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Women In Colonial America

Decent Essays

History scholars prior to the 1970’s believed that the colonial era was that of a “golden age” for women. Was it really a “golden age” for women though? Some more recent research suggests that it was not the most wonderful time in women's’ lives in history. Women were not treated very fair during the colonial era. Taking into account Native women’s lives before, and after the arrival of the white European colonists, and African women’s lives from the colonial era it is very clear to see they are not treated with as much respect as those scholars thought. Native and African women’s lives changed drastically when the Colonials came to America. As for Colonial women they were exposed to the many differences between them and the Natives when they …show more content…

There was a clear division between men and women in the Native American society but each had their own crucial role in the society. Women carried out many important jobs and even “helped develop the elaborate cultural, social, political, and economic patterns that characterized most of the hundreds of Native groups that spanned the continent.” So not only did women influence their own societies but also societies of Native groups across the country. Many Native societies were even matriarchal, where women could rule families and sometimes even tribes. Women participated in elections and most all political roles were elected by the women. Not only did they participate politically, but many women were farmers, in some tribes women produced up to 90 percent of the tribe’s diet, “raising food was considered an honor.” They could control whether the tribe went to war by controlling the food supply. Native women’s roles also extended outside of their homes and fields of crops, they often took roles of businesspeople or even entrepreneurs. Native women were even allowed to have tattoos and wear short skirts, these women had no privacy. Although it is hard to make generalizations about Native women in history because of all of the diversity among the tribes, it is clear to see that they had more freedom before the colonial …show more content…

The Europeans believed that this “new” land and these “new” people could be adapted easily, they had no belief in religious diversity. They viewed Native households as disorderly and sometimes even sinful, because of this the colonists believed that Natives needed to create a colonial household. Colonists believed that men were the head of the household while women were there to do the housework and take care of the children. They also saw the Natives as “lower” people, Europeans were superior to the Natives. They saw Native women as wild and very sexualized, as if they were closer to animals than actual people, sometimes they even viewed the women as whores. Although some men viewed the women as “princesses”, the Europeans even saw them as “exotic creatures decked out in beautifully tanned buckskin and fine quillwork”. These men were able to work with Native women in trading and bartering. Some men even encouraged marriage between colonists and Native women, a few of these men even married Native women and created “mixed-blood offspring”. The colonists unsurprisingly viewed the Native women who were willing to help them in a positive way also. The Native women of this time were treated with the same respect as men for the most part, until the colonists changed it

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