This carefully crafted volume introduces anthropological approaches to and perspectives on gender. It combines theoretically and ethnographically based essays in order to examine gender roles and ideology around the world. Divided thematically into 11 sections, the editors open each section with a succinct introduction to the principal issues. The articles themselves, both classic and contemporary, are drawn from all fields of anthropology and cover a wide variety of cultures. The seventh edition contains 11 new entries that reflect more recent developments in the discipline, including topics such as gender identity, transnationalism and female genital cutting. Additional features to support teaching and learning that are new to this edition include a film list and discussion questions at the end of each entry. This is an essential resource for students encountering the anthropology of gender for the first time.
I generally enjoyed this, though I didn’t read all of the articles in it (there are many). Some, mostly those about ethnographic theory, are pretty dry, but others give fascinating insight into gender as it factors into kinship, sexuality, labour, and all manner of other things.
Nancy Scheper-Hughes’ “Lifeboat Ethics: Mother Love and Child Death in Northeast Brazil” got me thinking about the complexity of motherhood and the complications that can result from disrupted or burdened bonding between mothers and their children, which set me on my own path towards writing a paper about maternal regret based on seven mothers I interviewed who regretted having children.
An informative look at gender across cultures, past and present, with a heavy focus on women and women's roles in societies. An updated edition would include more than a brief mention of third gender people, would acknowledge the existence of intersex people, and would discuss transgender women appropriately. Given the publication date of this edition (2001), this text still has a lot of historical relevance.
Most anthropology books at this level are a headache to read. This one was fascinating and well-written. I want to keep my copy even after my class has finished instead of reselling it.
A class text of mine I thought was very interesting. It's an anthology of ground-breaking articles in gender studies. It has many topics that are frequently cited in other texts, only these are the original articles and are in much more detail. Such as sati and hijras in India, naming in China, violence in New Guinea, funeral pratices in Kenya, and economic roles in the domestic sphere of women, etc. Lots of good articles.
I enjoyed learning about how gender is constructed in a variety of cultures around the world, and I came away from the book hopeful that we can one day return to the egalitarianism that characterized early societies.
This was my textbook for a Gender in a Global Perspective class. The essays collected in it are interesting and I definitely anyone interested in learning more about gender across the world checks it out.