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13 March 2001
Dear Editor:
I recently read Max Dashu's
review of my book The Myth of Matriarchal
Prehistory in your journal, and would like the
opportunity to respond, since it includes several
misreadings of my argument.
First, Dashu says over and
over again that I believe that all societies
everywhere have always been male-dominated. I never
say this, because I don't believe we know any such
thing. I am making the much more modest claim that
however prehistoric societies were organized, we
can be pretty sure that they were not all
matristic, goddess-worshipping, and respectful of
women. In other words, I am arguing against the
thesis of universal prehistoric matriarchy; not in
favor of the thesis of universal patriarchy. Given
that this is my aim, all I need are a few
well-chosen counterexamples: cultures that exist
apart from the conditions that matriarchalists
believe to create patriarchy (things like animal
husbandry, advanced technologies, the rise of the
state, or invasions by patriarchal cultures) that
are nevertheless male dominant. Again, I am not
saying that all cultures are patriarchal, or that
no cultures have ever been sex egalitarian. All I
am saying is that there's a very good chance that
prehistoric cultures were variable on the issue of
sex relations, as cultures are today, and that no
single pattern of sex egalitarianism or goddess
worship existed.
Since my book was
published, several "matrix historians" have claimed
that it is only an oddball radical fringe that
proposes that goddess worship and/or
female-centeredness in society were universal in
prehistory. They claim that all they or anyone else
has ever tried to show is that some cultures
somewhere were not male dominant. This is simply
false. I have plenty of citations from prominent
individuals saying that prehistory was universally,
or near-universally "matristic."
Second, I never use the
words "essentialist" or "essentialism" in my book
(Dashu accuses me of this four times in her
review). I purposely avoided using these terms. I
believe they have come to be stand-ins for an
argument rather than an argument itself, and thus
have descended to the status of cheap shot
(something with which Dashu agrees in the course of
her review). I wanted to make my case more
carefully than this, so I never talked about the
matriarchal thesis as being "essentialist."
Nevertheless, I do believe that matriarchal myth
does a disservice to the feminist movement by
reducing femaleness to a rather narrow quantity,
and specifically to one that is largely the
creation of a sexist society. Dashu complains that
my position makes it "hard to see how to stop the
dominant groups' ideologies from continuing to
define reality." Obviously, both of us, as
feminists, are troubled by the same problem. It is
just that Dashu believes that matrix history avoids
the problem while I think that matrix history
repeats it.
It is particularly
troubling to me that Dashu characterizes my
approach as one that regards sexism as a
superficial problem which could be easily remedied
by ignoring gender altogether. If I have done
anything to create this impression, I would like to
correct it right now. I regard sexism as a deeply
entrenched problem, and its social enforcement as
being so heavy-handed as to make it difficult to
even see it, let alone to remove it. When I say on
p. 75 of my book that while "gender may in fact be
nothing more than the effect of a performance . . .
it still has incredible social power which we
ignore at our own risk," and on p. 76 that we live
in a world where "sex determines quite powerfully
and completely," this is exactly the point I am
trying to make. When I say, on p. 74, "why can't we
just ignore [the feminine] and see if it
goes away?" I am not suggesting that we, as
feminists, should just ignore gender and hope for
the best. I am saying that we, all of us, might try
ignoring gender (this includes toy designers). For
feminists to pretend that gender doesn't exist
under current conditions is empirically absurd and
politically disastrous. But to argue forcefully
that gender has no necessary or well-documented
existence is, I think, a sensible feminist approach
and one that I advocate.
I also wanted to address
just a few specifics in Dashu's review. I never
argue that Paleolithic or Neolithic female figures
are pornographic. I mention this as one
interpretation offered by some archaeologists. In
fact, I think one of the most likely explanations
for these figurine assemblages is that they are
images of a goddess or goddesses, and I say this in
the book (p. 139). However, extensive female
iconographies are not incompatible with patriarchy.
This doesn't mean that prehistoric societies were
patriarchal. All it means is that they could have
been.
Since Dashu draws attention
to the example of Iron Age Israel cited in my book,
I'll review that case again here. Archaeologists
have uncovered a great many female figurines of
apparently religious significance from this era.
From the same era we have written texts proclaiming
that there is only one (male) god, and all other
worship of deities is heretical. This combination
of artifacts and text does not mean that the
artifacts could not have been goddesses or that
they were not worshipped (what Dashu seems to think
I am saying). What it suggests to me is that there
was significant tension between folk religion and
official religion in Iron Age Israel -- a common
occurrence in religions worldwide -- and that there
is no reason to believe that a similar tension
could not have been in place in preliterate
societies. Figurine-rich Neolithic cultures may
have worshipped a goddess and may also have had an
official religion that declared such worship
inferior to that of worship of an invisible male
god. Again, I'm not saying this is what the
situation was in Neolithic societies; I'm simply
saying that it could have been the situation, that
the evidence of probable goddess worship available
to us does not prove that these cultures were
matristic or sex egalitarian. Similarly, I do not
say that suttee burials aren't patriarchal; they
are. I say that absence of suttee burials doesn't
prove absence of patriarchy. We manage to be pretty
patriarchal ourselves while burying our dead in a
very egalitarian manner.
I wrote this book with the
clear understanding that some people would regard
me as a stooge of the patriarchal backlash, another
Camille Paglia, as Dashu suggests. Obviously I
don't see myself this way. Readers will have to
judge for themselves. However, I haven't seen a lot
of evidence that the enemies of feminism "just love
my book." Lawrence Osborne's review in Salon.com
which Dashu refers to was downright nasty, not only
towards feminist matriarchalists and their
"twaddle" (his word, not mine), but toward me, who
he described as an ideologue of "enlightened
feminism" (whatever that is) who is unoriginal,
smug, clubby, tangential, condescending, and
boring.
It is easy to level the
charge of "guilt by association," but I don't think
it is fair. Just as anti-pornography feminists
should not be dismissed because fundamentalist
Christians happen to be against pornography too, I
don't think my critique should be rejected as
anti-feminist because some anti-feminists also
critique matriarchal myth. This is a particularly
dangerous charge for feminist matriarchalists to
make, since it is easily leveled in turn at them,
for there is no question that earlier
matriarchalists were unrepentant misogynists. As I
take some care to say in my book (p. 7), this
doesn't mean that matriarchal myth cannot be
feminist, or that feminists who adopt it are either
foolish or naïve. I would appreciate the same
respect.
Sincerely,
Cynthia Eller
P.S. Let me apologize for
misrepresenting J.P. Mallory's position. I
understand what Mallory's position is, and I should
have introduced his quote by saying, "As Mallory
summarizes the position of most contemporary
archaeologists . . ." rather than merely saying "As
Mallory summarizes . . ."
Dear Stephanie,
What a fine way to begin
International Women' s Day - to be greeted
by
Awakened Woman
e-Newsletter! I heartily commend you for creating
such a
fine forum for vital
communication, intellectual stimulation
and
inspiration. The website is
magnificent!
A hearty e-hug!
Joan Marler
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