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Gender, Sexuality and Religion

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Title: Gender, Sexuality and Religion


1
Gender, Sexuality and Religion
  • Religious Studies/Womens Studies
  • 131

2
Gender and Sex
  • Sex Biological Equipment
  • (Clitoris/Vagina, or Testicles/Penis)
  • Gender Social roles and expectations based on
    sex
  • There are many ways to enact what theorists call
    a gendered performance - consider the many ways
    of being a man or a woman in contemporary
    American society, and the way in which these
    gendered roles can be adopted/enacted by people
    regardless of sex
  • Please note that these heuristic distinctions
    temporarily ignore questions raised by intersex
    and transgendered people

3
Sexuality
  • For the purposes of this class, sexuality
    includes all forms of sexual expression
  • Hetero-sexual (male/female)
  • Homo-sexual (male/male, female/female)
  • Auto-sexual (masturbation)
  • Asceticism/Celibacy (eschewing sexuality)
  • Sexuality as functional Sex exists for
    reproduction only or primarily
  • Sexuality as multi-functional Sex exists for a
    variety of purposes, including pleasure, power,
    reproduction, social ordering, and more.
  • Regulation of sexuality marriage, prohibitions,
    taboos, extra-marital pre-marital sex

4
Cosmology
  • In religious studies terms, all religions are
    socially-constructed cosmologies. A cosmology
    interprets the universe by providing organizing
    principles. These principles distinguish between
    what is significant and what is considered
    unimportant, accidental, or inconsequential.
  • Astronomers, physicists, and philosophers also
    use cosmology, but do so in a less
    socially-constructed and behavior-motivating
    manner than religions. The use of the term in
    these fields is more descriptive than
    prescriptive. In religion, cosmologies often
    lead to normative regulation

5
Examples of Cosmological Organizing Principles
  • Afterlife
  • Justice
  • Balance
  • Hierarchy
  • Stasis and Motion (Being and Becoming)
  • God/desses, Supernatural Beings
  • Distance between Humans and Gods
  • Status of Animals and Nature
  • Conflict or Harmony (War and Peace)

6
Sex, Gender and Sexuality have been used as
cosmological organizing principles by almost all
religions and social systems
7
Sex, Gender and Sexuality have been used as
cosmological organizing principles by almost all
religions and social systems
This style of proportional representation in
Indian sculpture can be seen as a
hierarchilization of relative importance. This
represents Siva, his consort Uma, and their child
Somaskanda.
8
Menstruation is Cosmological
  • Menstruation is a material fact that inspires
    cosmological interpretation.
  • Why is it limited by age and gender?
  • Is menstrual blood polluting? Healing?
    Dangerous? Inconsequential? Powerful? Taboo?
  • Are men jealous, contemptuous, or fearful of
    menstruation? Who teaches them these attitudes?
  • Should there be sexual intercourse or contact
    during menstruation?

9
The Natural False Naturalisms
  • Religious cosmologies often declare what is
    natural as well as what is out-of-harmony with
    the natural order.
  • For instance, is death a natural given? Or can
    death be overcome through resurrection, after
    life, or reincarnation? (this is a deeply
    cosmological question)
  • If womens function is cosmologically
    circumscribed as being about reproduction only,
    then biology destiny. Alternatively, this
    could be critiqued as a false naturalism
  • Quote of shame Dr. David Reuben, author of
    Everything You Always Wanted to Know About Sex
    (But Were Afraid to Ask) "Having outlived their
    ovaries, women have outlived their usefulness
    as human beings."

10
Religious Cosmologies and Social Organization
  • Religion makes cosmologies real when it builds
    institutions, articulates codes of behavior, and
    sets social expectations.
  • Religion thus establishes authority.
  • Authority and social institutions seek to
    maintain the existing social order, rather than
    change it they are inherently conservative,
    meaning both that they conserve what exists and
    that they have a political bias toward
    maintaining traditional ways.

11
Religious Cosmologies and Social Organization
  • "Religion legitimates so effectively because it
    relates the precarious reality constructions of
    empirical societies with ultimate reality" -
    Peter Berger in The Sacred Canopy
  • Meaning religion assures us that our form of
    social organization has divine sanction. But,
    the moment one begins to reflect comparatively,
    this assurance is under assault!

12
Four Basic Types of Human Social Organization
  • TYPE
  • Gathering/Hunting
  • Nomadic Raiding
  • Small-scale Agricultural (Villages)
  • Urban (Large-scale Agricultural)
  • SOCIAL EFFECTS
  • Relative equality and little job specialization
  • Preference to young, male, physically able
  • Relative equality and little job specialization
  • Hierarchic, increasing job specialization

13
Chains of Being and Causation
  • The Great Chain of Being is an explicitly
    hierarchic cosmology that ranks the importance of
    beings, as in the illustration below
  • The Chain of Causation marks Buddhist cosmology
    the idea that there are no stable entities
    (including you or your soul), but instead all
    things are derived and will pass from existence.
    Also known as dependent origination, this
    cosmology describes a world in flux.

14
Parallels in Feminist Methodology
  • Essentialism assumes that there are real
    differences between men and women, but that these
    differences do not justify male supremacy.
    Goddess feminism, and what is called cultural
    feminism, use this approach.
  • Social Constructionism assumes all sex
    differences are fluid and socially malleable.
    Post-modernism and Marxist feminism embrace
    social constructionism.

15
Chains of Oppression
  • All feminists would agree that women (however
    that category be defined) have been treated
    oppressively within almost all historically known
    societies.
  • The importance of religion in studying womens
    lives is that religion provides ideological
    support for social practices, and can also
    provide resources for changing social systems.

