</ref> According to standard sociological theory, patriarchy is the result of sociological constructions that are passed down from generation to generation.<ref name="Sanderson 2001">{{cite book |title=The Evolution of Human Sociality |url=https://archive.org/details/evolutionhumanso00sand/page/n209/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |last=Sanderson |first=Stephen K. |date=2001 |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |isbn=978-0-8476-9534-8 |location=Lanham, Maryland |page=198}}</ref> These constructions are most pronounced in societies with traditional cultures and less economic development.<ref>{{cite book |title=Sociology: A Global Introduction |first1=John J. |last1=Macionis |last2=Plummer |first2=Ken |publisher=Prentice Hall |location=Harlow |date=2000 |page=347 |isbn=978-0-13-040737-5}}</ref> Even in modern, developed societies, however, gender messages conveyed by family, mass media, and other institutions largely favor males having a dominant status.<ref name="Henslin 2001"/> | |||
] in the 1960s to 1970s turned to ] criticism of patriarchy, and ] and ] constructed the hypothesis of the patriarchy as a secondary imposition on an originally ] or ] '']''. | |||
] are not universally patriarchal, and a number of indigenous ] societies with egalitarian structures are on record. This has led to ] criticism of patriarchy as the result of the hierarchical structure of urban civilization, in the ] combined with calls to a return to a non-hierarchic model based on ]. | |||
Although patriarchy exists within the scientific atmosphere,{{Clarify|reason=what is the scientific atmosphere?|date=December 2020}} "the periods over which women would have been at a physiological disadvantage in participation in hunting through being at a late stage of pregnancy or early stage of child-rearing would have been short".<ref name="Lewontin 1984" />{{rp|157}} During the time of the nomads, patriarchy still grew with power. Lewontin and others argue that such biological determinism unjustly limits women. In his study, he states women 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".<ref name="Lewontin 1984" />{{rp|137}} | |||
In some ], the opposite of feminism is patriarchy. It is not surprising, therefore, that the word ''patriarchy'' has a range of additional, negative associations when used in the context of feminist theory, where it is sometimes capitalized and used with the definite article (''the Patriarchy''), likely best understood as a form of collective ] (compare "blame it on the Government" to "blame it on the Patriarchy"). The use of the word ''patriarchy'' in ] has become so loaded with emotive associations that some writers prefer to use an approximate ], the more objective and technical ] (also from Greek – ''anēr'', genitive ''andros'', meaning man). | |||
Feminists{{Who|date=December 2020}} believe that people have gendered biases, which are perpetuated and enforced across generations by those who benefit from them.<ref name="Lewontin 1984" /> For instance, it has historically been claimed that women cannot make rational decisions during their menstrual periods. This claim cloaks the fact that men also have periods of time where they can be aggressive and irrational; furthermore, unrelated effects of aging and similar medical problems are often blamed on menopause, amplifying its reputation.<ref name="Coney 1994">{{cite book |last=Coney |first=Sandra |title=The menopause industry: how the medical establishment exploits women |publisher=Hunter House |location=Alameda, California |date=1994 |isbn=978-0-89793-161-8 |url=https://archive.org/details/menopauseindustr00cone/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref> These biological traits and others specific to women, such as their ability to get pregnant, are often used against them as an attribute of weakness.<ref name="Lewontin 1984" /><ref name="Coney 1994" /> | |||
Fredrika Scarth, a feminist, reads Simone de Beauvoir's ''The Second Sex'' to be saying, "Neither men nor women live their bodies authentically under patriarchy."<ref>Fredrika Scarth, ''The Other Within: Ethics, Politics and the Body in Simone de Beauvoir'', (Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), p. 100.</ref> ], a radical feminist, wrote, "Males and males only are the originators, planners, controllers, and legitimators of patriarchy."<ref>Mary Daly, ''Gyn/Ecology The Metaethics of Radical Feminism'', (Boston: Beacon Press, 1978), p. 29.</ref> Carole Pateman, another feminist, writes, "The patriarchal construction of the difference between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection."<ref>Carole Pateman, ''The Sexual Contract'', (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988), p. 207.</ref> | |||
Sociologist ] has composed six overlapping structures that define patriarchy and that take different forms in different cultures and different times:<ref name="Walby 1989" /> | |||
], or mainstream, feminists do not propose to replace patriarchy with matriarchy, rather they argue for ]. Some ] and ] have have argued for ] against men, ], or ].<ref>http://www.wie.org/j16/daly.asp?page=2</ref> However, ] has argued that equality is a difficult idea.<ref>"People who praise it or disparage it disagree about what they are praising or disparaging.", Ronald Dworkin, ''Sovereign Virtue: The Theory and Practice of Equality'', (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2000), p. 2.</ref> It is particularly hard to work out what equality means when it comes to gender, because there are real differences between men and women (see ] and ]). Recent feminist writers speak of "feminisms of diversity", that seek to reconcile older debates between ]s and ]s. For instance, Judith Squires writes, "The whole conceptual force of 'equality' rests on the assumption of differences, which should in some respect be valued equally."<ref>Judith Squires, ''Gender in Political Theory'', (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999), p. 97.</ref> | |||
# The household: women are more likely to have their labor expropriated by their husbands such as through housework and raising children | |||
For a leading feminist who writes against patriarchy see ]; and for one who is more sympathetic{{Fact|date=August 2008}} see ]. | |||
# Paid work: women are likely to be paid less and face exclusion from paid work | |||
# The state: women are unlikely to have formal power and representation | |||
# Violence: women are more prone to being abused | |||
# Sexuality: women's sexuality is more likely to be treated negatively | |||
# Culture: representation of women in different cultural contexts | |||
The idea that patriarchy is natural has, however, come under attack from many sociologists, explaining that patriarchy evolved due to historical, rather than biological, conditions. In technologically simple societies, men's greater physical strength and women's common experience of pregnancy combined to sustain patriarchy.<ref name="Lewontin 1984" /> Gradually, technological advances, especially industrial machinery, diminished the primacy of physical strength in everyday life. Introduction of household appliances reduced the amount of manual labor needed in the households.<ref>{{cite web |title=How the appliance boom moved more women into the workforce |url=https://penntoday.upenn.edu/news/how-appliance-boom-moved-more-women-workforce |website=Penn Today |date=30 January 2019 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=de V. Cavalcanti |first1=Tiago V. |last2=Tavares |first2=José |title=Assessing the "Engines of Liberation": Home Appliances and Female Labor Force Participation |journal=The Review of Economics and Statistics |date=2008 |volume=90 |issue=1 |pages=81–88 |doi=10.1162/rest.90.1.81 |jstor=40043126 |s2cid=9870721 |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/40043126 |issn=0034-6535}}</ref> Similarly, contraception has given women control over their reproductive cycle.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://sitn.hms.harvard.edu/flash/2008/issue40/ |title=Taming the Cycle: How Does the Pill Work? |website=Science in the News |publisher=Harvard Medical School |date=15 March 2008 |access-date=17 February 2021}}</ref>{{relevance inline|date=February 2021|reason=Source doesn't mention patriarchy}} | |||
] | |||
'''Patriarchy and Feminism''' | |||
In summary, some recent feminist writers have shown a tendency to admit ] among some other members of the movement<ref name=Hoff_Sommers> Hoff Sommers, Christina, Who Stole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed Women (Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 1995)</ref>, and acknowledge real differences in men and women that make diversity a more meaningful aim than ] equality (for example Judith Squires above). | |||
Patriarchy generally falls under two categories, "traditional patriarchy" and "structural patriarchy" (Pierik).<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Pierek |first=B. T. |title=A History of Patriarchy? |url=https://studenttheses.universiteitleiden.nl/access/item%3A2605417/view |journal=Leiden University}}</ref> Traditional patriarchy refers to the idea that the father is the head of the household and is at the top of families’ social hierarchies. This patriarchal structure is most apparent in the American representation of a nuclear family; the father works and brings home an income while the mother takes care of the children and the household. This economic power dynamic in the home typically places the desires of the man/father/husband as priority over the desires of the woman/mother/wife. | |||
Decades of ] and ] have not yet changed the fact that ] is male dominated{{Fact|date=August 2008}}, and that it remains patriarchal{{Fact|date=August 2008}}, although women can vote in most countries of the world, and they outnumber men in ] in many countries.<ref>"In terms of academic achievement, international education figures from 43 developed countries, published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development in 2003, showed a consistent picture of women achieving better results than men at every level, particularly in literacy assessments.", </ref> | |||
