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[[Image:Vintage family from england.jpg|thumb|right|200px|English family c. 1900]]
'''Patriarchy''' (from [[Greek language|Greek]]: ''patria'' meaning father and ''arché'' meaning rule) is the anthropological term used to define the sociological condition where male members of a society tend to predominate in positions of power; with the more powerful the position, the more likely it is that a male will hold that position. The term patriarchy is also used in systems of ranking male leadership in certain hierarchical churches or religious bodies (see [[patriarch]] and [[Patriarchate]]). Examples include the [[Church of Greece|Greek Orthodox]] and [[Russian Orthodox]] churches. Finally, the term patriarchy is used pejoratively to describe a seemingly immobile and sclerotic political order.
 
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{{otheruses|Patriarchy (disambiguation)}}
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'''Patriarchy''' is the structuring of [[society]] on the basis of [[family]] units, where fathers have primary [[Social responsibility|responsibility]] for the welfare of, hence authority over, their families. The concept of ''patriarchy'' is often used, by extension (in [[anthropology]] and [[feminism]], for example), to refer to the expectation that [[man|men]] take primary responsibility for the welfare of the [[community]] as a whole, acting as representatives via public office.
   
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The feminine form of ''patriarchy'' is ''[[matriarchy]]''. 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 term "patriarchy' is distinct from [[patrilineality]] and [[patrilocality]]. "Patrilineal" defines societies where the derivation of inheritence (financial or otherwise) originates from the father's line; a society with [[matrilineal]] traits such as [[Judaism]], for example, provides that in order to be considered a Jew, a person must be born of a [[Jewish]] mother. "Patrilocal" defines a locus of control coming from the father's geographic/cultural community. In a matrilineal/[[matrilocal]] society, a woman will live with her mother and her sisters and brothers, even after marriage. She doesn't leave her maternal home. Her brothers act as 'social fathers' and will hold a higher influence on the women's offspring to the detriment of the children's biological father. Most societies are predominantly patrilineal and patrilocal, but this is not a universal (see: [[matriarchy]]).
 
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[[Gerda Lerner]], ''The Creation of Patriarchy'', (Oxford: [[Oxford University Press]], 1986), p. 36.</ref><ref>
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Cynthia Eller, ''[[The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory]]: [http://www.amazon.com/dp/080706792X Why an Invented Past Won't Give Women a Future]'', (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001).]</ref>
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Encyclopædia Britannica says matriarchy is a "[[Hypotheticals|hypothetical]] social system".<ref name=Britannica>'Matriarchy', ''Encyclopædia Britannica'', 2007.</ref>
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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 />
   
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The anthropologist [[Margaret Mead]] 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 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>
==In psychology==
 
A common observation among scholars is that the authority of the father and of the [political] leader are closely intertwined, that there is a [[symbolic]] identification between domestic authority and national political leadership.<ref name="Borneman2004">Borneman, John (2004) ''Death Of The Father: An Anthropology Of The End In Political Authority'' ISBN 1571811117 [http://books.google.com/books?id=TjOsyebOTS8C] pp.1-2, 11-12, 75-75</ref> In this sense, links have been shown between the concepts of "[[patriarchal]]", "[[paternalistic]]", "[[cult of personality]]", "[[fascist]]", "[[totalitarian]]", "[[imperial]]".<ref name="Borneman2004"/> The fundamental common grounds between domestic and national authority, are the mechanisms of naming (exercise the authority in someone's name) and [[identification]].<ref name="Borneman2004"/> In a patriarchal society, authority typically uses such rhetoric of fatherhood and family to implement their rule and advocate its legitimacy.<ref>[http://www.anthrosource.net/doi/abs/10.1525/pol.2006.29.1.151]</ref>
 
   
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For [[morality|moral]] assessments of patriarchy see [[patriarchy#Benefits of patriarchy|benefits]] and [[patriarchy#Feminist criticism|criticism]] below; for a [[scientific method|scientific]] treatment, see [[patriarchy#biology of gender|biology of gender]] below.
In the [[Ancient Rome|Roman]] and aristocratic [[patriarchal]] family, "the husband and the father had a measure of political authority and served as intermediary between the household and the [[polity]]."<ref>David Foster ''[http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0034-6705(199423)56%3A4%3C641%3ATTFJLC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-5 Taming the Father: John Locke's Critique of Patriarchal Fatherhood]''. The Review of Politics, Vol. 56, No. 4 (Autumn, 1994), pp. 641-670</ref><ref>[[Alexis de Tocqueville]] 1830</ref> In [[Western culture]] patriarchy and authority have been synonymous.<ref>WHITE, NICHOLAS [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb3296/is_200012/ai_n7997587 review of] [http://www.ecampus.com/book/0804735603 Questioning the Father: From Darwin to Zola, Ibsen, Strindberg, and Hardy] Journal of European Studies, December, 2000</ref> In the 19th century Europe, the idea was common, among both traditionalist and revolutionaries, that the authority of the domestic father should "be made omnipotent in the family so that it becomes less necessary in the state".<ref>[[Jules Simon]] 1869</ref><ref>[[Michelle Perrot]] 1990 ''A History of Private Life'' p.167</ref><ref name="Borneman2004"/> In the second part of that century, there was an extension of the authority of the husband over his wife and the authority of the father over his children, including "increased demands for absolute [[obedience]] of children to the father".<ref name="Borneman2004"/> Europe saw the rise of "new ideological [[hegemony]] of the [[nuclear family]] form and a legal codification of patriarchy", which was contemporary with the solid spread of the "nation-state model as political norm of order".<ref name="Borneman2004"/>
 
   
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==Etymology==
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The word ''patriarchy'' comes from two [[Greek language|Greek]] words —''pater'' (πατήρ, father) and ''archē'' (αρχή, rule). In Greek, the [[genitive case|genitive form]] of ''patēr'' is ''patr-os'',<ref>
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William D Mounce, ''The Morphology of Biblical Greek'', (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), p. 209.</ref>
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which shows the [[root (linguistics)|root form]] ''patr'', explaining why the word is spelled ''patr-iarchy''.<ref>
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The letter ''i'' in ''patr-i-archy'' occurs because ''patēr'' comes into [[English language|English]] via [[Latin]], which had a different [[vowel]] flavour to Greek in the genitive (''pater''/''patris''). For example, the abbreviation ''DVP'' stands for ''Decessit Vita Patris'' (literally, "died in the life of the father," meaning "died in the father's lifetime").</ref>
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The basic meaning of the Greek word ''archē'' is actually "beginning" (hence [[archeology|arche-ology]] or [[Menarche|men-arche]])<ref>
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Bauer, Arndt and Gingrich, ''A Greek-English Lexicon'', 3rd ed., (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), pp. 137.</ref>
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— the first words of [[Genesis]] in Greek (see [[Septuagint]]) are ''En archē'' ("In the beginning").<ref>
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Alfred Rahlfs ed., ''Septuaginta'', (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1979), p. 1.</ref>
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However, ''archē'' is also used [[metaphor]]ically to refer to ruling, because rulers are perceived to "start" things,<ref>
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Bauer, Danker, Arndt and Gingrich, ''A Greek-English Lexicon'', 3rd ed., (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), pp. 138.</ref>
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for example [[hierarchy|''hier-archy'']] and [[anarchy|''an-archy'']].
   
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==Related words==
[[Social Psychology|Psychology]] researchers have used the [[Social Dominance Orientation|SDO]] and [[Right_Wing_Authoritarianism|RWA]] measures to predict patriarchal attitudes.
 
