Aka And Ngandu Pygmy Tribes And Gender Role Essay

PAGES
4
WORDS
1274
Cite

¶ … Components of a Good Life," Hewlett (2013b) focuses on AKA and Ngandu concepts of female adolescence, including issues associated with puberty and rites of passage to adulthood. The author links the cultural components of female puberty with evidence from psychological development. Adolescence is a transitional period or life stage, generally characterized by psychic and social exploration, identity formation, and increased risk taking. Hewlett's thesis in this chapter is that gender is constructed as a process involving interactions between human biology/developmental psychology, culture, and the ecology of politics and economics. Hewlett's (2013b) data is gathered from field studies, including in-depth open-ended interviews with Aka and Ngandu women. Secondary sources are also cited in the bibliography, especially when referring to psychological or sociological research that substantiates the primary theses of the chapter. The author attempts to draw connections between research in evolutionary biology, developmental psychology, and cultural anthropology. The anecdotes and observations gathered in the field bolster prior research, and the research is heightened and substantiated by the direct evidence from Aka and Ngandu women.

The emphasis on the field work is on shifts in gender roles, norms, and customs with regards to the transitional period of adolescence. Focusing on women in two different tribes, Hewlett (2013b) illustrates two remarkably different normative structures and worldviews. The Aka and Ngandu have completely different concepts of female sexuality and female roles in society. Ngandu are patriarchal; the Aka more egalitarian. Evidence for these differences comes from objective observations of task differentiation, divisions of labor, and customs related to marriage and other rites of passage.

For example, the Ngandu have strict gender divisions of labor with women confined to domestic chores and childrearing. The Aka do not have...

...

Aka women are not treated as commodities as they are in Ngandu culture, in which the young girl who is of marrying age is purchased for her "brideprice," which diminishes if she has lost her virginity (p. 99). Moreover, marriage "ensures [the boy's] rights to [the girl's] future reproductive abilities" (Hewlett, 2013b, p. 99). On the other hand, the Aka permit, and even openly encourage, sexual play and exploration among their adolescent males and females. Marriage does not include an elaborate ceremony, but is encouraged as a form of coupling that produces children.
Both the Aka and the Ngandu value marriage as a pathway to childrearing. Yet gender has little to do with the cultural value placed on bearing children. As Hewlett (2013b) points out, the ecology of the Aka and Ngandu determines their proclivity to early reproduction and frequent childbirths, as infant mortality rates are high. Having sex is considered a form of work, the "work of the night" as both the Aka and Ngandu put it. This type of work is not necessarily perceived of as being different from other types of labor carried out through the day. Differences in gender roles and norms are secondary to the primary motivation to have sex in order to propagate. Love, however, is important to the male-female relationships in both societies, whereas neither envisions homosexual romance or sex as being feasible.

Other ecological considerations should be able to explain the differences in gender roles and norms, but in this case, they do not. Both Aka and Ngandu use hunting and gathering, but acquiring subsistence resources is gendered only for the Ngandu. Reasons for gender role differentiation are not based on pragmatic concerns, other than those that are imaginary or customary, especially in light of the Aka. The cultural knowledge that evolves out of ecological expediency varies…

Sources Used in Documents:

Hewlett, Barry S. (1992). Husband-Wife Reciprocity and the Father-Infant Relationship among the Aka Pygmies. In Father-Child Relations: Cultural and Biosocial Contexts. B.S. Hewlett, ed. Pp. 153-176. New York: Aldine de Gru

Hewlett, Bonnie L. 2013b Listen, Here's a Story: Ethnographic Life Narratives from Aka and Ngandu Women in the Congo Basin. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Kaufman, G. (2000). Do gender role attitudes matter? Journal of Family Issues 21(1): 128-144.


Cite this Document:

"Aka And Ngandu Pygmy Tribes And Gender Role" (2015, May 14) Retrieved April 25, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/aka-and-ngandu-pygmy-tribes-and-gender-role-2151141

"Aka And Ngandu Pygmy Tribes And Gender Role" 14 May 2015. Web.25 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/aka-and-ngandu-pygmy-tribes-and-gender-role-2151141>

"Aka And Ngandu Pygmy Tribes And Gender Role", 14 May 2015, Accessed.25 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/aka-and-ngandu-pygmy-tribes-and-gender-role-2151141

Related Documents
Gender Roles
PAGES 6 WORDS 2056

Gender Roles In the world today, the most common way in which human beings probably distinguish themselves is by their gender. All human beings, or at least the vast majority, are born as clearly male or female. Perhaps this is also why this distinction has, since ancient times, served as a factor in human relationships and indeed vast-scale human oppression and even slavery. Indeed, to this day many women suffer indignities

Gender Roles
PAGES 3 WORDS 1079

Gender Roles Sex is a biological given. Some animal species have one sex, some have two, and some have more than two. This is interesting to scientists perhaps, in terms of its physical construction. However, gender is what culture 'does' with these distinctions of physiology. Gender is how culture interprets the apparent biological differences between particular human bodies of different sexual anatomy. What does it mean, for instance, that a certain

Gender Role Analysis How Gender is Shaped by Education How Gender is Shaped by Public Policy How Gender is Shaped in the Workplace This report discusses the role played by social institutions such as schools, workplaces and policy making institutions in the shaping of gender roles and norms in society. These institutions hold control over desired resources such as information, wealth and social progress. They control the distribution of these resources by making it

Gender Roles in Everybody Loves Raymond Even with the fact that society as a whole has experienced significant progress during recent years, it seems difficult for the media to stop using stereotypes when relating to particular groups. Philip Rosenthal's television sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond is a perfect example concerning gender roles and how the media tends to use them with the purpose of shaping particular characters. In spite of its humor,

Gender Messages Gender roles are the behaviors and traits and expectations that are linked to women and men through socialization, according to Janice Lee and Amie Ashcraft (2005). In fact gender roles define what it means to be a feminine or masculine person. During one's lifetime there is an enormous amount of social pressure to "conform to these gender roles" (Lee, 2005). This paper examines the gender roles learned from family,

Gender Role Theory & Male
PAGES 4 WORDS 1548

References Anderson, I. (2007). What is a typical rape? Effects of victim and participant gender in female and male rape perception. The British Psychological Society, 46, 3225-245. Anderson, I. & Lyons, a. (2005). The Effect of Victims Social Support on Attribution of Blame in Female and Male Rape. Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 35(7), 1400-1417. Davies, M. & McCartney S. (2003). Effects of Gender and Sexuality on Judgments of Victim Blame and Rape