Structural patriarchy expands the range of this social hierarchy outside of just the home and family dynamic. The typical influence that men hold in the home is extended to their social and professional positions. Women are often considered the caretakers of the workplace when in a professional setting while men do the labor. This dynamic can be seen in an office setting, with men as sources of income for the business and women in roles as secretaries to care for the workplace. This system leans into the idea that men are typically placed in higher-power positions in society due to the traditional role of a financial provider, and women fall into caretaker roles.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Gupta |first1=Mayank |last2=Madabushi |first2=Jayakrishna S. |last3=Gupta |first3=Nihit |last4=Gupta |first4=Mayank |last5=Madabushi |first5=Jayakrishna S. |last6=Gupta |first6=Nihit |date=2023-06-10 |title=Critical Overview of Patriarchy, Its Interferences With Psychological Development, and Risks for Mental Health |journal=Cureus |language=en |volume=15 |issue=6 |pages=e40216 |doi=10.7759/cureus.40216 |doi-access=free |issn=2168-8184 |pmc=10332384 |pmid=37435274}}</ref> | |||
However, ], ], and the top ] of major ] are still mostly men (see ]). Also, women's average ] is still significantly ]. However many masculists argue that this is due to education and career choices that women and men make, rather than the patriarchy.<ref>http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/02/AR2007040201262.html</ref> Sally Haslanger claims women are still marginalized within academic ] departments.<ref>Sally Haslanger, .</ref> | |||
'''Development of Feminism''' | |||
===Existence of matriarchies=== | |||
{{See also|Cultures that have been claimed to be matriarchal}} | |||
] says matriarchy is a "] social system".<ref name=Britannica>'Matriarchy', ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', 2007.</ref> | |||
The Britannica article goes on to note, "The view of matriarchy as constituting a stage of cultural development is now generally discredited. Furthermore, the consensus among modern anthropologists and sociologists is that a strictly matriarchal society never existed."<ref name=Britannica /> | |||
The extended presence of patriarchal structures has led to the establishment of feministic ideals over centuries (Brunell).<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-09-17 |title=Feminism {{!}} Definition, History, Types, Waves, Examples, & Facts {{!}} Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/feminism |access-date=2024-10-25 |website=www.britannica.com |language=en}}</ref> Several prominent fronts led to and continue to push the development of feminism; including paid and unpaid labor and expectations of gender roles(Thompson).<ref>{{Cite web |date=2017-01-10 |title=Sylvia Walby: Six Structures of Patriarchy - ReviseSociology |url=https://revisesociology.com/2017/01/10/patriarchy-structure-walby-sylvia/#google_vignet |access-date=2024-10-25 |website=revisesociology.com |language=en-gb}}</ref> Men are traditionally viewed as the breadwinners in a patriarchal society, and women are seen as homemakers. Formal job occupations outside of the home, traditionally carried out by men in a patriarchal society, are paid labor. Any work done inside of the home without financial compensation, traditionally carried out by women in patriarchal societies, is unpaid labor. Until 1974, women were not allowed to have their bank accounts, which pushed the financial divide further and placed men in higher economic positions. (Adam)<ref>{{Cite web |title=When Could Women Open A Bank Account? – Forbes Advisor |url=https://www.forbes.com/advisor/banking/when-could-women-open-a-bank-account/ |access-date=2024-10-25 |website=www.forbes.com}}</ref> The uneven financial compensation between these levels of labor is one of the factors that pushed feministic ideals forward. | |||
The anthropologist ] said, "All the claims so glibly made about societies ruled by women are nonsense. We have no reason to believe that they ever existed. ... men everywhere have been in charge of running the show. ... men have always been the leaders in public affairs and the final authorities at home."<ref>Margaret Mead,'Review of Sex and Temperament in Three Privative Societies'. ''Redbook'' (October 1973): 48.</ref> | |||
'''The Role of Patriarchy in Feminism''' | |||
With men being expected to bring home an income to support a family and the entire household, the strain of the increasing cost of living makes that ideal impractical. Because of this economic strain, many households rely on multiple incomes from both men and women. When women would traditionally be expected to stay home and provide childcare, they now have to seek it out elsewhere to provide for the family, which in turn drives up the cost of living further. With this reliance on further income and sourcing traditionally female childcare roles outside of the home, patriarchal norms start to become less relevant. This breakdown of traditional roles leads to the natural decrease of a gender-specific social structure. | |||
'''Feminist Ideologies''' | |||
Feminism is not a direct opposition to patriarchy, it is a theory in response to patriarchy. Feminism focuses on the empowerment of women in society and the dismissal of traditional gender roles that are oppressive. Traditional female roles in the household are largely abandoned, and equal opportunity for women is the largest ideal that feminism stands with. Feminist theories believe that financial and social opportunities should be equally available for all. | |||
This social division of gender roles as caretakers and providers is broken down to better allow women to participate outside of caring for a home and children. Financial opportunity refers to employment pursuits, access to one's own finances, and wage equality for job positions that are available for both men and women. The wage gap issues and traditional roles as unpaid laborers for the family significantly drive the growth of feminism in modern social settings. Which in turn shuts down patriarchal structures. | |||
===Feminist theory=== | |||
]]] | |||
Feminist theorists have written extensively about patriarchy either as a primary cause of women's oppression, or as part of an interactive system. ], a radical-libertarian feminist, defines patriarchy as a system of ] of women. Firestone believes that patriarchy is caused by the biological inequalities between women and men, e.g. that women bear children, while men do not. Firestone writes that patriarchal ideologies support the oppression of women and gives as an example the joy of giving birth, which she labels a patriarchal myth. For Firestone, women must gain control over reproduction in order to be free from oppression.<ref name="Lerner p8" /> Feminist historian ] believes that male control over women's sexuality and reproductive functions is a fundamental cause and result of patriarchy.<ref name="Lerner p238">{{Cite book |last=Lerner |first=Gerda |title=The Creation of Patriarchy |date=1986 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-503996-2 |location=New York |series=Women and History, Volume 1 |pages=238–239 |quote=In its narrow meaning, patriarchy refers to the system, historically derived from Greek and Roman law, in which the male head of the household had absolute legal and economic power over his dependent female and male family members. Patriarchy in its wider definition means the manifestation and institutionalization of male dominance over women and children in the family and the extension of male dominance over women in society in general. |url=https://archive.org/details/creationofpatria00lern/page/238/mode/1up?ref=ol&view=theater |url-access=registration}}</ref> | |||
Interactive systems theorists ] and ] believe that patriarchy and ] interact together to oppress women. Young, Hartmann, and other ] and ] use the terms ''patriarchal capitalism'' or ''capitalist patriarchy'' to describe the interactive relationship of capitalism and patriarchy in producing and reproducing the oppression of women.<ref name="Tong 2017">{{Cite book |title=Feminist Thought: A More Comprehensive Introduction |last1=Tong |first1=Rosemarie |last2=Botts |first2=Tina Fernandes |date=2017 |isbn=978-0-8133-5070-7 |edition=Fifth |location=New York |oclc=979993556}}{{page needed|date=December 2023}}</ref> According to Hartmann, the term ''patriarchy'' redirects the focus of oppression from the ] to a moral and political responsibility liable directly to men as a ]. In its being both systematic and universal, therefore, the concept of patriarchy represents an adaptation of the Marxist concept of class and ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Hartmann |first1=Heidi |title=The Unhappy Marriage of Marxism and Feminism |journal=Capital and Class |volume=8 |page=1}}</ref> | |||
] represents an outlier in this regard. German argued for a need to redefine the origins and sources of the patriarchy, describing the mainstream theories as providing "little understanding of how women's oppression and the nature of the family have changed historically. Nor is there much notion of how widely differing that oppression is from class to class."<ref name="German 1981">{{Cite web |url=https://www.marxists.org/history/etol/writers/german/1981/xx/patriarchy.htm |title=Lindsey German: Theories of Patriarchy (Spring 1981) |website=www.marxists.org |access-date=2020-03-18}}</ref> Instead, the patriarchy is not the result of men's oppression of women or sexism per se, with men not even identified as the main beneficiaries of such a system, but ] itself. As such, female liberation needs to begin "with an assessment of the material position of women in capitalist society."<ref name="German 1981" /> In that, German differs from Young or Hartmann by rejecting the notion ("eternal truth") that the patriarchy is at the root of female oppression.<ref name="German 1981" /> | |||
], an African American feminist writer and theorist, believed that ] and patriarchy were intertwined systems of oppression.<ref name="Tong 2017" /> ], a philosopher who wrote about "good mothers" in the context of maternal ethics, describes the dilemma facing contemporary mothers who must train their children within a patriarchal system. She asks whether a "good mother" trains her son to be competitive, individualistic, and comfortable within the hierarchies of patriarchy, knowing that he may likely be economically successful but a mean person, or whether she resists patriarchal ideologies and ] her son to be cooperative and communal but economically unsuccessful.<ref name="Lerner p8" /> | |||
Lerner, in her 1986 book ''The Creation of Patriarchy'', makes a series of arguments about the origins and reproduction of patriarchy as a system of oppression of women, and concludes that patriarchy is ] and seen as natural and invisible.<ref name="Lerner p238" /> | |||