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[[Image:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 035.jpg|thumb|right|150px|Abraham & son]]
   
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A ''patriarch'' is a man who has great influence on his family or society. Many historical societies claimed descent from one great man. For example, the [[Ancient Rome|Romans]] believed they were descended from [[Romulus]] who founded [[Rome]]. The traditional founder of [[Athens]] is Erectheus, and of [[Sparta]] Lacedæmon. Similarly, the [[Judaism|Jewish]] tradition in the [[Torah]] says [[Jew]]s are descended from [[Abraham]] through [[Isaac]]. Both the Torah and [[Qur'an]] say [[Arab]]s are descended from Abraham through [[Ishmael]],<ref>Genesis 25:12-18.</ref>&nbsp;<ref>Sura 37:99-109.</ref> Abraham's first son, Isaac's half-brother. Traditional founders are often called patriarchs. The feminine form of ''patriarch'' is ''matriarch'', for example see [[Matriarchs (Bible)]]. ''[[Patriarch]]'' is also a name for the most senior leaders of [[Eastern Christianity]], roughly comparable to the western ''[[archbishop|arch-bishop]]'' (''archē'' as above).
   
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The adjective for ''patriarchy'' is ''patriarchal''; and ''patriarchalism'', or more commonly ''[[paternalism]]'', refer to the practice or defence of patriarchy. [[patronage|''Patron'']] is a related word used generically (that is, it is not [[gender]] or [[sex]] specific). Women and men who provide financial support to activities within a community can be termed ''patrons''. 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''.
   
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==Related customs==
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''Patrimonalism'' uses the Greek word ''monos'' (μόνος, sole) to describe the view of a [[state]] as the extended household of a [[monarch|mon-arch]] (sole ruler, ''archē'' as above) or [[deity]]. There are records of patrimonalism almost as far back as the earliest [[writing]] 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 [[accountancy|accounts]], and enough to pay those [[accountant]]s. The earliest records of patrimonalism come from [[Ancient Near East]]ern legal documents, the best known being the [[Code of Hammurabi]] and the Torah. Some aspects of patrimonalism can still be found in the few remaining [[monarchy|monarchies]] in the world today, for example, [[Law of the United Kingdom|British law]] concerning [[real estate]] (see [[Crown land]]s), especially in [[Australia]]. For more detail regarding patrimonalism see [[Traditional authority#Patrimonalism|Traditional authority]].
   
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[[Image:XlinkRecessive.jpg|thumb|Passing of X-linked conditions]]
==In anthropology==
 
   
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Some social customs reflect what is termed ''[[patrilineality]]'' or ''[[patrilocal residence|patrilocality]]''.
Human societies, whether they are ''ancient'', ''indigenous'' or ''modern industrial'', have been described in Anthropology in terms of either patriarchal or matriarchal systems. Between these polarities lie a number of social structures which include elements of both systems (see above under Patriarchy a discussion of the terms ''patrilinial'' and ''patrilocal'' ).
 
   
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''Patrilineal'' describes customs where family responsibilities and assets pass from father to son. By contrast, contemporary Judaism considers people to be [[Jew]]ish if their mothers were Jewish, which makes this aspect of contemporary Judaism [[matrilineal]]. Biblical Judaism is, however, a classical example of a patrilineal society. ''Matrilineal'' is a particularly useful term in [[genetics]], where some genetic features are more or less passed via the maternal line, notably [[mitochondrial DNA]] and severe [[Sex linkage|X-linked]] genetic conditions. An X [[chromosome]] from the mother is always passed to offspring, male and female. However, daughters do not receive a [[Y chromosome]], and sons do not receive an [[X chromosome]] from their fathers (see [[sex-determination system]], [[heredity]] and [[genetic genealogy]]).
Anthropologist Donald Brown has listed patriarchy to be a "human universal" (Brown 1991, p. 137), which includes characteristics such as age gradation, personal hygiene, aesthetics, food sharing, rape, and other sociological aspects, implying that patriarchy is innate to the human condition. Margaret Mead has observed that "... all the claims so glibly made about societies ruled by women are nonsense. We have no reason to believe that they ever existed....Men have always been the leaders in public affairs and the final authorities at home."[http://www.cortsoft.com/mop/Books3.htm]
 
   
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''Patrilocal'' describes the custom of [[bride]]s relocating to the geographic community of the husband and his father's family. In a [[matrilocal]] society, a husband will relocate to the home community of his wife and her mother (see also [[marriage]]). 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 [[patriarchy (anthropology)]].
Societies have developed out of patriarchal cultures. Institutions of religion, education, commerce retain patriarchal practices. In [[Muslim]] counties today, patriarchy in the form of divided roles between of women and men into the domestic and social spheres is distinctly visible. In [[European|Europe]] and [[Americas|America]] whose cultures are based on a [[Christianity|Christian]] model, political and religious power continues to exert a strong influence. The ideas of [[Age of Enlightenment]] philosophy, and [[Revolution]]ary movements including [[Feminism]] have brought about changes creating wider possibilities for both women and men. [[Marxist]] ideals support the advocacy of [[egalitarianism]] between the sexes, but these aspirations have been overtaken by authoritarian forms of political organisation in comunist states. In [[China]], for example, where by law the [[National People's Congress]] is composed of an equal number of men and women. There are, however, no women within the [[Politburo of the Chinese Communist Party]], the agency that actually rules China. Prior to its dissolution, the [[Soviet Union]]'s [[Congress of People's Deputies]] likewise consisted of equal numbers of men and women. Its successor, the [[Duma]], which has governing authority, at present has only 35 woman deputies among the 450 members.[http://www.eng.yabloko.ru/Forums/Main/posts/1376.html]
 
 
This longstanding thesis has raised political opposition. The Modern Matriarchal Studies organization has held two conferences Luxembourg (2004) and San Marcos, Texas (2005) so as to redefine the term "matriarchy." [http://www.hagia.de/ www.hagia.de/] (hagia being derived from the [[Greek language|Greek]] hagios or "holy"}. Various chairs, called "priestesses" in the group's literature, conducted workshops and at the end of the conference declared that “International Matriarchal Politics stands against white supremacist patriarchal capitalist homogenization and the globalization of misery. It stands for egalitarianism, diversity and the economics of the heart. Many matriarchal societies still exist around the world and they propose an alternative, life affirming model to patriarchal raptor capitalism."[http://www.hagia.de/documents/declaration.pdf Societies of Peace Declaration (2005), 2-3]
 
   
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By contrast with these other customs, patriarchy can be seen to be distinctly about gender and the [[nuclear family]], gender and public office, and about female-male relationships in general.
==In gender studies==
 
In [[gender studies]], the word ''patriarchy'' often refers to a social organization marked by the supremacy of a male figure, group of male figures, or men in general. It is depicted as subordinating women, children, and those whose genders or bodies defy traditional man/woman categorization.
 
   
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==Benefits of patriarchy==
==Feminist view==
 
Many [[feminism|feminist]] writers have considered patriarchy to be the basis on which most modern societies have been formed. They argue that it is necessary and desirable to get away from this model in order to achieve gender equality.
 
