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PRACTICE TEST!!!!!!!! SATURDAY, MAY 5th 9-12 BE HERE WITH PENCIL, PAPER, PEN BY 8:45

PRACTICE TEST!!!!!!!! SATURDAY, MAY 5th 9-12 BE HERE WITH PENCIL, PAPER, PEN BY 8:45. "Yes, I am fond of history.". "I wish I were too. I read it a little as a duty, but it tells me nothing. that does not either vex or weary me.

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PRACTICE TEST!!!!!!!! SATURDAY, MAY 5th 9-12 BE HERE WITH PENCIL, PAPER, PEN BY 8:45

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  1. PRACTICE TEST!!!!!!!! SATURDAY, MAY 5th 9-12 BE HERE WITH PENCIL, PAPER, PEN BY 8:45

  2. "Yes, I am fond of history." "I wish I were too. I read it a little as a duty, but it tells me nothing that does not either vex or weary me. The quarrels of popes and kings, with wars or pestilences, in every page; the men all so good for nothing, and hardly any women at all -- it is very tiresome:" Catherine Morland, in Northhangar Abbey (1803),    by Jane Austen

  3. Gender roles and relations Racial and ethnic constructions Family and kinship Social and economic classes Development and transformation of social structures

  4. NEOLITHIC REVOLUTION • Authority was based on family relationships. • Gender roles were more flexible, but most cultures has some • sort of division. • Men took leadership roles. • Women responsible for gathering. • Later, women were probably the first to plant seeds . • Both men and women made tools. • As people settled, women remained high in social status • controlling crops planted and sharing them. • Women had children at more frequent intervals and they • began to spin and weave…WHY NOT MEN? • Men began to take over agricultural jobs and patriarchal • system began to develop.

  5. RIVER VALLEY CIVILIZATIONS • Had reverence for females through fertility statues • Social inequality grew due to slavery and specialization • Women were sometimes shamans • Marriages were frequently to men at least 10 years older • Laws were set up to pass down property to heirs Cult of the Great Mother Goddess worshipped in this period. Artemis/Diana from Ephesus The earth tied to the fertility of crops and animals

  6. Women in Egypt were less repressed than in Mesopotamia…. in the upper-class at least. “Hold her back from mastery.” (a patriarchal statement from Egypt) HATSHEPSUT as pharaoh and after. It is TOUGH to be queen!

  7. Husbands needed to be sure the children were theirs, so laws were passed that women HAD to be virgins at marriage. Laws were passed against adultery. Later, men began to veil their wives to protect her honor which was linked with her sexuality. Men’s honor was linked to their job or position in society. Legally, a woman became subject to her husband with widows being the only women allowed to control property. Eventually, the emphasis was on the role of the male deity over the female once writing was invented. Female goddesses became less important. Mesopotamia

  8. Family arrangements became more arranged. • Philosophies were used to formulate ideas about men’s and women’s qualities and • roles. • Female infanticide became more common. • Laws were passed restricting women in certain stages of life such as widowhood. • Women viewed as necessary but inferior. Classical Civilizations • Women increasingly secluded from society. • Cultures became patrilocal. • Women were trained to be wives and mothers. • Families were the basis for a man’s place in the world. • A woman’s location determined her place.

  9. People were expected to marry with few exceptions. • The stability of the family determined if the armies won battles. • Patriarchal family structure. • Slavery continued and grew in number in some areas. Classical Civilizations • Women were regarded as capable of achieving spiritual goals. • Citizenship was for free males not women or slaves. • social status was determined by the land a person held. • Lower class women suffered less inequality than their upper-class sisters.

  10. In China, women were never on the official list of her birth family. • In Confucianism, the most important concept of li was the parent/child (son) • relationship.

  11. Spartan women had more freedom, because the men were in the barracks. They ran businesses, managed slaves and owned property.

  12. Paterfamilias in Rome was a male-dominated family structure. Social classes: patricians = upper-class; plebeians = free farmers; had a merchant class; slaves Indian Mauryan/Gupta caste membership was determined by birth Status of women declined during the Gupta because of the increased emphasis on inheritance of property. The ritual of Sati for wealthy women was instituted.

  13. Centralization led to greater gender distinctions. • Women were taken by conquerors from prominent families as symbols of their • conquest. • Special sections of the house were set aside for women as harim/harem or • “forbidden area.” Seclusion and veiling were based on rank. • Female religious communities (convents). The worship of female saints. • Hereditary monarchies sometimes had individual women rule, however, it was • often in the name of a son or husband. Postclassical

  14. Even though the system in Arabia was patriarchal, women enjoyed rights not always given in other lands. Could inherit property; own a business (Khadijah); divorce husbands The Qur’an outlawed female infanticide, emphasized that all people were equal before Allah. Dowries were to go directly to the brides. At first, in early Islam, women prayed and attended ceremonies in public. Muhammad’s youngest wife, Aisha, even led troops into battle. With the arrival of slaves, and the influence of lands conquered, Muslims began to veil and seclude women. Shari’a expanded concept of seclusion, so unlike Khadija, women couldn’t hold property, run a business, etc. Mohammed and his wife Aisha freeing the daughter of a tribal chief. From the Siyer-i Nebi. In the Topkapi Palace Library, Istanbul.

  15. In China, the Tang/Song dynasties begin the custom of footbinding. Neo-Confucianist doctrines about female subordination become stronger in the Song dynasty. Women were increasingly secluded; even in peasant homes. Widows were forbidden to remarry. Empress Wu stressed the family unit as the basic unit of society focusing on loyalty and obedience. (Confucian values) She took power and stressed the loyalty owed to one’s mother (Confucian values), and the Buddhist ideas of the godlike ruler to build up her power.

