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Native American Gender Roles

Decent Essays

During the early modern period Native Americans differed from their newly arrived European neighbors. They had differing views on the standings of women in their societies: Even the views of gender differed between them. They viewed social class different. The political economy infrastructure was vastly different and majority of the dealings could be viewed with some confusion on both ends.
The standings of women differed between European and Native American societies. In the Native American societies, specifically Iroquois, women were the backbone. The women worked the fields and provided most of the non-meat food items. “In Iroquois villages a rough division of authority apparently existed, in which women took primary responsibility for not …show more content…

For Native Americans there were females, males, berdache, and fourth gender. “The evidence of multiple genders in North America offers support for the theory of social constructionism, which maintains that gender roles, sexualities, and identities are not natural, essential, or universal, but constructed by social processes and discourses.” (SCT P2) Multiple genders were not limited to the Eastern Tribes alone as they were documented in over 155 tribes. In a third of these groups, females taking on a male’s lifestyle were referred to by the same term as male berdaches or by a distinct term- fourth gender. In simplistic terms, third gender will refer to males and fourth to females. The berdache were not considered homosexual if they had someone with the same physical gender: “In fact, Lakota warriors sometimes visited winkte before going to battle as a means of increasing their own masculinity.” (SCT P4) [This information mirrors that of Ancient Greece, a European Nation, only before Christianity came.] The berdache also had nonreproductive sex with one another for pleasure and emotional rewards. “Male and female berdaches were sexually active with members of their own sex and this behavior was part of the cultural expectations for their role.” (SCT P4) The third genders were said to have special powers. “In fact, most native belief systems ultimately viewed berdaches and successful …show more content…

The Native Americans worked with reciprocity. “Reciprocal exchanges of presents sealed relationships-between the man who gave the meat he hunted and his wife's longhouse, between the longhouse matron who distributed that meat and "the other Persons in the Family according to their Age," and between the man and those who gave him gifts of tobacco, knives, or awls when he invited them to his lineage's feast.” (Iroquois P4) Previously mentioned was the bases of giving gifts as showing wealth. The gifts also solidified that you could provide for your people and you would be a good leader. The Native Americans also believed in a communal use of things. “As the Indians saw it, unused items should be free for anyone who needed them, and hospitality required owners to yield them to those without.” (Iroquois P4) The European views clashed heavily with those of Native Americans. They didn’t give things to build relationships or show leadership and gain power. [They didn’t mix business with pleasure.] Wealth came from the amount of things you owned and how much you could buy. To them, buying power was power. Communal sense of things made no sense outside of the home and community. “Early seventeenth-century Dutch and French colonist rich in excess material possessions learned a lesson in Iroquois economics when they accused natives of "always

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