Some feminist theorists believe that patriarchy is an unjust ] that is harmful to both men and women.<ref>{{cite book |author1=David A. J. Richards |title=Resisting Injustice and the Feminist Ethics of Care in the Age of Obama: "Suddenly ... All the Truth Was Coming Out" |publisher=Routledge Research in American Politics and Governance |isbn=978-1-135-09970-1 |page=143 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Qm7MAgAAQBAJ&pg=PA143 |access-date=11 February 2015 |quote=Feminism, as I understand it, arises in resistance to the gender binary enforced by the patriarchy, an injustice that is as harmful to men as it is to women, as we can see in the long history of unjust wars, rationalized by patriarchy, in which men have fought and been killed and injured and traumatized. |date=2014-02-05}}</ref> It often includes any social, political, or economic mechanism that evokes male dominance over women. Because patriarchy is a social construction, it can be overcome by revealing and critically analyzing its manifestations.<ref>{{cite book |author=Tickner, Ann J. |chapter=Patriarchy |title=Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy: Entries P-Z |publisher=Taylor & Francis |date=2001 |isbn=978-0-415-24352-0 |pages=1197–1198 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=lSmU3aXWIAYC&pg=PA1197}}</ref> | |||
Jaggar, Young, and Hartmann are among the feminist theorists who argue that the system of patriarchy should be completely overturned, especially the ] family, which they see as a necessary component of female oppression. The family not only serves as a representative of the greater civilization by pushing its own affiliates to change and obey, but performs as a component in the rule of the patriarchal state that rules its inhabitants with the head of the family.<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.unesco.org |title=Violence against Women and Media: Advancements and Challenges of a Research and Political Agenda |last=Montiel |first=Aimée Vega |date=8 October 2014 |publisher=UNESCO}}</ref> | |||
Many feminists (especially scholars and activists) have called for culture repositioning as a method for deconstructing patriarchy. Culture repositioning relates to ]. It involves the reconstruction of the cultural concept of a society.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Chigbu |first=Uchendu Eugene |title=Repositioning culture for development: women and development in a Nigerian rural community |journal=Community, Work & Family |date=2015 |volume=18 |issue=3 |pages=334–350 |doi=10.1080/13668803.2014.981506 |s2cid=144448501}}</ref> Prior to the widespread use of the term ''patriarchy'', early feminists used '']'' and ''sexism'' to refer roughly to the same phenomenon.<ref name="hooks p17">{{cite book |last=hooks |first=bell |author-link=bell hooks |chapter=Understanding patriarchy |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G28LTQltyVAC&pg=PA17 |title=The will to change: men, masculinity, and love |publisher=Washington Square Press |date=2004 |pages=17–25 |isbn=978-0-7434-8033-8 |quote=Patriarchy is a political-social system that insists that males are inherently dominating, superior to everything and everyone deemed weak, especially females, and endowed with the right to dominate and rule over the weak and to maintain that dominance through various forms of psychological terrorism and violence.}}</ref> Author ] argues that the new term identifies the ideological system itself (that men claim dominance and superiority to women) that can be believed and acted upon by either men or women, whereas the earlier terms imply only men act as oppressors of women.<ref name="hooks p17" /> | |||
Sociologist ], analyzing the concept of patriarchy and the role that it has played in the development of feminist thought, says that seeing patriarchy as a "universal, trans-historical and trans-cultural phenomenon" where "women were everywhere oppressed by men in more or less the same ways tended toward a biological essentialism."<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Acker |first1=Joan |title=The Problem with Patriarchy |journal=Sociology |date=1989 |volume=23 |issue=2 |page=235 |doi=10.1177/0038038589023002005 |s2cid=143683720}}</ref> | |||
Anna Pollert has described use of the term patriarchy as circular and conflating description and explanation. She remarks the discourse on patriarchy creates a "theoretical impasse ... imposing a structural label on what it is supposed to explain" and therefore impoverishes the possibility of explaining ].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Pollert |first1=Anna |title=Gender and Class Revisited, or the Poverty of 'Patriarchy' |journal=Sociology |date=1996 |volume=30 |issue=4 |page=235 |doi=10.1177/0038038596030004002 |s2cid=145758809}}</ref> | |||
==Biological theories== | |||
{{Main|Sex differences in humans|Social construction of gender difference}} | |||
Studies of male ] and female resistance in nonhuman ] (for example, ]s<ref>{{cite journal |title=Sexually coercive male chimpanzees sire more offspring. |journal=Current Biology |volume=24 |issue=23 |pages=2855–2860 |date=Dec 2014 |pmid=25454788 |pmc=4905588 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2014.10.039 |last1=Feldblum |first1=Joseph T. |last2=Wroblewski |first2=Emily E. |last3=Rudicell |first3=Rebecca S. |last4=Hahn |first4=Beatrice H. |last5=Paiva |first5=Thais |last6=Cetinkaya-Rundel |first6=Mine |last7=Pusey |first7=Anne E. |last8=Gilby |first8=Ian C.|bibcode=2014CBio...24.2855F }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |title=Sexual Conflict: Nice Guys Finish Last |author=Thompson, ME |journal=Current Biology |volume=24 |issue=23 |pages=R1125–R1127 |year=2014 |pmid=25465331 |doi=10.1016/j.cub.2014.10.056 |doi-access=free|bibcode=2014CBio...24R1125T }}</ref>) suggest that sexual conflicts of interest underlying the patriarchy precede the emergence of the human species.<ref name="Smuts 1995">{{cite journal |title=The evolutionary origins of patriarchy |author=Smuts, B |journal=Human Nature |year=1995 |volume=6 |issue=1 |pages=1–32 |doi=10.1007/BF02734133 |pmid=24202828 |s2cid=17741169}}</ref> However, the extent of male power over females varies greatly across different primate species.<ref name="Smuts 1995"/> Among ] (a close relative of humans), for example, male coercion of females is rarely, if ever, observed,<ref name="Smuts 1995"/> and bonobos are widely considered to be ] in their social structure.<ref name="Sommer 2010">{{cite book |last1=Sommer |first1=Volker |last2=Bauer |first2=Jan |last3=Fowler |first3=Andrew |last4=Ortmann |first4=Sylvia |title=Primates of Gashaka |year=2010 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/primatesgashakas00somm/page/n488/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration |publisher=Springer |isbn=978-1-4419-7402-0 |pages=469–501 |chapter=Patriarchal Chimpanzees, Matriarchal Bonobos: Potential Ecological Causes of a Pan Dichotomy}}</ref><ref name="Bosson 2018">{{cite book |last1=Bosson |first1=Jennifer Katherine |last2=Vandello |first2=Joseph Alan |last3=Buckner |first3=Camille E. |title=The Psychology of Sex and Gender |date=27 February 2018 |isbn=978-1-5063-3132-4 |page=185 |publisher=SAGE Publications}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Angier |first=Natalie |date=2016-09-10 |title=In the Bonobo World, Female Camaraderie Prevails |language=en-US |work=The New York Times |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2016/09/13/science/bonobos-apes-matriarchy.html |access-date=2022-05-07 |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> | |||
There is also considerable variation in the role that gender plays in human societies, and there is no academic consensus on to what extent ] human social structure. The '']'' states that "...many cultures bestow power preferentially on one sex or the other...."<ref name="Britannica 2018">{{cite encyclopedia |title=Matriarchy |encyclopedia=] |date=2018 |access-date=23 June 2018 |url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/matriarchy}}</ref> Some anthropologists, such as Floriana Ciccodicola, have argued that patriarchy is a ],<ref name="Ciccodicola 2012">{{cite book |last=Ciccodicola |first=Floriana |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Gq9QSx4CQLAC&pg=PA160 |title=Practicing anthropology in development processes: new perspectives for a radical anthropology |date=2012 |publisher=Edizioni Nuova Cultura |isbn=978-88-6134-791-5 |location=Roma |page=160}}</ref> and the masculinities scholar ] suggests that ]' description of the term ''],'' i.e. patriarchy as the 'norm' or common sense, is relevant.<ref>{{cite book |last=Buchbinder |first=David |title=Studying men and masculinities |publisher=Routledge |year=2013 |isbn=978-0-415-57829-5 |location=Abingdon, Oxon, UK; New York, N.Y. |pages=106–107 |chapter=Troubling patriarchy |author-link=David Buchbinder |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=TmfUzE4WnW8C&pg=PA106}}</ref>{{Clarify|reason=How is it relevant?|date=December 2020}} However, there do exist cultures that some anthropologists have described as matriarchal. Among the ] (a tiny society in ], China), for example, women exert greater power, authority, and control over decision-making.<ref name="Macionis 2012" /> Other societies are ] or ], primarily among ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Schlegel |first=Alice |title=Male dominance and female autonomy: domestic authority in matrilineal societies |date=1972 |publisher=HRAF Press |isbn=978-0-87536-328-8 |location=New Haven, Connecticut}}</ref> Some ] groups, such as the ] of southern Africa,{{r|Lockard p88}} have been characterized as largely ].<ref name="Erdal 1996" /> | |||
Some proponents{{Who|date=December 2020}} of the ] understanding of patriarchy argue that because of human female biology, women are more fit to perform roles such as anonymous child-rearing at home, rather than high-profile decision-making roles, such as leaders in battles. Through this basis, "the existence of a ] in primitive societies is a starting point as much for purely social accounts of the origins of patriarchy as for biological."<ref name="Lewontin 1984">{{cite book |chapter=The determined patriarchy |chapter-url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/10348941 |last1=Lewontin |first1=Richard C. |last2=Rose |first2=Steven |last3=Kamin |first3=Leon J. |author-link1=Richard Lewontin |title=Not in our genes: biology, ideology, and human nature |pages=132–163 |publisher=Pantheon Books |location=New York |date=1984 |isbn=978-0-14-022605-8 |oclc=10348941}}</ref>{{rp|157}}{{Verify source|date=December 2020}} Hence, the rise of patriarchy is recognized through this apparent "sexual division".<ref name="Lewontin 1984" />{{Verify source|date=December 2020}} | |||
