There seems a tendency to view “important” history as
beginning with the classical Greek and Roman eras of the first millennium
B.C. However, by the time of the arrival
of those well-documented societies, the several thousand years preceding had
already evolved many of the basic characteristics of society that define our current
existence. Basic religious practices, hierarchical
structures, economic concepts, and the social relationships between the sexes
all were developed in that earlier era.
There is more to be learned about those millennia than the traditionally
educated might expect. Gerda Lerner
is a respected historian who is best known for her studies of the role of women
in society. Her best-known work is The Creation of Patriarchy in which she summarizes the knowledge that can
gathered from early archeological studies and the written records that began to
be available around 3000 B.C. Although
her focus is on the history of females, it soon becomes clear that all of
history is intertwined in addressing that topic. Her subject was the developments in
Mesopotamia, but similar trends were observed as societies evolved in both
China and India. Learning more about
those earlier millennia sheds light on the problems that still beset us today.
Lerner discovered that different regions developed
characteristics at different rates and times, but there was a distinct
convergence in many of the societies studied.
She provides the reader with her “best estimate” of how the
establishment of sedentary societies based on agriculture replaced
hunter-gatherer societies and transitioned women from a highly egalitarian
status with respect to men to one of subservience. The topic here is not that entire history,
but Lerner’s insights into how the treatment of women played into the establishment
of slavery as a social institution.
Lerner provides this general perspective.
“The story of civilization is
the story of men and women struggling up from necessity, from their helpless
dependence on nature, to freedom and their partial mastery over nature. In this struggle women were longer confined
to species-essential activities than men and were therefore more vulnerable to
being disadvantaged. My argument sharply
distinguishes between biological necessity, to which both women and men submitted
and adapted, and culturally constructed customs and institutions, which forced
women into subordinate positions. I have
tried to show how it might have come to pass that women agreed to a sexual
division of labor, which would eventually disadvantage them, without having
been able to foresee the later consequences.”
“There are a few facts of which
we can be certain on the basis of archeological evidence. Sometime during the agricultural revolution
relatively egalitarian societies with a sexual division of labor based on
biological necessity gave way to more highly structured societies in which both
private property and the exchange of women based on incest taboos and exogamy
were common. The earlier societies were
often matrilineal and matrilocal, while the latter surviving societies were predominately
patrilineal and patrilocal. Nowhere is
there any evidence of a reverse process, going from patriliny to matriliny. The more complex societies featured a
division of labor no longer based on biological distinctions, but also on hierarchy
and the power of some men over other men and all women.”
The transition in the role of women would take place
gradually. Evolution, Economics, Patriarchy, and the Status of Women discusses this process in more detail,
but suffice it to say here, that women became valuable as property, and as
property, they could be bought and sold.
Their status depended on the whim of their patriarch, either father or
spouse. If that protection was withdrawn,
they had few options available other than making their bodies available for
sexual services. Once men realized they could
exercise such power over women, and women realized their lack of power, this
relationship became imbedded in the psyche of each gender and it became the
natural order of things. What Lerner
focuses on is the similarity of the status of females to that of slaves.
“The father had the power of
life and death over his children. He had
the power to commit infanticide by exposure or abandonment. He could give his daughters in marriage in
exchange for receiving a bride price even during their childhood, or he could
consecrate them to a life of virginity in the temple service. He could arrange marriages for children of
both sexes. A man could pledge his wife,
his concubines and their children as pawns for his debt; if he failed to pay
back the debt, these pledges would be turned into debt slaves.”
“The class difference between a
wife living under the patriarchal dominance/protection of her husband and a
slave living under the dominance/protection of the master was mainly that the
wife could own a slave…”
The logic of patriarchy closely follows that of
slavery. If a group such as women can be
treated as a lesser class of human being, then they must be a lesser
class. If a group of people can be
enslaved, then they must deserve to be enslaved.