   
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Patriarchy is advanced as being beneficial for human [[evolution]] and social organization on many grounds, crossing several [[List of academic disciplines|disciplines]]. Although [[biology]] may explain its existence (see below), arguments for its social [[Utilitarianism|utility]] have been made since ancient times. These include elements of Greek [[Stoicism|Stoic Philosophy]] and the Roman social structure based on the ''[[pater familias]]'',<ref>"Research into the nature of marriage in the Greco-Roman world ... shows ... [that] in Stoic traditions marriage promoted the full responsibility of a husband as a householder, father, and citizen and stability in society." [[Anthony Thiselton|Anthony C. Thiselton]], ''First Corinthians: A Shorter Exegetical and Pastoral Commentary'', (Grand Rapids: [[Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co.]], 2006), p. 102.</ref> but are also found in [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]] records of Babylonian and Assyrian laws. [[George Lakoff]] 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 [[Pragmatism|pragmatic]]—namely, the [[Sexual reproduction|reproductive]] advantages of male-as-provider—<ref> [[Phillip Longman]], '[http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3376 The Return of Patriarchy]', ''[[Foreign Policy]]'', 2006.</ref> or [[Ethics|ethical]]—that any perceived male authority is [[Contingency|contingent]] upon underlying perceptions of [[duty of care]].
Feminist writer [[Marilyn French]], in her polemic ''[[Beyond Power]]'', defines patriarchy as a system that values power over life, control over pleasure, and dominance over happiness. She argues that:
 
:It is therefore extremely ironic that patriarchy has upheld power as a good that is permanent and dependable, opposing it to the fluid, transitory goods of matricentry. Power has been exalted as the bulwark against pain, against the ephemerality of pleasure, but it is no bulwark, and is as ephemeral as any other part of life...Yet so strong is the mythology of power that we continue to believe, in the face of all evidence to the contrary, that it is substantial, that if we possessed enough of it we could be happy, that if some "great man" possessed enough of it, he could make the world come right.
 
   
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==Feminist criticism==
According to French:
 
:It is not enough either to devise a morality that will allow the human race simply to survive. Survival is an evil when it entails existing in a state of wretchedness. Intrinsic to survival and continuation is felicity, pleasure [...] But pleasure does not exclude serious pursuits or intentions, indeed, it is found in them, and it is the only real reason for staying alive" &mdash;[http://www.fragmentsweb.org/stuff/10french.html''Beyond Power: On Women, Men and Morals'']
 
   
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[[Image:Beauvoir.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Simone de Beauvoir]]
The latter philosophy is what French offers as a replacement to the current structure where, she says, power has the highest value.
 
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[[Image:JohnStuartMill.jpg|thumb|150px|right|John Stuart Mill]]
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{{Main|Patriarchy in feminism}}
   
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Most forms of feminism have challenged patriarchy as a social system that is adopted uncritically, due to millennia of human experience where male physical strength was the ultimate way of settling social conflicts – from [[war]] to [[child discipline|disciplining children]]. [[John Stuart Mill]] wrote, "In early times, the great majority of the male sex were slaves, as well as the whole of the female. And many ages elapsed ... before any thinker was bold enough to question the rightfulness, and the absolute necessity, either of the one slavery or of the other."<ref>John Stuart Mill, ''The Subjection of Women'', (London: Longmans, 1868).</ref>
[[Cathy Young]], a minor free-lance journalist whose polemics on gender issues may best be described as a libertarian reaction against feminism, dismisses reference to "patriarchy" as a semantic device intended to shield the speaker from accountability when making misandrist slurs, since "patriarchy" means all of Western society.[http://books.guardian.co.uk/review/story/0,,1327412,00.html] She cites [[Andrea Dworkin]]'s criticism, "Under patriarchy, every woman's son is her potential betrayer and also the inevitable rapist or exploiter of another woman." Taking Dworkin's effusion of horror directed at the effects of patriarchy as a [[straw man]], Young appeals to the unpalatability of Dworkin's statement as itself an argument against the very concept of patriarchy. Young ignores the possibility and significance of a system of oppresion that restricts the freedom of individual women before they could ever assert it. Instead, she assumes that all discussion about systematic oppression is what actually restricts this liberty.
 
   
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In some [[feminist theory]], 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 [[personification]] (compare "blame it on the Government" to "blame it on the Patriarchy"). The use of the word ''patriarchy'' in [[list of feminist literature|feminist literature]] has become so loaded with emotive associations that some writers prefer to use an approximate [[synonym]], the more objective and technical [[androcentrism|''androcentric'']] (also from Greek – ''anēr'', genitive ''andros'', meaning man).
==Pro-feminism and patriarchy==
 
{{Main|Pro-feminism}}
 
[[Pro-feminism]] refers to a school of thought developed by men that supports the feminist analysis of patriarchy as a system that privileges men over women, and also men over other men. A pro-feminist analysis of patriarchy acknowledges that gender interacts with other dimensions such as ethnicity, power and social class. Patriarchy is seen as a hegemonic gender order imposed through individual, collective and institutional behaviours.
 
   
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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> [[Mary Daly]], 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>
Patriarchy as an embodied set of beliefs about the 'natural' gender order (frequently backed up by notions of biological or deific determinism) often operates through a collective willingness towards 'gender blindness', a refusal to observe and study the effects of gender on social relations and power. One clear effect of this has been a refusal until recently to acknowledge the full extent of physical and sexual violence committed against women by heterosexual men.
 
