Why is patriarchy important




















While the focus of feminism is primarily on gender, feminism with an emphasis on intersectionality can help men, women, and nonbinary folks alike understand where they are most negatively affected, how they experience various forms of oppression, and what they can do to eradicate those oppressive systems. There is no logical or reasonable way to deny that we live in a society that perpetuates rape and rape culture. Our society has been historically set up in a way that makes rape, sexual violence, or romantic manipulation not only possible, but rather a normal, expected occurrence for many people.

Much of the recent focus of feminism is completely ridding our society of rape and rape culture. Feminism is out to protect everyone from the terrifying outcomes of rape and rape culture by making sure it can not only be talked about more openly, but it can also be more openly villainized and dismantled. What all of this comes down to is the simple fact that the masculinity that patriarchy has bred and enabled is extremely toxic.

Men are hurt by their own dedication to toxic, patriarchal masculinity by allowing themselves to hurt others. This is one of the goals of feminism: to enable men to be less toxic and be more caring and supportive, to be willing to share and create safe spaces.

Men have to be more willing to understand themselves, their feelings, their insecurities, their needs, while also actively rejecting the notion that being violent or abusive or overbearing or condescending is normal. Men have to be more feminist-minded when it comes to treating others with respect, with calling out toxicity, with fighting for social justice and equality, and with being good to themselves as well as those around them.

It is pertinent to the betterment of our society that we can question ourselves, masculinity, and patriarchy. My Account 0 - Free No products in the cart. Share with your friends. The objective reality of gender inequalities shows the existence of a division of labour and organic image. This division of society into strata based on different unequal statuses of men and women in terms of wealth, power, and privilege paves the way for gender stratification highlighting the economic and social disparities between the two genders.

Different norms, customs, traditions, and institutions encourage this hierarchical and asymmetrical division. There has been general acceptance for it into the community intended not to touch the sustainable course of familial relationships. The evolution of patriarchy has remained a very dynamic historical process where agriculture and land ownership made it strongly rootable, before this, some of the nomadic hunter-gatherer societies were egalitarian, and some cultures were based on the mother as the head of the family or household, however, as the different tribes started declaring war on each other, dissimilar vulnerabilities engraved male domination.

These appeared as social inequalities, though there were many, but they remained conspicuous and drew criticism. The culture contributed to ordering society into sets based on perceived social status, which was further strengthened by class. This resulted in two different roles and relative statuses based on gender within the same family. In this case, since the distribution remained unequal, it affected the economic status of the family because of which women experienced constraints at both social and economic levels and got used to deprivation which became standard, usual and typical societal offering.

In the early stages of human togetherness, the earning potential of women remained dormant. They were dependent on men for their financial securities. They lost hold on resources and institutions necessary for self-subsistence.

Since time immemorial, patriarchy has not allowed social, cultural and economic homogeneity to exist in any form. This includes the time in the past which had been so long ago that women and men both have no knowledge or memory of it, and even women, in general, have stopped blaming patriarchy for the social inequality and the gender stratification.

Patriarchy disempowered women. They do not become focused individuals. They receive a poor education, undergo substance abuse, and face unemployment and marginalisation. Patrilocal residence, as it is called, is associated with patriarchy, says anthropologist and primatologist Sarah Hrdy at the University of California at Davis. For most of our history, we have been hunter-gatherers, and patrilocal residence is not the norm among modern hunter-gatherer societies.

According to Hrdy, a degree of egalitarianism is built into these systems. If they reflect what prehistoric hunter-gatherers did, women in those early societies would have had the choice of support from the group they grew up with, or the option to move away from oppression. According to one school of thought, things changed around 12, years ago.

With the advent of agriculture and homesteading, people began settling down. They acquired resources to defend, and power shifted to the physically stronger males.

Fathers, sons, uncles and grandfathers began living near each other, property was passed down the male line, and female autonomy was eroded. As a result, the argument goes, patriarchy emerged. This origin story is supported by a study published in Researchers at the Sapienza University of Rome, Italy, studied mitochondrial DNA inherited from mothers and genetic markers on the Y chromosome inherited from fathers in 40 populations from sub-Saharan Africa.



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