Woman's Share in Neolithic Society: A View from the Southern Levant
Document Type
Article
Language
eng
Format of Original
8 p.
Publication Date
9-2016
Publisher
American School of Oriental Research (ASOR)
Source Publication
Near Eastern Archaeology
Source ISSN
1094-2076
Abstract
Early farming groups set into motion substantial, even revolutionary, socioeconomic changes during the Pre-Pottery Neolithic period (ca. 10,500–6,000 cal. B.C.E.) in the southern Levant of Southwest Asia. Social organizational structures capable of addressing new opportunities and challenges would have been integral to these developments. This contribution focuses on the archaeological evidence from which our understanding of the gendered aspects of this new social order can be gleaned. Specifically, evidence for sex-based labor patterns, the relative status of men and women, and gendered ideology are discussed by synthesizing current data from human skeletal remains, mortuary contexts, architecture, and figurative art. Available evidence does not support the hypothesis that Pre-Pottery Neolithic societies were organized hierarchically in terms of gender.
Recommended Citation
Peterson, Jane, "Woman's Share in Neolithic Society: A View from the Southern Levant" (2016). Social and Cultural Sciences Faculty Research and Publications. 158.
https://epublications.marquette.edu/socs_fac/158
Comments
Near Eastern Archaeology, Vol. 79, No. 3 (September 2016): 132-139. DOI.