=== Evolutionary biology === | |||
An early theory in ], sometimes referred to as ], argues that females almost always invest more energy into producing offspring than males, and therefore, females are a ] over which males of most species will compete. This idea suggests that females prefer males who control more resources that can help her and her offspring, which in turn causes an ] on males to be competitive with each other in order to gain resources and power.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Buss |first1=David Michael |last2=Schmitt |first2=David P. |date=May 2011 |title=Evolutionary psychology and feminism |journal=] |volume=64 |issue=9–10 |pages=768–787 |doi=10.1007/s11199-011-9987-3 |s2cid=7878675}}</ref> | |||
Sociobiologist ] argues that social behavior is primarily determined by ], and thus that patriarchy arises more as a result of inherent biology than ]. Goldberg contends that patriarchy is a universal feature of ]. 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."<ref name="Goldberg 1974">{{cite book |last=Goldberg |first=Steven |title=The inevitability of patriarchy |date=1974 |publisher=W. Morrow |isbn=978-0-688-05175-4 |location=New York}}</ref> Goldberg has critics among anthropologists. Concerning Goldberg's claims about the "feelings of both men and women", ] 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 ] on the cultures represented in the studies were not considered.<ref name="Leacock 1974">{{cite journal |last=Leacock |first=Eleanor |author-link=Eleanor Leacock |date=June 1974 |title=Reviewed Work: ''The Inevitability of Patriarchy'' by Steven Goldberg |journal=] |volume=76 |issue=2 |pages=363–365 |doi=10.1525/aa.1974.76.2.02a00280 |jstor=674209 |doi-access=free}}</ref> | |||
Anthropologist and psychologist ] argues that patriarchy evolved in humans through conflict between the respective reproductive interests of males and females. She lists six ways it may have emerged:<ref name="Smuts 1995" />{{Further explanation needed|reason=|date=December 2020}} | |||
# a reduction in female allies | |||
# elaboration of male-male alliances | |||
# increased male control over resources | |||
# increased hierarchy formation among men | |||
# female strategies that reinforce male control over females | |||
# the ] and its power to create ideology. | |||
==Psychoanalytic theories== | |||
While the term ''patriarchy'' often refers to male domination generally, another interpretation sees it as literally "rule of the father".<ref name="Mitchell 1974">{{cite book |last=Mitchell |first=Juliet |author-link=Juliet Mitchell |chapter=The cultural revolution |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DwG0AAAAIAAJ |title=Psychoanalysis and feminism |page=409 |publisher=Pantheon Books |location=New York |date=1974 |isbn=978-0-394-47472-4}}</ref> So some people{{Who|date=September 2018}} believe patriarchy does not refer simply to male power over women, but the expression of power dependent on age as well as gender, such as by older men over women, children, and younger men. Some of these younger men may inherit and therefore have a stake in continuing these conventions. Others may rebel.<ref>{{cite book |last=Eherenreich |first=Barbara |chapter=Life without father |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=4_zeRtk81pcC |editor-last1=McDowell |editor-first1=Linda |editor-last2=Pringle |editor-first2=Rosemary |title=Defining women: Social institutions and gender divisions |publisher=Polity/Open University |location=London |date=1992 |isbn=978-0-7456-0979-9 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/definingwomensoc0000unse/mode/1up?view=theater}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Cockburn |first=Cynthia |title=Brothers: male dominance and technological change |publisher=Pluto |location=London Concord, Massachusetts |date=1991 |isbn=978-0-7453-0583-7}}</ref>{{Explain|date=September 2018}} | |||
This psychoanalytic model is based upon revisions of Freud's description of the normally neurotic family using the analogy of the story of ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Lacan |first=Jaques |author-link=Jaques Lacan |chapter=The mirror stage as formative of the function of the I as revealed in psychoanalytic experience (1949) |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XFtrNAEACAAJ |editor-last=Sheridan |editor-first=Alan |title=Écrits: a selection |publisher=Routledge |location=London |date=2001 |orig-date=1977 |isbn=978-0-415-25392-5}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Mulvey |first=Laura |author-link=Laura Mulvey |chapter=The Oedipus myth: beyond the riddles of the Sphinx |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P6awCwAAQBAJ&pg=PA177 |title=Visual and other pleasures |pages=177–200 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |location=Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire England New York |date=2009 |edition=2nd |isbn=978-0-230-57646-9}}</ref> Those who fall outside the Oedipal triad of mother/father/child are less subject to male authority.<ref>{{cite book |last=Butler |first=Judith |author-link=Judith Butler |title=Antigone's claim: kinship between life and death |url=https://archive.org/details/antigonesclaim00judi/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |publisher=Columbia University Press |location=New York |date=2000 |isbn=978-0-231-11895-8}}</ref> | |||
The operations of power in such cases are usually enacted unconsciously. All are subject, even fathers are bound by its strictures.<ref>{{cite thesis |degree=PhD |last=Dalton |first=Penelope |author-link=Pen Dalton |date=2008 |chapter=Complex family relations |title=Family and other relations: a thesis examining the extent to which family relationships shape the relations of art |publisher=] |hdl=10026.1/758}}</ref> It is represented in unspoken traditions and conventions performed in everyday behaviors, customs, and habits.<ref name="Mitchell 1974" /> The 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 ] in rituals of courtship and marriage.<ref>{{cite book |last=Dalton |first=Pen |author-link=Pen Dalton |chapter=Theoretical perspectives |chapter-url=https://www.mheducation.co.uk/openup/chapters/0335196489.pdf |title=The gendering of art education: modernism, identity, and critical feminism |pages=9–32 |publisher=Open University |location=Buckingham England Philadelphia, Pennsylvania |date=2001 |isbn=978-0-335-19649-4}}</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>{{cite book |last1=Hofstede |first1=Geert |last2=Hofstede |first2=Gert Jan |title=Cultures and organizations: software of the mind |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7mslqQWDP10C |publisher=McGraw-Hill |location=New York |date=2005 |isbn=978-0-07-143959-6}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Tierney |first=Margaret |chapter=Negotiating a software career: informal work practices and 'the lads' in a software installation |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wbukPYoqZ2cC&pg=PA192 |editor-last1=Gill |editor-first1=Rosalind |editor-last2=Grint |editor-first2=Keith |editor-link1=Rosalind Gill |title=The gender-technology relation: contemporary theory and research |pages=192–209 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |location=London Bristol, Pennsylvania |date=1995 |isbn=978-0-7484-0161-1}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Roper |first=Michael |title=Masculinity and the British organization man since 1945 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Dhq5PdRMsRQC |publisher=Oxford University Press |location=Oxford New York |date=1994 |isbn=978-0-19-825693-9}}</ref> | |||
Arguing from this standpoint, radical feminist ] wrote in her 1970 '']'': | |||
<blockquote>Marx was on to something more profound than he knew when he observed that the family contained within itself in embryo all the antagonisms that later develop on a wide scale within the society and the state. For unless revolution uproots the basic social organisation, the biological family – the vinculum through which the psychology of power can always be smuggled – the tapeworm of exploitation will never be annihilated.<ref>{{cite book |last=Firestone |first=Shulamith |author-link=Shulamith Firestone |title=The dialectic of sex: the case for feminist revolution |url=https://archive.org/details/dialecticofsexca0000fire/mode/1up?view=theater |url-access=registration |publisher=Quill |location=New York |date=1970 |isbn=978-0-688-12359-8}}</ref></blockquote> | |||
== Gender Inequality today == | |||
According to United Nations, $6.4 trillion the estimated annual requirement for certain sectors in 48 developing countries. This accounts for almost 70% of the world's population in developing countries.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title='Patriarchy Is Regaining Ground', Secretary-General Warns, while Women's, Girls' Rights Face Unprecedented Threat, as Commission Opens 2024 Session |url=https://press.un.org/en/2024/wom2231.doc.htm}}</ref> The President of the General Assembly, Dennis Francis emphasized the need to reverse the prediction of 340 million women in extreme poverty by 2030 due to the finding of one in every ten women currently living in extreme poverty. Women are also being targeted in places like Palestine, Ukraine, and Haiti, as he stated that credible evidence of sexual abuse was found.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal |title=Critical Overview of Patriarchy, Its Interferences With Psychological Development, and Risks for Mental Health |date=2023 |doi=10.7759/cureus.40216 |doi-access=free |last1=Gupta |first1=Mayank |last2=Madabushi |first2=Jayakrishna S. |last3=Gupta |first3=Nihit |last4=Gupta |first4=Mayank |last5=Madabushi |first5=Jayakrishna S. |last6=Gupta |first6=Nihit |journal=Cureus |volume=15 |issue=6 |pages=e40216 |pmid=37435274 |pmc=10332384 }}</ref> Sexual violence impacts individuals of all genders, though women are disproportionately affected. Additionally, most perpetrators are male, which some view as reinforcing traditional power structures associated with patriarchy.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