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[[Liberal feminism|Liberal]], or mainstream, feminists do not propose to replace patriarchy with matriarchy, rather they argue for [[egalitarianism|equality]]. Some [[radical feminism|radical feminists]] and [[separatist feminism|separatist feminists]] have have argued for [[gendercide]] against men, [[matriarchy]], or [[Separatist feminism|separation]].<ref>http://www.wie.org/j16/daly.asp?page=2</ref> However, [[Ronald Dworkin]] 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 [[Sexual dimorphism]] and [[Gender differences]]). Recent feminist writers speak of "feminisms of diversity", that seek to reconcile older debates between [[equality feminism]]s and [[difference feminism]]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>
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For a leading feminist who writes against patriarchy see [[Marilyn French]]; and for one who is more sympathetic{{Fact|date=August 2008}} see [[Christina Hoff Sommers]].
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[[Image:Income inequity US.png||thumb|300px|right|Average Income USA (2005 Census Data)]]
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In summary, some recent feminist writers have shown a tendency to admit [[misandry]] 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 [[reductionism|reductionistic]] equality (for example Judith Squires above).
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Decades of [[legislation]] and [[affirmative action]] have not yet changed the fact that [[western culture]] 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 [[higher education]] 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.", [http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/doi/pdf/10.1046/j.1529-8817.2004.00098.x Ian W Craig, Emma Harper and Caroline S Loat, 'The Genetic Basis for Sex Differences in Human Behaviour: Role of the Sex Chromosomes', ''Annals of Human Genetics'' 68 (2004): 269–284.]</ref>
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However, [[head of state|heads of state]], [[minister (government)|cabinet ministers]], and the top [[corporate title|executives]] of major [[company (law)|companies]] are still mostly men (see [[glass ceiling]]). Also, women's average [[income]] is still significantly [[Male-female income disparity in the United States|lower than men's average income]]. 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 [[philosophy]] departments.<ref>Sally Haslanger, [http://www.mit.edu/~shaslang/papers/HaslangerCICP.pdf Article Title].</ref>
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==Steven Goldberg==
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[[Image:Inevitability.jpg|thumb|150px|First Book]]
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{{Main|Why Men Rule}}
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To date, feminists have failed to achieve some of their goals (for example, those related to executive positions and average income, see [[Patriarchy#Feminist criticism|above]]). This was predicted in 1973 (the early days of [[second wave feminism|second wave feminist activism]]) by [[Steven Goldberg]] (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>[[Steven Goldberg]], ''[[The Inevitability of Patriarchy]]'', (London: Temple Smith, 1977), p. 196.</ref>
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Goldberg was chairman of the department of sociology at [[City College of New York]], and has written two books on patriarchy. In the second he wrote:
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{{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>[[Steven Goldberg]], ''[[Why Men Rule]]'', (Chicago, Illinois: [[Open Court Publishing Company]], 1993), p. 1.</ref>}}
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[[Image:WhyMenRule.jpg|thumb|150px|left|Second Book]]
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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 [[social status|status]] 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>
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  +
Goldberg proposes the [[hypothesis]] that the statistical averages of all these forms of behaviour are partly explained by the [[Necessary and sufficient conditions|necessary]] (but not sufficient) condition of [[neuroendocrinology|neuroendocrinological]] effects – namely, [[testosterone]]. The title of his first book makes his hypothesis very clear, it was called ''[[The Inevitability of Patriarchy]]: 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 [[biology|biological]] [[research]]ers to support or contradict his hypothesis. The situation has changed a lot since then.
  +
  +
For other writers who make similar points to Goldberg see [[Steven Pinker]] and [[Donald Brown]] in the [[Patriarchy#Literature|literature]] below.
  +
  +
For current feminists and writers with considerably more biological knowledge than Goldberg, who accept his hypothesis, but consider issues beyond the biological, see [[Helena Cronin]] and [[Louann Brizendine]].
  +
  +
{{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, [http://books.google.com/books?id=D5lkoMxTgMoC&pg=PR10&lpg=PR10&dq=%22to+state+categorically+that+there+can+be+no+biological+component+would+seem+to+be+foolish%22&source=web&ots=fCq1Hm-S0R&sig=Q6BS3AbuuC-TVGkuErsTFF99kU4 ''Theology and Feminism'',] (Oxford: [[Blackwell Publishing]], 1990), p. x.</ref>}}
  +
  +
==Biology of gender==
  +
[[Image:Peacock courting peahen.jpg||thumb|250px|right|Female-male differences — [[Peacock]] courting peahen]]
  +
{{Main|Biology of gender}}
  +
  +
The '''biology of gender''' is scientific analysis of the physical basis for behavioural differences between men and women. It is more specific than [[sexual dimorphism]], which covers physical and behavioural differences between males and females of any sexually reproducing species, or [[sexual differentiation]], where physical and behavioural differences between men and women are described. Biological research of [[gender]] has explored such areas as: [[intersex]] physicalities, [[gender identity]], [[gender roles]] and [[sexual orientation]].
  +
  +
Research in this area is generally motivated by the search for causes of [[disease]]s in human beings, and ways of treating or preventing those diseases; it is thought that men and women might require different kinds of treatment for certain diseases. The results are relevant to gender issues, but that is not their direct concern.
  +
  +
It has long been known that there are [[correlation]]s between the biological sex of [[animal]]s and their [[ethology|behaviour]].<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>
  +
  +
The late twentieth century saw an explosion in technology capable of aiding sex research. [[John Money]] and [[Milton Diamond]] made great progress towards understanding the formation of [[gender identity]] in [[human]]s. Extensive advances were also made in understanding sexual dimorphism in other animals. For example, there were studies on the effects of [[sex steroid|sex hormone]]s on rats. In the early twenty first century, discoveries were made concerning [[genetic programming|genetically programmed]] sexual dimorphism in rat brains, prior even to the influence of hormones on [[developmental biology|development]].
  +
  +
[[Image:Lobes of the brain NL.svg||thumb|150px|left|Human Brain]]
  +
{{cquote|Genes on the [[sex chromosome]]s can directly influence sexual dimorphism in [[cognition]] and behaviour, [[Statistical independence|independent]] 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 [[Endocrinology]]|volume=155|pages=99–106|date=2006|doi=10.1530/eje.1.02263}}</ref>
  +
  +
Some specific relevant [[result]]s are as follows. The brains of many animals are [[statistical significance|significantly]] different for [[female]]s and [[male]]s of the [[species]].<ref name = SexDiffBrain>[https://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=10042&mode=toc Robert W Goy and Bruce S McEwen, ''Sexual Differentiation of the Brain: Based on a Work Session of the Neurosciences Research Program''. MIT Press Classics. Boston: MIT Press, 1980.]</ref> Both [[genes]] and [[hormone]]s affect the formation of many animal brains before "[[birth]]" (or [[hatching]]), 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.
  +
  +
[[Image:Normal distribution pdf.png||thumb|200px|right|The red bell curve here has a lower [[standard deviation]] 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 [[ability|abilities]]. In particular, on average, women are more capable in nearly everything to do with [[senses|sensory]] 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, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2006/12/18/GR2006121800372.html The Perception of Pain]'.<ref>Laura Stanton and Brenna Maloney, '[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/graphic/2006/12/18/GR2006121800372.html The Perception of Pain]', ''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 [[autism]] may be essentially extreme expressions of certain typically male characteristics.<ref>[http://www.autismresearchcentre.com/docs/papers/1999_BC_extrememalebrain.pdf Simon Baron-Cohen, 'The Extreme-Male-Brain Theory of Autism', in H Tager-Flusberg (ed.), ''Neurodevelopmental Disorders'', (Boston: The MIT Press, 1999).]</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 [[aggression]] and female power motivation.<ref>[http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0009-3920(198708)58%3A4%3C1114%3AHEDAAA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-0 Elizabeth J. Susman, Gale Inoff-Germain, Editha D. Nottelmann, and others, 'Hormones, Emotional Dispositions, and Aggressive Attributes in Young Adolescents', ''Child Development'' 58 (1987): 1114-1134.]</ref><ref>http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522075940.htm</ref> [[Sarah Blaffer Hrdy]] (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.' ''[[Human Nature]] '''8''' (1997): 1-49.</ref>.
  +
  +
[[Image:Lightmatter chimp.jpg||thumb|200px|left|Chimpanzee]]
  +
  +
Alexandra M. Lopes and others recently published that:
  +
{{cquote|A sexual dimorphism in levels of [[Gene expression|expression]] in brain [[biological tissue|tissue]] was observed by [[quantitative]] [[Real-time computing|real-time]] [[Polymerase chain reaction|PCR]], with females presenting an up to 2-fold excess in the abundance of PCDH11X [[Gene transcription|transcripts]]. We relate these findings to sexually dimorphic [[Trait (biology)|traits]] in the human brain. Interestingly, PCDH11X/Y gene pair is unique to ''Homo sapiens'', since the X-linked gene was [[Transposon|transposed]] to the Y chromosome after the human–[[chimpanzee]] [[Lineage (evolution)|lineages]] 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>}}
  +
  +
==Appendix==<!-- This section is linked from [[Patriarchy]] -->
  +
  +
;Patriarchies in dispute
  +
The [[Patriarchy#Table|table]] shows most societies that have been claimed at one time or another to be matriarchal. In every case the [[Ethnography|ethnographers]] report that the societies were patriarchal not matriarchal, even before changes brought by contact with western culture. However, some of the societies are matrilineal or matrilocal.
  +
  +
Note: ''separate'' in the marriage column, refers to the practice of husbands and wives living in separate locations, often informally called ''walking marriages''. See the articles for the specific cultures that practice this for further description.
  +
  +
==Table==
  +
{| class="wikitable sortable collapsible"
  +
|+Patriarchal cultures that have been claimed to be matriarchal
  +
|-
  +
! [[Endonym]] !! Continent !! Country !! Marriage !! Property !! Government !! Ethnographer !! Date !! F/M
  +
|-
  +
| [[Alor]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Indonesia]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Cora du Bois
  +
| 1944
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Bamenda]]
  +
| [[Africa]]
  +
| [[Cameroon]]
  +
| patrilocal
  +
| only Kom matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Phyllis Kaberry]]
  +
| 1952
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| Bantoc
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Philippines]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Albert S Bacadayan
  +
| 1974
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Batek]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Malaysia]]
  +
| patrilocal
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Kirk Michael Endicott
  +
| 1974
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Trobriand Islands|Boyowan]]
  +
| [[Australasia]]
  +
| [[Papua New Guinea]]
  +
| patrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Bronisław Malinowski]]
  +
| 1916
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Bribri]]
  +
| [[North America]]
  +
| [[Costa Rica]]
  +
| matrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| William Moore Grabb
  +
| 1875
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| unknown ([[Çatalhöyük]])
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Turkey]]
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| [[James Mellaart]]
  +
| 1961
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Chambri]]
  +
| [[Australasia]]
  +
| [[Papua New Guinea]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Margaret Mead]]
  +
| 1935
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Philippines|Pilipino]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Philippines]]
  +
| both
  +
| both
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Chester L Hunt
  +
| 1959
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Fore (people)|Gahuku-Gama]]
  +
| [[Australasia]]
  +
| [[Papua New Guinea]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Shirley Glasse (Lindenbaum)
  +
| 1963
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Hopi|Hopituh Shi-nu-mu]]
  +
| [[North America]]
  +
| [[United States of America]]
  +
| matrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Barbara Freire-Marreco
  +
| 1914
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Iban people|Iban]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Borneo]]
  +
| both
  +
| neither
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Edwin H Gomes
  +
| 1911
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Berbers|Imazighen]]
  +
| [[Africa]]
  +
| North [[Sahara]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[George Murdock|George Peter Murdock]]
  +
| 1959
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Iroqois|Haudenosaunee]]
  +
| [[North America]]
  +
| North East [[North America]]
  +
| matrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Lewis Morgan|Lewis Henry Morgan]]
  +
| 1901
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Jivaro]]
  +
| [[South America]]
  +
| West [[Amazon Basin|Amazon]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| R Karstan
  +
| 1926
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Nubians|Kenuzi]]
  +
| [[Africa]]
  +
| [[Sudan]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Ernest Godard
  +
| 1867
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Kibutz]]im
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Israel]]
  +
| neither
  +
| neither
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Judith Buber Agassi
  +
| 1989
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[!Kung people|!Kung San]]
  +
| [[Africa]]
  +
| Southern [[Africa]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Marjorie Shostak]]
  +
| 1976
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Minicoy Island|Maliku]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[India]]
  +
| separate
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Ellen Kattner
  +
| 1996
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Minangkabau]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Indonesia]]
  +
|
  +
| both
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| PJ Veth
  +
| 1882
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Mosuo]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[China]]
  +
| separate
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Joseph Rock|Joseph Francis Charles Rock]]
  +
| 1924
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Nakhi]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[China]]
  +
|
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Joseph Rock|Joseph Francis Charles Rock]]
  +
| 1924
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Nair|Nayar]]
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[India]]
  +
|
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| E Kathleen Gough
  +
| 1954
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| [[Tlingit]]
  +
| [[North America]]
  +
| [[United States of America]]
  +
| matrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| [[Aurel Krause]]
  +
| 1885
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| [[Vanatinai]]
  +
| [[Australasia]]
  +
| [[Papua New Guinea]]
  +
| matrilocal
  +
| matrilineal
  +
| no government<br>patriarchy
  +
| Maria Lipowsky
  +
| 1981
  +
| female
  +
|-
  +
| Wemale
  +
| [[Asia]]
  +
| [[Indonesia]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| Adolf E Jensen
  +
| 1939
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| Woorani
  +
| [[South America]]
  +
| [[Ecuador]]
  +
|
  +
|
  +
| patriarchy
  +
| John Man
  +
| 1982
  +
| male
  +
|-
  +
| Yegali
  +
| [[Africa]]
  +
| [[Madagascar]]
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
| na
  +
|}
  +
  +
==List==
  +
{{Patriarchy (ethnographies)}}
   
