The Creation of Patriarchy
The Origins of Women's Subordination. Women and History, Volume 1
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:18th Feb '88
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Winner of the Joan Kelly Prize for the best work on women's history
In this radically fresh view of the history of Western civilization, the author argues that male dominance is not natural or biological (and hence unchangeable), but a product of historical development.When precisely did the ideas, symbols and metaphors of patriarchy take hold of Western civilization? When were women, so central to the creation of society, moved on to the sidelines? Where is the evidence to support the notion that male dominance over women is a natural state of things? Gerda Lerner's radical review of Western civilization shows that male dominance over women has nothing to do with biology, and everything to do with cultural and historical habits. Dr Lerner draws her evidence from a host of archaeological, literary, and artistic sources, using them to pinpoint the critical turning points in the allocation of women's roles in society. She draws especially on archaeological evidence of the cultures of ancient Hebrew and Mesopotamian societies, cultures from which modern Western civilization has largely derived. This approach enables her to trace the ways in which men and women have been classified as essentially separate creatures - from ancient Greek philosophy onwards - and also to examine ways in which their experience of society differs, through the structures and symbols of class and religion. Most of all, by showing patriarchy as the result of an historical process, Lerner produces an irresistable argument that it can be altered, and ended, by similar means.
`A valuable contribution to history and women's studies.' Booklist
- Winner of Winner of the Joan Kelly Prize for the best work on women's history.
ISBN: 9780195051858
Dimensions: 213mm x 140mm x 23mm
Weight: 454g
368 pages