Sima Bahouse, the Executive director of the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, emphasized the urgent need to eliminate poverty for women and girls, advocating for inclusive fiscal policies that promote equitable redistribution and progressive taxation.<ref name=":0" /> Key priorities include enhancing public services and creating gender-responsive social protection systems that specifically benefit women and girls in poverty. Investing in the care economy is highlighted as essential for alleviating their poverty and fostering sustainable economic growth. The speaker rejected excuses about the difficulty or cost of these initiatives, asserting that a fair and sustainable future for all women and girls is achievable.<ref name=":0" /> | |||
== Impact of Patriarchy on Mental Health == | |||
The patriarchal framework of gender norms has established specific behavioral expectations for individuals according to their biological sex. Some individuals may not desire to adhere to the strict "acceptable behaviors" or gender boundaries set by society, which could be traumatic for some. These individuals are excluded and faced with alienation, making them more vulnerable to sexual violence.<ref name=":1" /> For example, LGBTQ+ members frequently fall victim to sexual abuse and harassment. Consequently, a patriarchal society creates an inherently unsafe and harmful environment for non-conforming women and those who do not adhere to rigid societal norms of gender and sexuality. While this power disparity is often perceived as primarily benefiting men, it also poses hidden risks to their psychological well-being.<ref name=":1" /> | |||
With social media being very present today, individuals are increasingly susceptible to the negative impacts of patriarchy on their mental health. The internet has facilitated the spread of gender-based discrimination, reinforced patriarchal norms, and propagated negative representations of women. Research has shown that "social media use may be linked to adverse mental health effects, such as suicidal thoughts, feelings of loneliness, and reduced empathy".<ref name=":1" /> For instance, social media platforms often feature curated images that promote unrealistic body standards or lifestyles, leading to feelings of comparison, jealousy, and anxiety among users. | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
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== Notes and references == | |||
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===Contrast=== | |||
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==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
<!-- * {{cite book |title= |publisher= |date= |isbn= |url=}} --> | |||
* {{cite book |last=Bourdieu |first=Pierre |author-link=Pierre Bourdieu |title=Masculine domination |publisher=Polity Press |location=Cambridge, UK |date=2001 |isbn=978-0-7456-2265-1}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Durham |first=Meenakshi G. |author-link1=Meenakshi Gigi Durham |title=Articulating adolescent girls' resistance to patriarchal discourse in popular media |journal=Women's Studies in Communication |volume=22 |issue=2 |pages=210–229 |doi=10.1080/07491409.1999.10162421 |date=1999}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Gilligan |first=Carol |title=In a different voice: psychological theory and women's development |publisher=Harvard University Press |location=Cambridge, Massachusetts |date=1982 |isbn=978-0-674-44544-4 |title-link=In a Different Voice}} | |||
:'':Cited in'': | |||
:* {{cite journal |last=Smiley |first=Marion |title=Gender, democratic citizenship v. patriarchy: a feminist perspective on Rawls |journal=] |volume=72 |issue=5 |pages=1599–1627 |date=2004 |url=http://ir.lawnet.fordham.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3965&context=flr}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Keith |first=Thomas |title=Masculinities in Contemporary American Culture: An Intersectional Approach to the Complexities and Challenges of Male Identity |date=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-317-59534-2 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r_niDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT29 |chapter=Patriarchy, Male Privilege, and the Consequences of Living in a Patriarchal Society}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Light |first=Aimee U. |chapter=Patriarchy |editor1=Boynton, Victoria |editor2=Malin, Jo |title=Encyclopedia of Women's Autobiography, Volume 2: K-Z |publisher=Greenwood Publishing Group |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-313-32737-7 |pages=453–456 |chapter-url=https://archive.org/details/encyclopediaofwo0000unse_v4e3/page/453/mode/1up?view=theater |chapter-url-access=registration}} | |||
* {{cite journal |last=Messner |first=Michael A. |author-link=Michael Messner |title=On patriarchs and losers: rethinking men's interests |journal=Berkeley Journal of Sociology |volume=48 |pages=74–88 |date=2004 |jstor=41035593}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Mies |first=Maria |author-link=Maria Mies |title=Patriarchy and accumulation on a world scale: women in the international division of labour |publisher=Zed Books Ltd |location=London |date=2014 |isbn=978-1-78360-169-1}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Smith |first=Bonnie G. |author-link=Bonnie G. Smith |title=Women's history in global perspective |volume=2 |publisher=University of Illinois Press |location=Urbana |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=cQz2o883S38C |date=2004 |isbn=978-0-252-02997-4}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Pateman |first1=Carole |title=The Sexual Contract |date=2018 |publisher=Stanford University Press |isbn=978-1-5036-0827-6 |edition=30th anniversary}} | |||
* {{cite book |last1=Pilcher |first1=Jane |last2=Wheelan |first2=Imelda |title=50 key concepts in gender studies |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161230160953/http://www.imd.inder.cu/adjuntos/article/329/50_Key_Concepts_in_Gender_Studies.pdf |archive-date=30 December 2016 |url=http://www.imd.inder.cu/adjuntos/article/329/50_Key_Concepts_in_Gender_Studies.pdf |publisher=Sage |location=London Thousand Oaks, California |author-link=Jane Pilcher |date=2004 |isbn=978-0-7619-7036-1}} | |||
==External links== | |||
== Bibliography == | |||
* {{Wiktionary-inline|patriarchy}} | |||
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* {{wikiquote-inline}} | |||
* {{Commons category-inline}} | |||
* {{Cite Americana |wstitle=Patriarchal System |page=401 |short=x}} | |||
{{Feminism}} | |||
* Adeline, Helen B. ''Fascinating Womanhood''. New York: Random House, 2007. | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
* ]. ''The Essential Difference: The Truth about the Male and Female Brain''. New York: Perseus Books Group, 2003. | |||
* ]. ''Le Deuxième Sexe''. Paris: ], 1949. (original French edition) | |||
* ]. ''The Second Sex''. London: ], 1953. (first UK edition, in translation) | |||
* ]. ''The Second Sex''. New York: ], 1953. (first USA edition, in translation) | |||
* ]. ''Masculine Domination''. Translated by Richard Nice. Stanford: ], 2001. | |||
* ]. ''The Female Brain''. New York: Morgan Road Books, 2006. | |||
* ]. '']''. New York: ], 1991. | |||
* Jay, Jennifer W. "Kingdoms of Women" in Tang China'. '']'' '''116''' (1996): 220-229. | |||
* ]. '' Biological Constraints on the Human Spirit''. 2nd edition, revised and updated. (], 2003). 560p. ISBN 0805072799 | |||
* Lepowsky, Maria. '' Gender in an Egalitarian Society''. New York: ], 1993. | |||
* ]. 'Do We Undervalue Full-Time Wives'. '']'' 122 (1963). | |||
* Mies, Maria. ''Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale: Women in the International Division of Labour''. ], 1999. | |||
* Moir, Anne and David Jessel. '']: The Real Difference Between Men and Women''. | |||
* ]. 'Is Female to Male as Nature is to Culture?'. In MZ Rosaldo and L Lamphere (eds). ''Woman, Culture and Society''. Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1974, pp. 67-87. | |||
* ]. 'So, Is Female to Male as Nature is to Culture?'. In S Ortner. ''Making Gender: The Politics and Erotics of Culture.'' Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1996, pp. 173-180. | |||
* Pilcher, Jane and Imelda Wheelan. ''50 Key Concepts in Gender Studies''. London: Sage Publications, 2004. | |||
* ]. ''The Blank Slate: A Modern Denial of Human Nature''. London: ], 2002. | |||
] | |||
== External links == | |||
* ''. '']'' Online, 2007. | |||
* ''. '']'' (2003). | |||
* ]. ''''. Boston: Peter Edes for Thomas and Andrews, 1792. | |||
* ]. ''''. Translated by HM Parshley. London: Penguin, 1972. | |||
* ''. In '']''. Stanford University, 2001. | |||
* | |||
* ]. ''''. London: ], 1952. | |||
* Steven Webster. '' '']'' (1972): 37–38. | |||
* ]. ''. '']'' (2006). | |||
* Official of the ]. | |||
* — ]. | |||
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Latest revision as of 13:56, 24 December 2024
Social system with male rule This article is about the social system. For other uses, see Patriarchy (disambiguation). "Macho politics" redirects here. For the concept of pride in male domination, see Machismo. "Patriarchal system" redirects here. For the political hierarchy of the Western Zhou, see Patriarchal system (Western Zhou). Not to be confused with Patriarchate.Patriarchy is a social system in which positions of authority are primarily held by men. The term patriarchy is used both in anthropology to describe a family or clan controlled by the father or eldest male or group of males, and in feminist theory to describe a broader social structure in which men as a group dominate society.
Patriarchal ideology acts to explain and rationalize patriarchy by attributing gender inequality to inherent natural differences between men and women, divine commandment, or other fixed structures. Sociologists tend to disagree with some of the predominantly biological explanations of patriarchy and contend that socialization processes are primarily responsible for establishing gender roles. Sociobiologists compare human gender roles to sexed behavior in other primates and some argue that gender inequality comes primarily from genetic and reproductive differences between men and women. Social constructionists contest this argument, arguing that gender roles and gender inequity are instruments of power and have become social norms to maintain control over women.
Historically, patriarchy has manifested itself in the social, legal, political, religious, and economic organization of a range of different cultures. Most contemporary societies are, in practice, patriarchal, unless the criteria of complete exclusion of women in authority is applied.