 
==See also==
 
==See also==
* [[Patriarch]]
+
* [[Gender role]]
* [[Matriarchy]]
+
* [[Homemaker]]
* [[Paideia]]
+
* [[Masculinity]]
  +
* [[Mother absence]]
* [[Classical definition of effeminacy]]
 
* [[Traditional authority]]
+
* [[Patriarchy]]
* [[Patriarchs (Bible)]]
+
* [[Sex role attitudes]]
* [[Matriarchs (Bible)]]
+
* [[Sex roles]]
* [[Father]]
+
* [[Sociology of fatherhood]]
  +
* [[Chinese patriarchy]]
 
  +
* [[Paternalism]]
 
  +
== Notes and references ==
* [[Heteropatriarchy]]
 
  +
* [[Anthropology]]
 
  +
{{reflist|2}}
  +
  +
== Bibliography ==
  +
<!-- This section is linked from [[Patriarchy]] -->
  +
  +
* Adeline, Helen B. ''Fascinating Womanhood''. New York: Random House, 2007.
  +
* [[Simon Baron-Cohen|Baron-Cohen, Simon]]. ''The Essential Difference: The Truth about the Male and Female Brain''. New York: Perseus Books Group, 2003.
  +
* [[Simone de Beauvoir|Beauvoir, Simone de]]. ''Le Deuxième Sexe''. Paris: [[Éditions Gallimard]], 1949. (original French edition)
  +
* [[Simone de Beauvoir|Beauvoir, Simone de]]. ''The Second Sex''. London: [[Jonathan Cape]], 1953. (first UK edition, in translation)
  +
* [[Simone de Beauvoir|Beauvoir, Simone de]]. ''The Second Sex''. New York: [[Alfred A. Knopf]], 1953. (first USA edition, in translation)
  +
* [[Pierre Bourdieu|Bourdieu, Pierre]]. ''Masculine Domination''. Translated by Richard Nice. Stanford: [[Stanford University Press]], 2001.
  +
* [[Louann Brizendine|Brizendine, Louann]]. ''The Female Brain''. New York: Morgan Road Books, 2006.
  +
* [[Donald Brown|Brown, Donald E]]. ''[[Human Universals]]''. New York: [[McGraw Hill]], 1991.
  +
* Jay, Jennifer W. [http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-0279%28199604%2F06%29116%3A2%3C220%3AIM%22OWI%3E2.0.CO%3B2-R&size=LARGE&origin=JSTOR-enlargePage 'Imagining Matriarchy:] "Kingdoms of Women" in Tang China'. ''[[Journal of the American Oriental Society]]'' '''116''' (1996): 220-229.
  +
* [[Melvin Konner|Konner, Melvin]]. ''[http://www.henryholt.com/tangledwing/tangledwingnotes.pdf The Tangled Wing:] Biological Constraints on the Human Spirit''. 2nd edition, revised and updated. ([[Henry Holt|Owl Books]], 2003). 560p. ISBN 0805072799 [first published 1982, [http://www.anthropology.emory.edu/FACULTY/ANTMK/TangledWing.htm Endnotes]
  +
* Lepowsky, Maria. ''[http://www.columbia.edu/cu/cup/catalog/data/023108/0231081200.HTM Fruit of the Motherland:] Gender in an Egalitarian Society''. New York: [[Columbia University Press]], 1993.
  +
* [[Margaret Mead|Mead, Margaret]]. 'Do We Undervalue Full-Time Wives'. ''[[Redbook]]'' 122 (1963).
  +
* Mies, Maria. ''Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale: Women in the International Division of Labour''. [[Palgrave Macmillan|Palgrave MacMillan]], 1999.
  +
* Moir, Anne and David Jessel. ''[[Brain Sex]]: The Real Difference Between Men and Women''.
  +
* [[Sherry Ortner|Ortner, Sherry Beth]]. '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.
  +
* [[Sherry Ortner|Ortner, Sherry Beth]]. '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.
  +
* [[Steven Pinker|Pinker, Steven]]. ''The Blank Slate: A Modern Denial of Human Nature''. London: [[Penguin Books]], 2002.
   