Slavery surely existed for a long time as the earliest
settlements competed with each other for land, resources, and laborers. Those defeated were likely subjected to
various degrees of involuntary servitude, but often had options to emerge from
that status over time. As time went on
and settlements became larger and more organized, the need for involuntary
labor would only grow. However, as
conflict became more common and better organized, the males who might have been
captured were more likely to be trained warriors rather than simple
laborers. A different approach to
slavery was called for. In Lerner’s
phrasing, it had to be “institutionalized.”
“The ‘invention of slavery’ involves
the development of techniques of permanent enslavement and the concept, in the
dominant as well as in the dominated, that permanent powerlessness on the one
side and total power on the other are acceptable conditions of social
interaction.”
The “techniques of permanent enslavement” would eventually
involve a permanent threat of death, complete separation from a person’s social
origins, and imposition of some form of permanent dishonor. For a long time, it was not clear that such a
system could be imposed on a class of people and make it work. Male captives from a defeated city or state
were deemed too dangerous and were either killed outright, mutilated to lessen
any threat they might pose, or transported to some far-off location from which
they were unlikely to return. The
previous demotion of women to lower-class humans suggested that experimentation
with women and their children as permanent slaves could work.
Initially, the practice was to kill all captives taken in
war. Women were often raped prior to
their murder. It seems the thought occurred
to the victors that women, especially ones with children, would be willing to
endure servitude in return for their lives.
Even those without children would eventually become pregnant due to
sexual usage and remain docile to protect their newborn children. If the dishonor of rape and sexual bondage
was not sufficient to define a slave woman as different from normal society,
they could be branded or forced to dress in a specific manner to remind them of
their status.
Lerner notes that male historians and anthropologists recognize
the initiation of institutionalized slavery with that of women but assign little
significance to it. For her, it is
extremely significant. She sees this as
a direct result of the demotion of women in the patriarchal system and suggests
that the successful enslavement of women became a further justification for
patriarchal control of women.
“As subordination of women by
men provided the conceptual model for the creation of slavery as an institution,
so the patriarchal family provided the structural model.”
It should be noted that the captives after a battle were
generally similar peoples to the victors.
In a patriarchy, the honor of the males is tied directly to their
ability to protect and control the sexual experiences of their women. Raping the women not only dishonors them but
also dishonors greatly the men.
“The impact on the conquered of
the rape of the conquered women was twofold: it dishonored the women and by
implication served as a symbolic castration of their men. Men in patriarchal
societies who cannot protect the sexual purity of their wives, sisters, and
children are truly impotent and dishonored.
The practice of raping the women of a conquered group has remained a
feature of warfare and conquest from the second millennium B.C. to the
present. It is a social practice which,
like the torture of prisoners, has been resistant to ‘progress,’ to
humanitarian reforms, and to sophisticated moral and ethical considerations. I suggest this is the case because it is a
practice built into and essential to the structure of patriarchal institutions
and inseparable from them.”
The successful enslavement of women allowed recognition
of the mechanism by which other groups could be enslaved.
“The precedent of seeing women
as an inferior group allows the transference of such a stigma onto any other
group which is enslaveable. The domestic
subordination of women provided the model out of which slavery developed as a
social institution.”
“Once a group has been
designated as enslaved, it gathers on itself the stigma of having been enslaved
and, worse, the stigma of belonging to a group that is enslaveable. This stigma becomes a reinforcing factor
which excuses and justifies the practice of enslavement in the minds of the
dominant group and in the minds of the enslaved. If this stigma is fully internalized by the
enslaved—a process which takes many generations and demands the intellectual
isolation of the enslaved group—enslavement then becomes to be perceived as ‘natural’
and therefore acceptable.”
This system for the degradation of women began about
5,000 years ago. Is it any wonder that
it has been difficult for them to extract themselves from its clutches? Patriarchy was the practice in place when the
great religions that would emerge from the Middle East were created. They would enshrine these customs and continue
to propagate them into our current era.
It should be recognized that patriarchy preceded the religions and demanded
that the religions support its traditions—not the other way around.
Wonderful explanations and well researched! Thanks!
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