Terminology
Patriarchy literally means "the rule of the father" and comes from the Greek πατριάρχης (patriarkhēs), "father or chief of a race", which is a compound of πατριά (patria), "lineage, descent, family, fatherland" (from πατήρ patēr, "father") and ἀρχή (arkhē), "domination, authority, sovereignty".
Historically, the term patriarchy has been used to refer to autocratic rule by the male head of a family; however, since the late 20th century it has also been used to refer to social systems in which power is primarily held by adult men. The term was particularly used by writers associated with second-wave feminism such as Kate Millett; these writers sought to use an understanding of patriarchal social relations to liberate women from male domination. This concept of patriarchy was developed to explain male dominance as a social, rather than biological, phenomenon.
Overview
Patriarchy is a social system in which men are the primary authority figures in the areas of political leadership, moral authority and control of property. Sociologist Sylvia Walby defines patriarchy as "a system of social structures and practices in which men dominate, oppress, and exploit women". Social stratification along gender lines, with power predominantly held by men, has been observed in most, but not all societies. The concept of patriarchy is also related to patrilineality in a anthropological sense, although not exclusively.
History
Pre-history
Sexual division of labour
Some preconditions for the eventual development of patriarchy were the emergence of increased paternal investment in the offspring, also referred to as fatherhood, and of a sexual division of labour. Several researchers have stated that the first signs of a sexual division of labour dates from around 2 million years ago, deep within humanity's evolutionary past. It has been connected to an evolutionary process during a period of resource scarcity in Africa approximately 2 million years ago. In the 2009 book Catching Fire: How Cooking Made Us Human, British primatologist Richard Wrangham suggests that the origin of the division of labor between males and females may have originated with the invention of cooking, which is estimated to have happened simultaneously with humans gaining control of fire between 1 and 2 million years ago. The idea was early proposed by Friedrich Engels in an unfinished essay from 1876.
Sex hierarchies
Anthropological, archaeological and evolutionary psychological evidence suggests that most prehistoric societies were relatively egalitarian, and suggests that patriarchal social structures did not develop until after the end of the Pleistocene epoch, following social and technological developments such as agriculture and domestication. According to Robert M. Strozier, historical research has not yet found a specific "initiating event". Historian Gerda Lerner asserts in her 1986 book The Creation of Patriarchy that there was no single event, and documents that patriarchy as a social system arose in different parts of the world at different times. Some scholars point to social and technological events, notably the emergence of agriculture, about six thousand years ago (4000 BCE).
Marxist theory, as articulated mainly by Friedrich Engels in The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884), assigns the origin of patriarchy to the emergence of private property, which has traditionally been controlled by men. In this view, men directed household production and sought to control women in order to ensure the passing of family property to their own (male) offspring, while women were limited to household labor and producing children. Lerner disputes this idea, arguing that patriarchy emerged before the development of class-based society and the concept of private property.
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". According to some researchers, with the appearance of the Hebrews, there is also "the exclusion of woman from the God-humanity covenant".
The archaeologist Marija Gimbutas argues that waves of kurgan-building invaders from the Ukrainian steppes into the early agricultural cultures of Old Europe in the Aegean, the Balkans and southern Italy instituted male hierarchies that led to the rise of patriarchy in Western society. Steven Taylor argues that the rise of patriarchal domination was associated with the appearance of socially stratified hierarchical polities, institutionalised violence and the separated individuated ego associated with a period of climatic stress.
Ancient Western history
A prominent Greek general Meno, in the Platonic dialogue of the same name, sums up the prevailing sentiment in Classical Greece about the respective virtues of men and women. He says:
First of all, if you take the virtue of a man, it is easily stated that a man's virtue is this—that he be competent to manage the affairs of his city, and to manage them so as to benefit his friends and harm his enemies, and to take care to avoid suffering harm himself. Or take a woman's virtue: there is no difficulty in describing it as the duty of ordering the house well, looking after the property indoors, and obeying her husband.
— Meno, Plato in Twelve Volumes
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 to serve men in the household; and saw male domination of women as natural and virtuous.
Not all of the great Greek thinkers believed that women were inferior. Aristotle's teacher Plato laid out his vision of the most just society in his work Republic. In it, Plato argues that women would have complete educational and political equality in such a society, and would serve in the military. The Pythagoreans also valued the participation of women, who were treated as intellectual equals.
Lerner 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 Horowitz 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 he perceived as male). Aristotle had a hierarchical ruling structure in his theories. Lerner claims that through this patriarchal belief system, passed down generation to generation, people have been 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.
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, middle-class women were eligible to sit on a local tribunal, engage in real estate transactions, and inherit or bequeath property. Women also secured loans, and witnessed legal documents. Athenian women were denied such rights.
Greek influence spread, however, with the conquests of Alexander the Great, who was educated by Aristotle.
Modern Western history
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 species, according to Judeo-Christian-Islamic tradition.
However, in the latter half of the 18th century, clerical sentiments of patriarchy were meeting challenges from intellectual authorities – Diderot's Encyclopédie denies inheritance of paternal authority stating, "... reason shows us that mothers have rights and authority equal to those of fathers; for the obligations imposed on children originate equally from the mother and the father, as both are equally responsible for bringing them into the world. Thus the positive laws of God that relate to the obedience of children join the father and the mother without any differentiation; both possess a kind of ascendancy and jurisdiction over their children...."
In the 19th century, various women began to question the commonly accepted patriarchal interpretation of Christian scripture. Quaker Sarah Grimké 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.
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. In 2020, social theorist and theologian Elaine Storkey retold the stories of thirty biblical women in her book Women in a Patriarchal World and applied the challenges they faced to women today. Working from both the Hebrew Scriptures and the New Testament, she analysed different variations of patriarchy, and outlined the paradox of Rahab, a prostitute in the Old Testament who became a role-model in the New Testament Epistle of James, and Epistle to the Hebrews. In his essay "A Judicial Patriarchy: Family Law at the Turn of the Century", Michael Grossberg coined the phrase "judicial patriarchy", stating that "The judge became the buffer between the family and the state", and that "Judicial patriarchs dominated family law because within these institutional and intraclass rivalries judges succeeded in protecting their power over the law governing the hearth."
Asian history
In ancient Japan, power in society was more evenly distributed, particularly in the religious domain, where Shintoism worships the goddess Amaterasu, and ancient writings were replete with references to great priestesses and magicians. However, at the time contemporary with Constantine in the West, "the emperor of Japan changed Japanese modes of worship", giving supremacy to male deities and suppressing belief in female spiritual power in what feminist scholars in the field of religious studies have called a "patriarchal revolution."
In ancient China, gender roles and patriarchy were shaped by Confucianism. Adopted as the official religion in the Han dynasty, Confucianism has strong dictates regarding the behavior of women, declaring a woman's place in society, as well as outlining virtuous behavior. Three Obediences and Four Virtues, a Confucian text, places a woman's value on her loyalty and obedience. It explains that an obedient woman is to obey their father before her marriage, her husband after marriage, and her first son if widowed, and that a virtuous woman must practice sexual propriety, proper speech, modest appearance, and hard work. Ban Zhao, a Confucian disciple, writes in her book Precepts for Women that a woman's primary concern is to subordinate themselves before patriarchal figures, such as a husband or father, and that they need not concern themselves with intelligence or talent. Ban Zhao is considered by some historians as an early champion for women's education in China; however, her extensive writing on the value of a woman's mediocrity and servile behavior leaves others feeling that this narrative is the result of a misplaced desire to cast her in a contemporary feminist light. Similarly to Three Obediences and Four Virtues, Precepts for Women was meant as a moral guide for proper feminine behavior, and was widely accepted as such for centuries.
In China's Ming dynasty, widowed women were expected to never remarry, and unmarried women were expected to remain chaste for the duration of their lives. Biographies of Exemplary Women, a book containing biographies of women who lived according to the Confucian ideals of virtuous womanhood, popularized an entire genre of similar writing during the Ming dynasty. Women who lived according to this Neo-Confucian ideal were celebrated in official documents, and some had structures erected in their honor.
In China's Qing dynasty, laws governing morality, sexuality, and gender-relations continued to be based on Confucian teachings. Men and women were both subject to strict laws regarding sexual behavior, however men were punished infrequently in comparison to women. Additionally, women's punishment often carried strong social stigma, "rendering unmarriageable", a stigma which did not follow men. Similarly, in the People's Republic of China, laws governing morality which were written as egalitarian were selectively enforced favoring men, with insufficient enforcement against female infanticide in various areas, while infanticide of any form was, by the letter of the law, prohibited.
Social theories
Further information: Sex differences in humans and Social construction of gender differenceSociologists tend to reject predominantly biological explanations of patriarchy and contend that socialization processes are primarily responsible for establishing gender roles. According to standard sociological theory, patriarchy is the result of sociological constructions that are passed down from generation to generation. These constructions are most pronounced in societies with traditional cultures and less economic development. Even in modern, developed societies, however, gender messages conveyed by family, mass media, and other institutions largely favor males having a dominant status.
Although patriarchy exists within the scientific atmosphere, "the periods over which women would have been at a physiological disadvantage in participation in hunting through being at a late stage of pregnancy or early stage of child-rearing would have been short". During the time of the nomads, patriarchy still grew with power. Lewontin and others argue that such biological determinism unjustly limits women. In his study, he states women 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".