 
== External links ==
 
== External links ==
  +
* '[http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9051408 Matriarchy]'. ''[[Encyclopædia Britannica]]'' Online, 2007.
* [http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994220 ''Cattle ownership makes it a man's world''] New Scientist (1. October 2003): Early matrilineal societies became patrilineal when they started herding cattle, a new study demonstrates
 
  +
* '[http://www.newscientist.com/news/news.jsp?id=ns99994220 Cattle ownership makes it a man's world]'. ''[[New Scientist]]'' (2003).
  +
* [[Mary Wollstonecraft]]. ''[http://oregonstate.edu/instruct/phl302/texts/wollstonecraft/woman-a.html#CHAPTER%20II A Vindication of the Rights of Women]''. Boston: Peter Edes for Thomas and Andrews, 1792.
  +
* [[Simone de Beauvoir]]. ''[http://www.marxists.org/reference/subject/philosophy/works/fr/2ndsex.htm The Second Sex]''. Translated by HM Parshley. London: Penguin, 1972.
  +
* '[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/equality Equality]'. In ''[[Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy]]''. Stanford University, 2001.
  +
* [http://www.debunker.com/texts/avoidable.html ''Times Literary Supplement'' review (by Mark Ridley) of ''The Inevitability of Patriarchy'' and reply by the author (Steven Goldberg).]
  +
* [[Phyllis Kaberry|Phyllis M Kaberry]]. ''[http://www.era.anthropology.ac.uk/Kaberry/Kaberry_text A Study of the Economic Position of Women in Bamenda, British Cameroons]''. London: [[Office of Public Sector Information|Her Majesty's Stationary Office]], 1952.
  +
* Steven Webster. '[http://www.nybooks.com/articles/9751 Was it Matriarchy?]' ''[[New York Review of Books]]'' (1972): 37–38.
  +
* [[Phillip Longman]]. '[http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=3376 The Return of Patriarchy]'. ''[[Foreign Policy]]'' (2006).
  +
* Official [http://www.cbmw.org site] of the [[Council on Biblical Manhood and Womanhood]].
  +
* [http://www.mensstudies.info/RMBP.html Culture, Society & Masculinities] — [[Men's Studies Press]].
  +
* [http://www.mamiwata.com/news.html Beyond Ritual: Rethinking the Role of Patriarchy in African Traditional Religions].
   
  +
{{Forms of leadership}}
== Literature ==
 
* [[Pierre Bourdieu]], Male Domination, Polity Press 2001
 
* Robert Brown, ''Human Universals''. Philadelphia: Temple University Press 1991
 
* [[Margaret Mead]], . (1950). ''Male and Female'', Penguin, London.
 
* [[Maria Mies]], ''Patriarchy and Accumulation on a World Scale: Women in the International Division of Labour'', Palgrave MacMillan 1999
 
   
  +
[[Category:Biology of gender]]
 
[[Category:Cultural anthropology]]
 
[[Category:Cultural anthropology]]
[[Category:Feminism]]
+
[[Category:Family structure]]
[[Category:Sociology]]
+
[[Category:Fathers]]
  +
[[Category:Gender studies]]
 
[[Category:Men]]
 
[[Category:Men]]
  +
[[Category:Sociology]]
  +
[[Category:Sociobiology]]
  +
[[Category:Feminism and society]]
   
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File:Vintage family from england.jpg

English family c. 1900

Patriarchy is the structuring of society on the basis of family units, where fathers have primary responsibility for the welfare of, hence authority over, their families. The concept of patriarchy is often used, by extension (in anthropology and feminism, for example), to refer to the expectation that men take primary responsibility for the welfare of the community as a whole, acting as representatives via public office.

The feminine form of patriarchy is matriarchy. However, there are no known examples of matriarchal societies.[1][2] Encyclopædia Britannica says matriarchy is a "hypothetical social system".[3] 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."[3]

The anthropologist Margaret Mead 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 been the leaders in public affairs and the final authorities at home."[4]

For moral assessments of patriarchy see benefits and criticism below; for a scientific treatment, see biology of gender below.

Etymology

The word patriarchy comes from two Greek words —pater (πατήρ, father) and archē (αρχή, rule). In Greek, the genitive form of patēr is patr-os,[5] which shows the root form patr, explaining why the word is spelled patr-iarchy.[6] The basic meaning of the Greek word archē is actually "beginning" (hence arche-ology or men-arche)[7] — the first words of Genesis in Greek (see Septuagint) are En archē ("In the beginning").[8] However, archē is also used metaphorically to refer to ruling, because rulers are perceived to "start" things,[9] for example hier-archy and an-archy.

Related words

File:Rembrandt Harmensz. van Rijn 035.jpg

Abraham & son

A patriarch is a man who has great influence on his family or society. Many historical societies claimed descent from one great man. For example, the Romans believed they were descended from Romulus who founded Rome. The traditional founder of Athens is Erectheus, and of Sparta Lacedæmon. Similarly, the Jewish tradition in the Torah says Jews are descended from Abraham through Isaac. Both the Torah and Qur'an say Arabs are descended from Abraham through Ishmael,[10] [11] Abraham's first son, Isaac's half-brother. Traditional founders are often called patriarchs. The feminine form of patriarch is matriarch, for example see Matriarchs (Bible). Patriarch is also a name for the most senior leaders of Eastern Christianity, roughly comparable to the western arch-bishop (archē as above).

The adjective for patriarchy is patriarchal; and patriarchalism, or more commonly paternalism, refer to the practice or defence of patriarchy. Patron is a related word used generically (that is, it is not gender or sex specific). Women and men who provide financial support to activities within a community can be termed patrons. 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.

Related customs

Patrimonalism uses the Greek word monos (μόνος, sole) to describe the view of a state as the extended household of a mon-arch (sole ruler, archē as above) or deity. There are records of patrimonalism almost as far back as the earliest writing 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 accounts, and enough to pay those accountants. The earliest records of patrimonalism come from Ancient Near Eastern legal documents, the best known being the Code of Hammurabi and the Torah. Some aspects of patrimonalism can still be found in the few remaining monarchies in the world today, for example, British law concerning real estate (see Crown lands), especially in Australia. For more detail regarding patrimonalism see Traditional authority.

XlinkRecessive

Passing of X-linked conditions

Some social customs reflect what is termed patrilineality or patrilocality.

Patrilineal describes customs where family responsibilities and assets pass from father to son. By contrast, contemporary Judaism considers people to be Jewish if their mothers were Jewish, which makes this aspect of contemporary Judaism matrilineal. Biblical Judaism is, however, a classical example of a patrilineal society. Matrilineal is a particularly useful term in genetics, where some genetic features are more or less passed via the maternal line, notably mitochondrial DNA and severe X-linked genetic conditions. An X chromosome from the mother is always passed to offspring, male and female. However, daughters do not receive a Y chromosome, and sons do not receive an X chromosome from their fathers (see sex-determination system, heredity and genetic genealogy).

Patrilocal describes the custom of brides relocating to the geographic community of the husband and his father's family. In a matrilocal society, a husband will relocate to the home community of his wife and her mother (see also marriage). 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[How to reference and link to summary or text], matrilocality is not equivalent to matriarchy, see main entry patriarchy (anthropology).

By contrast with these other customs, patriarchy can be seen to be distinctly about gender and the nuclear family, gender and public office, and about female-male relationships in general.