  16. Murasaki Shikibu author of Tale of Genji As with most Heian women, we do not know her real name. In Japan women played a significant public role, but lost position with the growing power of the Shogunate. Daughters were more valuable than sons due to the marital political arrangements in the upper class. Husbands often went to live with their wives families.

  17. Sei Shonagan author of the Pillowbook The emperor of Japan traced his ancestry to Amaterasu the sun goddess. Women could be religious leaders in Shinto. With the arrival of Buddhism, women became nuns. Wives of samurai managed the estates of their husbands when they were away even fighting if necessary. Poor women were expected to be workers in agriculture or divers for ocean products such as seaweed.

  18. Aztecs had slaves that were household servants. women who died in childbirth received honor as a warrior upper-class boys and girls received formal schooling large gap between rich and poor smaller merchant class and fewer craftsmen than Aztecs virgin women were selected to serve the Inca and his family who had the status of gods the line of descent was through the mothers for girls and boys from the father women were seen as links to the earth deities, so they were the ones to put seeds in the ground while men dug the holes Aztec and Inca

  19. MEDIEVAL EUROPE • Women could inherit estates and take oaths of vassalage and they were expected to • defend the estates. • At first, the king’s wife was in charge of the kingdom’s finances just like she was of the • household. Women were the caregivers who studied herbs and remedies. • Primogeniture trickled down to all levels of society. • Convents offered women protection and opportunities for leadership as abbesses. • Worship of female saints, such as Mary, became important. • Men cleared land, plowed and took care of large animals. Women took care of small • animals, the spinning and food prep. • Widows were not restricted as in other places, and women were often employed in the • production of trade products.

  20. AFRICA Very Diverse….but many cultures were matrilineal and had systems of marriage that involved a bride-price rather than a dowry. Thus, girls were seen as a source of wealth rather than a drain on their families. Many cultures practiced polygamy with families living in compounds where each wife had her own house, cattle, fields and property. The division of labor was quite varied, but in most areas women were responsible for the growing, processing and even selling of crops. In some kingdoms there was the position of “Mother of the King” who was a joint ruler with certain duties. Both men and women acted as priests and honored male and female gods/spirits. Ethiopian Christian culture and Islamic regions excluded women from positions of leadership.

  21. New international contacts led to new ethnicities. Traditional gender patterns disrupted with new patterns formed. Concepts of race and status developed. EARLY MODERN PERIOD 1450-1750 “Need” for consumer goods! Intellectual movements “An eloquent woman is never chaste.”

  22. New international contacts led to new ethnicities and to new ideas of racial hierarchies. In Africa, 2/3rds of the slaves taken were male which reinforced or created the idea of polygamy. Mestizos, Mulattos Traditional gender patterns disrupted with new patterns formed. Men were the early travelers, and laws were passed against “racial mixing.” miscengenation This to changes in religious practices, languages, and family patterns. So many men left that women were left competing for the few men available in Europe.

  23. “Need” for consumer goods! Male labor needed in large numbers as a workforce on plantations. Women’s roles in upper-class homes become consumption rather than production. Intellectual movements “An eloquent woman is never chaste.” Protestant women didn’t learn to write, because it was seen as dangerous. Educated women always viewed as suspect in character.

  24. The home was “A haven in a heartless world.” A low point for women around the world. A time of “equality of misery.” Both men and women living in a poor state compounded by industrialization and imperialism with most men and women left back. It was more about class structure than gender structure. 1750-1919 Thomas Jefferson said, “Were our state a pure democracy, there would still be excluded from our deliberation women, who, to prevent the deprivation of morals and ambiguity of issues, should not mix promiscuously in gatherings of men.” “Women ought to have representatives, instead of being arbitrarily governed without any direct share allowed them in the deliberations of government.” Mary Wollstonecraft And so it begins, the push for rights and suffrage!

  25. Political Revolutions Women’s Movements

  26. Women in factories were paid less for less skilled labor. Women were mainly unmarried which led to sexual exploitation and concerns about THEIR morality and respectability!!!

  27. In Japan and Latin America Women were to stay home to be “Good wives and wise mothers.” At home, women still had to work to survive, but the governments didn’t count it as real work as it was “housekeeping.” Men frequently left home in Latin America to seek work leaving women to continue subsistence farming. Marianismo and machismo

  28. Scientific discoveries about women used to justify limits on their education. Women who accomplished anything intellectual were seen as having “transcended their sex.” China: “She who is unskilled in arts and literature is a virtuous woman.” Japan: “To cultivate women’s skills would be harmful.”

  29. Women’s Movements “The woman question.”

  30. Families Marriage Patterns Work Patterns 1920-2000 Independence Movements Political and Legal Developments

  31. Families: smaller; access to birth control; by 1950’s people no longer saw big families as necessary for survival in Industrialized countries. Size of families limited by governments. Marriage patterns changed and declined in industrialized areas.

  32. Work Patterns: factory workers remain mainly female along With many children. Some parts of the world women make up very little of the workforce except for highly trained professionals in sex segregated societies.

  33. Independence Movements: Single women are taxed by colonial powers for leaving home to find work which caused them to join movements. Women participate in every way. After independence, women begin to get some power which was limited. “Women’s issues” such as access to birth control or family violence were not considered important by Marxist leaders.

  34. Great quote! 1st Prime Minister of Israel

  35. Indira Gandhi India Benazir Bhutto Pakistan Margaret Thatcher United Kingdom Francis Perkins 1st Female in USA Cabinet

  36. Bronze Nazi’s Mother’s Cross Der Deutschen Mutter Awarded for having4-5 babies

  37. World War II

  38. China’s one child policy Most posters today are of girls.

  39. Civil Rights Leaders Rosa Parks

  40. You’ve come along way, Baby!

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