Feminists believe that people have gendered biases, which are perpetuated and enforced across generations by those who benefit from them. For instance, it has historically been claimed that women cannot make rational decisions during their menstrual periods. This claim cloaks the fact that men also have periods of time where they can be aggressive and irrational; furthermore, unrelated effects of aging and similar medical problems are often blamed on menopause, amplifying its reputation. These biological traits and others specific to women, such as their ability to get pregnant, are often used against them as an attribute of weakness.
Sociologist Sylvia Walby has composed six overlapping structures that define patriarchy and that take different forms in different cultures and different times:
- The household: women are more likely to have their labor expropriated by their husbands such as through housework and raising children
- Paid work: women are likely to be paid less and face exclusion from paid work
- The state: women are unlikely to have formal power and representation
- Violence: women are more prone to being abused
- Sexuality: women's sexuality is more likely to be treated negatively
- Culture: representation of women in different cultural contexts
The idea that patriarchy is natural has, however, come under attack from many sociologists, explaining that patriarchy evolved due to historical, rather than biological, conditions. In technologically simple societies, men's greater physical strength and women's common experience of pregnancy combined to sustain patriarchy. Gradually, technological advances, especially industrial machinery, diminished the primacy of physical strength in everyday life. Introduction of household appliances reduced the amount of manual labor needed in the households. Similarly, contraception has given women control over their reproductive cycle.
Patriarchy and Feminism
Patriarchy generally falls under two categories, "traditional patriarchy" and "structural patriarchy" (Pierik). Traditional patriarchy refers to the idea that the father is the head of the household and is at the top of families’ social hierarchies. This patriarchal structure is most apparent in the American representation of a nuclear family; the father works and brings home an income while the mother takes care of the children and the household. This economic power dynamic in the home typically places the desires of the man/father/husband as priority over the desires of the woman/mother/wife.
Structural patriarchy expands the range of this social hierarchy outside of just the home and family dynamic. The typical influence that men hold in the home is extended to their social and professional positions. Women are often considered the caretakers of the workplace when in a professional setting while men do the labor. This dynamic can be seen in an office setting, with men as sources of income for the business and women in roles as secretaries to care for the workplace. This system leans into the idea that men are typically placed in higher-power positions in society due to the traditional role of a financial provider, and women fall into caretaker roles.
Development of Feminism
The extended presence of patriarchal structures has led to the establishment of feministic ideals over centuries (Brunell). Several prominent fronts led to and continue to push the development of feminism; including paid and unpaid labor and expectations of gender roles(Thompson). Men are traditionally viewed as the breadwinners in a patriarchal society, and women are seen as homemakers. Formal job occupations outside of the home, traditionally carried out by men in a patriarchal society, are paid labor. Any work done inside of the home without financial compensation, traditionally carried out by women in patriarchal societies, is unpaid labor. Until 1974, women were not allowed to have their bank accounts, which pushed the financial divide further and placed men in higher economic positions. (Adam) The uneven financial compensation between these levels of labor is one of the factors that pushed feministic ideals forward.
The Role of Patriarchy in Feminism
With men being expected to bring home an income to support a family and the entire household, the strain of the increasing cost of living makes that ideal impractical. Because of this economic strain, many households rely on multiple incomes from both men and women. When women would traditionally be expected to stay home and provide childcare, they now have to seek it out elsewhere to provide for the family, which in turn drives up the cost of living further. With this reliance on further income and sourcing traditionally female childcare roles outside of the home, patriarchal norms start to become less relevant. This breakdown of traditional roles leads to the natural decrease of a gender-specific social structure.
Feminist Ideologies
Feminism is not a direct opposition to patriarchy, it is a theory in response to patriarchy. Feminism focuses on the empowerment of women in society and the dismissal of traditional gender roles that are oppressive. Traditional female roles in the household are largely abandoned, and equal opportunity for women is the largest ideal that feminism stands with. Feminist theories believe that financial and social opportunities should be equally available for all.
This social division of gender roles as caretakers and providers is broken down to better allow women to participate outside of caring for a home and children. Financial opportunity refers to employment pursuits, access to one's own finances, and wage equality for job positions that are available for both men and women. The wage gap issues and traditional roles as unpaid laborers for the family significantly drive the growth of feminism in modern social settings. Which in turn shuts down patriarchal structures.
Feminist theory
Feminist theorists have written extensively about patriarchy either as a primary cause of women's oppression, or as part of an interactive system. Shulamith Firestone, a radical-libertarian feminist, defines patriarchy as a system of oppression of women. Firestone believes that patriarchy is caused by the biological inequalities between women and men, e.g. that women bear children, while men do not. Firestone writes that patriarchal ideologies support the oppression of women and gives as an example the joy of giving birth, which she labels a patriarchal myth. For Firestone, women must gain control over reproduction in order to be free from oppression. Feminist historian Gerda Lerner believes that male control over women's sexuality and reproductive functions is a fundamental cause and result of patriarchy.
Interactive systems theorists Iris Marion Young and Heidi Hartmann believe that patriarchy and capitalism interact together to oppress women. Young, Hartmann, and other socialist and Marxist feminists use the terms patriarchal capitalism or capitalist patriarchy to describe the interactive relationship of capitalism and patriarchy in producing and reproducing the oppression of women. According to Hartmann, the term patriarchy redirects the focus of oppression from the labour division to a moral and political responsibility liable directly to men as a gender. In its being both systematic and universal, therefore, the concept of patriarchy represents an adaptation of the Marxist concept of class and class struggle.
Lindsey German represents an outlier in this regard. German argued for a need to redefine the origins and sources of the patriarchy, describing the mainstream theories as providing "little understanding of how women's oppression and the nature of the family have changed historically. Nor is there much notion of how widely differing that oppression is from class to class." Instead, the patriarchy is not the result of men's oppression of women or sexism per se, with men not even identified as the main beneficiaries of such a system, but capital itself. As such, female liberation needs to begin "with an assessment of the material position of women in capitalist society." In that, German differs from Young or Hartmann by rejecting the notion ("eternal truth") that the patriarchy is at the root of female oppression.
Audre Lorde, an African American feminist writer and theorist, believed that racism and patriarchy were intertwined systems of oppression. Sara Ruddick, a philosopher who wrote about "good mothers" in the context of maternal ethics, describes the dilemma facing contemporary mothers who must train their children within a patriarchal system. She asks whether a "good mother" trains her son to be competitive, individualistic, and comfortable within the hierarchies of patriarchy, knowing that he may likely be economically successful but a mean person, or whether she resists patriarchal ideologies and socializes her son to be cooperative and communal but economically unsuccessful.
Lerner, in her 1986 book The Creation of Patriarchy, makes a series of arguments about the origins and reproduction of patriarchy as a system of oppression of women, and concludes that patriarchy is socially constructed and seen as natural and invisible.
Some feminist theorists believe that patriarchy is an unjust social system that is harmful to both men and women. It often includes any social, political, or economic mechanism that evokes male dominance over women. Because patriarchy is a social construction, it can be overcome by revealing and critically analyzing its manifestations.
Jaggar, Young, and Hartmann are among the feminist theorists who argue that the system of patriarchy should be completely overturned, especially the heteropatriarchal family, which they see as a necessary component of female oppression. The family not only serves as a representative of the greater civilization by pushing its own affiliates to change and obey, but performs as a component in the rule of the patriarchal state that rules its inhabitants with the head of the family.
Many feminists (especially scholars and activists) have called for culture repositioning as a method for deconstructing patriarchy. Culture repositioning relates to culture change. It involves the reconstruction of the cultural concept of a society. Prior to the widespread use of the term patriarchy, early feminists used male chauvinism and sexism to refer roughly to the same phenomenon. Author bell hooks argues that the new term identifies the ideological system itself (that men claim dominance and superiority to women) that can be believed and acted upon by either men or women, whereas the earlier terms imply only men act as oppressors of women.
Sociologist Joan Acker, analyzing the concept of patriarchy and the role that it has played in the development of feminist thought, says that seeing patriarchy as a "universal, trans-historical and trans-cultural phenomenon" where "women were everywhere oppressed by men in more or less the same ways tended toward a biological essentialism."
Anna Pollert has described use of the term patriarchy as circular and conflating description and explanation. She remarks the discourse on patriarchy creates a "theoretical impasse ... imposing a structural label on what it is supposed to explain" and therefore impoverishes the possibility of explaining gender inequalities.
Biological theories
Main articles: Sex differences in humans and Social construction of gender differenceStudies of male sexual coercion and female resistance in nonhuman primates (for example, chimpanzees) suggest that sexual conflicts of interest underlying the patriarchy precede the emergence of the human species. However, the extent of male power over females varies greatly across different primate species. Among bonobos (a close relative of humans), for example, male coercion of females is rarely, if ever, observed, and bonobos are widely considered to be matriarchal in their social structure.
There is also considerable variation in the role that gender plays in human societies, and there is no academic consensus on to what extent biology determines human social structure. The Encyclopædia Britannica states that "...many cultures bestow power preferentially on one sex or the other...." Some anthropologists, such as Floriana Ciccodicola, have argued that patriarchy is a cultural universal, and the masculinities scholar David Buchbinder suggests that Roland Barthes' description of the term ex-nomination, i.e. patriarchy as the 'norm' or common sense, is relevant. However, there do exist cultures that some anthropologists have described as matriarchal. Among the Mosuo (a tiny society in Yunnan Province, China), for example, women exert greater power, authority, and control over decision-making. Other societies are matrilinear or matrilocal, primarily among indigenous tribal groups. Some hunter-gatherer groups, such as the !Kung of southern Africa, have been characterized as largely egalitarian.