Benefits of patriarchy

Patriarchy is advanced as being beneficial for human evolution and social organization on many grounds, crossing several disciplines. Although biology may explain its existence (see below), arguments for its social utility have been made since ancient times. These include elements of Greek Stoic Philosophy and the Roman social structure based on the pater familias,[12] but are also found in Akkadian records of Babylonian and Assyrian laws. George Lakoff proposes an ancient dichotomy of "Strict Father" as opposed to "Nurturing Parent" models of ethical theory (SFM and NPM).[13] In general, the main lines of argument are either pragmatic—namely, the reproductive advantages of male-as-provider—[14] or ethical—that any perceived male authority is contingent upon underlying perceptions of duty of care.

Feminist criticism

File:Beauvoir.jpg

Simone de Beauvoir

JohnStuartMill

John Stuart Mill

Main article: Patriarchy in feminism

Most forms of feminism have challenged patriarchy as a social system that is adopted uncritically, due to millennia of human experience where male physical strength was the ultimate way of settling social conflicts – from war to disciplining children. John Stuart Mill wrote, "In early times, the great majority of the male sex were slaves, as well as the whole of the female. And many ages elapsed ... before any thinker was bold enough to question the rightfulness, and the absolute necessity, either of the one slavery or of the other."[15]

In some feminist theory, 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 personification (compare "blame it on the Government" to "blame it on the Patriarchy"). The use of the word patriarchy in feminist literature has become so loaded with emotive associations that some writers prefer to use an approximate synonym, the more objective and technical androcentric (also from Greek – anēr, genitive andros, meaning man).

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."[16] Mary Daly, a radical feminist, wrote, "Males and males only are the originators, planners, controllers, and legitimators of patriarchy."[17] Carole Pateman, another feminist, writes, "The patriarchal construction of the difference between masculinity and femininity is the political difference between freedom and subjection."[18]

Liberal, or mainstream, feminists do not propose to replace patriarchy with matriarchy, rather they argue for equality. Some radical feminists and separatist feminists have have argued for gendercide against men, matriarchy, or separation.[19] However, Ronald Dworkin has argued that equality is a difficult idea.[20] 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 Sexual dimorphism and Gender differences). Recent feminist writers speak of "feminisms of diversity", that seek to reconcile older debates between equality feminisms and difference feminisms. 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."[21]

For a leading feminist who writes against patriarchy see Marilyn French; and for one who is more sympathetic[How to reference and link to summary or text] see Christina Hoff Sommers.

Income inequity US

Average Income USA (2005 Census Data)

In summary, some recent feminist writers have shown a tendency to admit misandry among some other members of the movement[22], and acknowledge real differences in men and women that make diversity a more meaningful aim than reductionistic equality (for example Judith Squires above).

Decades of legislation and affirmative action have not yet changed the fact that western culture is male dominated[How to reference and link to summary or text], and that it remains patriarchal[How to reference and link to summary or text], although women can vote in most countries of the world, and they outnumber men in higher education in many countries.[23]

However, heads of state, cabinet ministers, and the top executives of major companies are still mostly men (see glass ceiling). Also, women's average income is still significantly lower than men's average income. However many masculists argue that this is due to education and career choices that women and men make, rather than the patriarchy.[24] Sally Haslanger claims women are still marginalized within academic philosophy departments.[25]

Steven Goldberg

File:Inevitability.jpg

First Book

Main article: 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 above). This was predicted in 1973 (the early days of second wave feminist activism) by Steven Goldberg (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."[26] Goldberg was chairman of the department of sociology at City College of New York, and has written two books on patriarchy. In the second he wrote:

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.[27]
File:WhyMenRule.jpg

Second Book

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 status 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."[28] 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."[29]

Goldberg proposes the hypothesis that the statistical averages of all these forms of behaviour are partly explained by the necessary (but not sufficient) condition of neuroendocrinological effects – namely, testosterone. The title of his first book makes his hypothesis very clear, it was called The Inevitability of Patriarchy: 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 biological researchers to support or contradict his hypothesis. The situation has changed a lot since then.

For other writers who make similar points to Goldberg see Steven Pinker and Donald Brown in the literature below.

For current feminists and writers with considerably more biological knowledge than Goldberg, who accept his hypothesis, but consider issues beyond the biological, see Helena Cronin and Louann Brizendine.

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.[30]
"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[31]

Biology of gender

Peacock courting peahen

Female-male differences — Peacock courting peahen

Main article: Biology of gender

The biology of gender is scientific analysis of the physical basis for behavioural differences between men and women. It is more specific than sexual dimorphism, which covers physical and behavioural differences between males and females of any sexually reproducing species, or sexual differentiation, where physical and behavioural differences between men and women are described. Biological research of gender has explored such areas as: intersex physicalities, gender identity, gender roles and sexual orientation.

Research in this area is generally motivated by the search for causes of diseases in human beings, and ways of treating or preventing those diseases; it is thought that men and women might require different kinds of treatment for certain diseases. The results are relevant to gender issues, but that is not their direct concern.

It has long been known that there are correlations between the biological sex of animals and their behaviour.[32][33][34]

The late twentieth century saw an explosion in technology capable of aiding sex research. John Money and Milton Diamond made great progress towards understanding the formation of gender identity in humans. Extensive advances were also made in understanding sexual dimorphism in other animals. For example, there were studies on the effects of sex hormones on rats. In the early twenty first century, discoveries were made concerning genetically programmed sexual dimorphism in rat brains, prior even to the influence of hormones on development.

Lobes of the brain NL

Human Brain

Genes on the sex chromosomes can directly influence sexual dimorphism in cognition and behaviour, independent of the action of sex steroids.

[35]

Some specific relevant results are as follows. The brains of many animals are significantly different for females and males of the species.[36] Both genes and hormones affect the formation of many animal brains before "birth" (or hatching), 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.

Normal distribution pdf

The red bell curve here has a lower standard deviation 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.[37]

Brain differences also have a statistically measurable effect on an array of abilities. In particular, on average, women are more capable in nearly everything to do with sensory processing.[How to reference and link to summary or text] For an illustrated description of clear differences between female and male brain response to pain see Laura Stanton and Brenna Maloney, 'The Perception of Pain'.[38] 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).[37] There is evidence to suggest that forms of autism may be essentially extreme expressions of certain typically male characteristics.[39][40] Hormones have also been linked with male aggression and female power motivation.[41][42] Sarah Blaffer Hrdy (confirming Goldberg above) claims that observed male aggression would predict a tendency towards the patriarchy that has also been observed.[43].

Lightmatter chimp

Chimpanzee

Alexandra M. Lopes and others recently published that:

A sexual dimorphism in levels of expression in brain tissue was observed by quantitative real-time PCR, with females presenting an up to 2-fold excess in the abundance of PCDH11X transcripts. We relate these findings to sexually dimorphic traits in the human brain. Interestingly, PCDH11X/Y gene pair is unique to Homo sapiens, since the X-linked gene was transposed to the Y chromosome after the human–chimpanzee lineages split.[44]

Appendix

Patriarchies in dispute

The table shows most societies that have been claimed at one time or another to be matriarchal. In every case the ethnographers report that the societies were patriarchal not matriarchal, even before changes brought by contact with western culture. However, some of the societies are matrilineal or matrilocal.

Note: separate in the marriage column, refers to the practice of husbands and wives living in separate locations, often informally called walking marriages. See the articles for the specific cultures that practice this for further description.