Some proponents of the biological determinist understanding of patriarchy argue that because of human female biology, women are more fit to perform roles such as anonymous child-rearing at home, rather than high-profile decision-making roles, such as leaders in battles. Through this basis, "the existence of a sexual division of labor in primitive societies is a starting point as much for purely social accounts of the origins of patriarchy as for biological." Hence, the rise of patriarchy is recognized through this apparent "sexual division".
Evolutionary biology
An early theory in evolutionary biology, sometimes referred to as Bateman's principle, argues that females almost always invest more energy into producing offspring than males, and therefore, females are a limiting factor over which males of most species will compete. This idea suggests that females prefer males who control more resources that can help her and her offspring, which in turn causes an evolutionary pressure on males to be competitive with each other in order to gain resources and power.
Sociobiologist Steven Goldberg argues that social behavior is primarily determined by genetics, and thus that patriarchy arises more as a result of inherent biology than social conditioning. Goldberg 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." 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.
Anthropologist and psychologist Barbara Smuts argues that patriarchy evolved in humans through conflict between the respective reproductive interests of males and females. She lists six ways it may have emerged:
- a reduction in female allies
- elaboration of male-male alliances
- increased male control over resources
- increased hierarchy formation among men
- female strategies that reinforce male control over females
- the evolution of language and its power to create ideology.
Psychoanalytic theories
While the term patriarchy often refers to male domination generally, another interpretation sees it as literally "rule of the father". So some people believe patriarchy does not refer simply to male power over women, but the expression of power dependent on age as well as gender, such as by older men over women, children, and younger men. Some of these younger men may inherit and therefore have a stake in continuing these conventions. Others may rebel.
This psychoanalytic model is based upon revisions of Freud's description of the normally neurotic family using the analogy of the story of Oedipus. Those who fall outside the Oedipal triad of mother/father/child are less subject to male authority.
The operations of power in such cases are usually enacted unconsciously. All are subject, even fathers are bound by its strictures. It is represented in unspoken traditions and conventions performed in everyday behaviors, customs, and habits. The 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. They provide conceptual models for organising power relations in spheres that have nothing to do with the family, for example, politics and business.
Arguing from this standpoint, radical feminist Shulamith Firestone wrote in her 1970 The Dialectic of Sex:
Marx was on to something more profound than he knew when he observed that the family contained within itself in embryo all the antagonisms that later develop on a wide scale within the society and the state. For unless revolution uproots the basic social organisation, the biological family – the vinculum through which the psychology of power can always be smuggled – the tapeworm of exploitation will never be annihilated.
Gender Inequality today
According to United Nations, $6.4 trillion the estimated annual requirement for certain sectors in 48 developing countries. This accounts for almost 70% of the world's population in developing countries. The President of the General Assembly, Dennis Francis emphasized the need to reverse the prediction of 340 million women in extreme poverty by 2030 due to the finding of one in every ten women currently living in extreme poverty. Women are also being targeted in places like Palestine, Ukraine, and Haiti, as he stated that credible evidence of sexual abuse was found. Sexual violence impacts individuals of all genders, though women are disproportionately affected. Additionally, most perpetrators are male, which some view as reinforcing traditional power structures associated with patriarchy.
Sima Bahouse, the Executive director of the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, emphasized the urgent need to eliminate poverty for women and girls, advocating for inclusive fiscal policies that promote equitable redistribution and progressive taxation. Key priorities include enhancing public services and creating gender-responsive social protection systems that specifically benefit women and girls in poverty. Investing in the care economy is highlighted as essential for alleviating their poverty and fostering sustainable economic growth. The speaker rejected excuses about the difficulty or cost of these initiatives, asserting that a fair and sustainable future for all women and girls is achievable.
Impact of Patriarchy on Mental Health
The patriarchal framework of gender norms has established specific behavioral expectations for individuals according to their biological sex. Some individuals may not desire to adhere to the strict "acceptable behaviors" or gender boundaries set by society, which could be traumatic for some. These individuals are excluded and faced with alienation, making them more vulnerable to sexual violence. For example, LGBTQ+ members frequently fall victim to sexual abuse and harassment. Consequently, a patriarchal society creates an inherently unsafe and harmful environment for non-conforming women and those who do not adhere to rigid societal norms of gender and sexuality. While this power disparity is often perceived as primarily benefiting men, it also poses hidden risks to their psychological well-being.
With social media being very present today, individuals are increasingly susceptible to the negative impacts of patriarchy on their mental health. The internet has facilitated the spread of gender-based discrimination, reinforced patriarchal norms, and propagated negative representations of women. Research has shown that "social media use may be linked to adverse mental health effects, such as suicidal thoughts, feelings of loneliness, and reduced empathy". For instance, social media platforms often feature curated images that promote unrealistic body standards or lifestyles, leading to feelings of comparison, jealousy, and anxiety among users.
See also
Patriarchal models
- Biblical patriarchy
- Chinese patriarchy
- Domostroy
- Imperial House of Japan
- Neopatriarchy
- Pater familias
- Deme and genos
Related topics
- Androcentrism
- Anti-subordination principle
- Capitalist Patriarchy and the Case for Socialist Feminism
- La Cité antique (about anthropological patriachy)
- Correspondence principle (sociology)
- Family as a model for the state
- Family economics
- Hegemonic masculinity
- Homemaker
- Male expendability
- Nature versus nurture
- Patriarch (disambiguation)
- Patriarchate
- Patrician (ancient Rome)
- Patrilocal residence
- Phallocentrism
- Son preference
- Sociology of fatherhood
- The personal is political
- Tree of patriarchy
- Womb envy
Comparable social models
Contrast
References
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In its narrow meaning, patriarchy refers to the system, historically derived from Greek and Roman law, in which the male head of the household had absolute legal and economic power over his dependent female and male family members. Patriarchy in its wider definition means the manifestation and institutionalization of male dominance over women and children in the family and the extension of male dominance over women in society in general.
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I shall define patriarchy as a system of social structures, and practices in which men dominate, oppress and exploit women.
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The core concept of patriarchy of male domination and female subordination Although patriarchy has been variously defined, for purposes of this article, it means social arrangements that privilege males, where men as a group dominate women as a group, both structurally and ideologically man power!
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{{cite book}}
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Feminism, as I understand it, arises in resistance to the gender binary enforced by the patriarchy, an injustice that is as harmful to men as it is to women, as we can see in the long history of unjust wars, rationalized by patriarchy, in which men have fought and been killed and injured and traumatized.
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Patriarchy is a political-social system that insists that males are inherently dominating, superior to everything and everyone deemed weak, especially females, and endowed with the right to dominate and rule over the weak and to maintain that dominance through various forms of psychological terrorism and violence.
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Further reading
- Bourdieu, Pierre (2001). Masculine domination. Cambridge, UK: Polity Press. ISBN 978-0-7456-2265-1.
- Durham, Meenakshi G. (1999). "Articulating adolescent girls' resistance to patriarchal discourse in popular media". Women's Studies in Communication. 22 (2): 210–229. doi:10.1080/07491409.1999.10162421.
- Gilligan, Carol (1982). In a different voice: psychological theory and women's development. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-44544-4.
- :Cited in:
- Smiley, Marion (2004). "Gender, democratic citizenship v. patriarchy: a feminist perspective on Rawls". Fordham Law Review. 72 (5): 1599–1627.
- Keith, Thomas (2017). "Patriarchy, Male Privilege, and the Consequences of Living in a Patriarchal Society". Masculinities in Contemporary American Culture: An Intersectional Approach to the Complexities and Challenges of Male Identity. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-59534-2.
- Light, Aimee U. (2005). "Patriarchy". In Boynton, Victoria; Malin, Jo (eds.). Encyclopedia of Women's Autobiography, Volume 2: K-Z. Greenwood Publishing Group. pp. 453–456. ISBN 978-0-313-32737-7.
- Messner, Michael A. (2004). "On patriarchs and losers: rethinking men's interests". Berkeley Journal of Sociology. 48: 74–88. JSTOR 41035593. Pdf.
- Mies, Maria (2014). Patriarchy and accumulation on a world scale: women in the international division of labour. London: Zed Books Ltd. ISBN 978-1-78360-169-1.
- Smith, Bonnie G. (2004). Women's history in global perspective. Vol. 2. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-252-02997-4.
- Pateman, Carole (2018). The Sexual Contract (30th anniversary ed.). Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-1-5036-0827-6.
- Pilcher, Jane; Wheelan, Imelda (2004). 50 key concepts in gender studies (PDF). London Thousand Oaks, California: Sage. ISBN 978-0-7619-7036-1. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 December 2016.
External links
- The dictionary definition of patriarchy at Wiktionary
- Quotations related to Patriarchy at Wikiquote
- Media related to Patriarchy at Wikimedia Commons
- "Patriarchal System" . Encyclopedia Americana. 1920. p. 401.