Table

Patriarchal cultures that have been claimed to be matriarchal
Endonym Continent Country Marriage Property Government Ethnographer Date F/M
Alor Asia Indonesia patriarchy Cora du Bois 1944 female
Bamenda Africa Cameroon patrilocal only Kom matrilineal patriarchy Phyllis Kaberry 1952 female
Bantoc Asia Philippines patriarchy Albert S Bacadayan 1974 male
Batek Asia Malaysia patrilocal patriarchy Kirk Michael Endicott 1974 male
Boyowan Australasia Papua New Guinea patrilocal matrilineal patriarchy Bronisław Malinowski 1916 male
Bribri North America Costa Rica matrilocal matrilineal patriarchy William Moore Grabb 1875 male
unknown (Çatalhöyük) Asia Turkey na na na James Mellaart 1961 male
Chambri Australasia Papua New Guinea patriarchy Margaret Mead 1935 female
Pilipino Asia Philippines both both patriarchy Chester L Hunt 1959 male
Gahuku-Gama Australasia Papua New Guinea patriarchy Shirley Glasse (Lindenbaum) 1963 female
Hopituh Shi-nu-mu North America United States of America matrilocal matrilineal patriarchy Barbara Freire-Marreco 1914 female
Iban Asia Borneo both neither patriarchy Edwin H Gomes 1911 male
Imazighen Africa North Sahara patriarchy George Peter Murdock 1959 male
Haudenosaunee North America North East North America matrilocal matrilineal patriarchy Lewis Henry Morgan 1901 male
Jivaro South America West Amazon patriarchy R Karstan 1926 male
Kenuzi Africa Sudan patriarchy Ernest Godard 1867 male
Kibutzim Asia Israel neither neither patriarchy Judith Buber Agassi 1989 female
!Kung San Africa Southern Africa patriarchy Marjorie Shostak 1976 female
Maliku Asia India separate matrilineal patriarchy Ellen Kattner 1996 female
Minangkabau Asia Indonesia both patriarchy PJ Veth 1882 male
Mosuo Asia China separate matrilineal patriarchy Joseph Francis Charles Rock 1924 male
Nakhi Asia China matrilineal patriarchy Joseph Francis Charles Rock 1924 male
Nayar Asia India matrilineal patriarchy E Kathleen Gough 1954 female
Tlingit North America United States of America matrilocal matrilineal patriarchy Aurel Krause 1885 male
Vanatinai Australasia Papua New Guinea matrilocal matrilineal no government
patriarchy
Maria Lipowsky 1981 female
Wemale Asia Indonesia patriarchy Adolf E Jensen 1939 male
Woorani South America Ecuador patriarchy John Man 1982 male
Yegali Africa Madagascar na na na na na na

List

Template:Patriarchy (ethnographies)

See also


Notes and references

  1. "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." Gerda Lerner, The Creation of Patriarchy, (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1986), p. 36.
  2. Cynthia Eller, The Myth of Matriarchal Prehistory: Why an Invented Past Won't Give Women a Future, (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001).]
  3. 3.0 3.1 'Matriarchy', Encyclopædia Britannica, 2007.
  4. Margaret Mead,'Review of Sex and Temperament in Three Privative Societies'. Redbook (October 1973): 48.
  5. William D Mounce, The Morphology of Biblical Greek, (Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 1994), p. 209.
  6. The letter i in patr-i-archy occurs because patēr comes into English via Latin, which had a different vowel flavour to Greek in the genitive (pater/patris). For example, the abbreviation DVP stands for Decessit Vita Patris (literally, "died in the life of the father," meaning "died in the father's lifetime").
  7. Bauer, Arndt and Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon, 3rd ed., (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), pp. 137.
  8. Alfred Rahlfs ed., Septuaginta, (Stuttgart: Deutsche Bibelgesellschaft, 1979), p. 1.
  9. Bauer, Danker, Arndt and Gingrich, A Greek-English Lexicon, 3rd ed., (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2000), pp. 138.
  10. Genesis 25:12-18.
  11. Sura 37:99-109.
  12. "Research into the nature of marriage in the Greco-Roman world ... shows ... [that] in Stoic traditions marriage promoted the full responsibility of a husband as a householder, father, and citizen and stability in society." Anthony C. Thiselton, First Corinthians: A Shorter Exegetical and Pastoral Commentary, (Grand Rapids: Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., 2006), p. 102.
  13. George Lakoff, Moral Politics, (Univ of Chicago Press, 1996) and Philosophy in the Flesh, (UCP, 1999).
  14. Phillip Longman, 'The Return of Patriarchy', Foreign Policy, 2006.
  15. John Stuart Mill, The Subjection of Women, (London: Longmans, 1868).
  16. Fredrika Scarth, The Other Within: Ethics, Politics and the Body in Simone de Beauvoir, (Oxford: Rowman & Littlefield, 2004), p. 100.
  17. Mary Daly, Gyn/Ecology The Metaethics of Radical Feminism, (Boston: Beacon Press, 1978), p. 29.
  18. Carole Pateman, The Sexual Contract, (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988), p. 207.
  19. http://www.wie.org/j16/daly.asp?page=2
  20. "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.
  21. Judith Squires, Gender in Political Theory, (Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999), p. 97.
  22. Hoff Sommers, Christina, Who Stole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed Women (Touchstone/Simon & Schuster, 1995)
  23. "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.", Ian W Craig, Emma Harper and Caroline S Loat, 'The Genetic Basis for Sex Differences in Human Behaviour: Role of the Sex Chromosomes', Annals of Human Genetics 68 (2004): 269–284.
  24. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/02/AR2007040201262.html
  25. Sally Haslanger, Article Title.
  26. Steven Goldberg, The Inevitability of Patriarchy, (London: Temple Smith, 1977), p. 196.
  27. Steven Goldberg, Why Men Rule, (Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company, 1993), p. 1.
  28. Margaret Mead. Male and Female. London: Penguin, 1950.
  29. Steven Goldberg, Why Men Rule, (Chicago, Illinois: Open Court Publishing Company, 1993), p. 11.
  30. John Brockman, 'Getting Human Nature Right: A Talk with Helena Cronin', Edge 73 (2000): 2.
  31. Margaret Daphne Hampson, Theology and Feminism, (Oxford: Blackwell Publishing, 1990), p. x.
  32. 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).
  33. Charles Darwin, The Descent of Man, and Selection in Relation to Sex, 2 volumes, (London: John Murray, 1871).
  34. Helena Cronin, The Ant and the Peacock: Altruism and Sexual Selection from Darwin to Today, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991).
  35. Skuse, David H (2006). Sexual dimorphism in cognition and behaviour: the role of X-linked genes. European Journal of Endocrinology 155: 99–106.
  36. Robert W Goy and Bruce S McEwen, Sexual Differentiation of the Brain: Based on a Work Session of the Neurosciences Research Program. MIT Press Classics. Boston: MIT Press, 1980.
  37. 37.0 37.1 Camilla Persson Benbow and Julian C Stanley, 'Sex Differences in Mathematical Reasoning Ability: More Facts', Science 222 (1983): 1029-1031.
  38. Laura Stanton and Brenna Maloney, 'The Perception of Pain', Washington Post 19 December, 2006.
  39. Simon Baron-Cohen, 'The Extreme-Male-Brain Theory of Autism', in H Tager-Flusberg (ed.), Neurodevelopmental Disorders, (Boston: The MIT Press, 1999).
  40. Simon Baron-Cohen. Mindblindness: An Essay on Autism and Theory of Mind. (Boston: The MIT Press, 1997).
  41. Elizabeth J. Susman, Gale Inoff-Germain, Editha D. Nottelmann, and others, 'Hormones, Emotional Dispositions, and Aggressive Attributes in Young Adolescents', Child Development 58 (1987): 1114-1134.
  42. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080522075940.htm
  43. , 'Raising Darwin's Consciousness: Female Sexuality and the prehominid origins of patriarchy.' Human Nature 8 (1997): 1-49.
  44. Alexandra M. Lopes and others,'Inactivation status of PCDH11X: sexual dimorphisms in gene expression levels in brain', Human Genetics 119 (2006): 1–9.

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External links