16
Vectors of Oppression
  • Access to resources
  • Relation to, and admission to, the hegemonic
    elite - those who have positions of authority -
    and to institutions where power is circulated.
  • Circumscription of social roles
  • Ability to exercise agency, and to be heard

17
Access to Resources Whos Got What, Who Gets
Left Out?
  • Necessary Resources
  • Privileged Resources
  • Valorized Resources
  • Authoritative Resources
  • Food, Shelter, Health Care, Clothing, etc.
  • Luxury Items, Wealth, Servants/Slaves, Art
  • Literacy, Education, Art, Prestige, Fame,
    Happiness, Success, Privacy (A Room of Ones
    Own)
  • Positions of Leadership

18
Hegemonic Elite
  • Kings, Power Brokers, Presidents, Generals,
    University Faculty, Surgeon General, Superstar
    who constitutes the hegemonic elite varies from
    one society to another.
  • What defines a hegemonic elite? The elite embody
    importance, privilege, (sometimes) skill, and
    prestige. Hegemony refers to any system (social
    system, system of thought) that is predominant
    over others. Putting them together, a hegemonic
    elite will attempt to justify and sustain its
    power.
  • Women, as a class, have often been excluded from
    being part of a hegemonic elite (see
    exceptionalism for some exceptions!).

19
Exceptionalism
  • The success of one or two women in a patriarchal
    system is often credited to their being an
    exception rather than an example of how all
    women could succeed given a chance. See Young p.
    xxvi for a damning modern example involving
    Wittgenstein.

20
Social Roles
  • Women have had their social roles limited,
    usually to household and reproductive tasks
  • Women have sometimes been classed as less than
    human, or have been reified (thingification) into
    objects to be sold, bartered, or traded.
  • Womens contributions have been made invisible,
    and their lives have been erased.

21
Types of Womens History I
  • Inferential history - What can we infer about
    womens history from mens history? For
    instance, when we read about a military battle in
    which 4,000 men died, can we infer at least 2,000
    widows? Can we infer at least 100 prostitutes
    providing sexual services to any army on enemy
    turf? Even if these women are not mentioned?
  • Derivative history - Assume that womens status
    was very similar to mens, and needs little
    independent study. For instance, assume that
    wealthy women had extensive privilege, even
    greater than that of working class men.

22
Types of Womens History II
  • Compensatory history - Give disproportionate
    attention to women in history, in order to
    compensate for previous absence of women in
    history books.
  • Celebratory history - A subset of compensatory
    history, celebratory history happens when an
    oppressed subject group, like women, write their
    history with only the good, positive and virtuous
    highlighted. Celebratory history often occurs in
    national histories that are overly (and overtly)
    patriotic.

23
Types of Womens History III
  • Celebrity history - A history of women that only
    looks at famous women. This has the effect of
    re-marginalizing everyday women. Furthermore,
    celebrities (whether Paris Hilton or Queen
    Victoria) are often examples of exceptionalism.
  • Hagiography - This technical term from religious
    studies means a biography of a saint that is
    uncritical of the saint. Possibly a subset of
    celebratory history, it is also a legitimate
    genre of sacred literature.

24
Types of Womens History IV
  • Victimology - The opposite of celebratory and
    celebrity history, victimology examines womens
    history by looking only for examples where women
    have been victimized. This has the effect of
    reducing womens agency, power, and success.
  • Comparative Patriarchy - Regrettably, much of
    womens history has to take into account that
    systems of male dominance take different forms
    and have different effects. But when womens
    history reduces itself to nothing more than
    comparative patriarchy studies, womens lives and
    successes once again disappear.

25
Agency, Resistance, and Standpoint Theory
  • Agency means the ability to act. All people have
    agency in all situations, but no one ever has
    utterly boundless agency. Consider what you can
    and cannot do in this class right now
  • Womens circumscribed social roles makes their
    agency specific to their position. For example,
    womens resistance has rarely (if ever) taken the
    form of a military coup. But it can take the
    form of a sex strike (see Lysistrata by
    Aristophanes).
  • Standpoint theory, as described by Juschka, means
    that the oppressed group, from their social
    location, has access to knowledge about both
    themselves and those classes above them. It has
    also been used by feminists to acknowledge ones
    own standpoint and biases as a researcher/scholar.
    Acknowledging the multiplicities of our
    identities prevents us from glibly assuming
    universals.

26
Do Goddesses Make a Difference?
  • In a cosmology?
  • In the lives of living women?

27
Ancient Goddess Images
Eastern Europe, Venus of Willendorf
Laussel Cave, France
Minoan Crete Lunar Goddess
Minoan Crete Snake Goddess
28
Hindu Goddesses
Clockwise from right to left Sarasvati,
Lakshmi, Durga slaying the Buffalo Demon, and
Kali astride Siva
29
Native North American Images of Sacred Women
Clockwise from above Spirit of Lake Superior
(Ojibwe) Sedna (Inuit) Fog Woman Ring (NW
Coast) Our Three Sisters (Corn, Squash, Beans)
(Haudenosaunee aka Iroquois)
30
Some Feminist Theories
31
HERMENEUTICS OF SUSPICION HERMENEUTICS OF
REMEMBRANCE Elisabeth Schussler-Fiorenza Suspicio
n - do not trust what the hegemonic elite has
decreed or written Remembrance - since women have
been erased, compensatory history becomes an
important method.
32
Mary Daly and Radical Feminism
  • Cosmological critique of patriarchy centers on
    how the sacred has been reified, and how death
    has been prized over life.
  • She theorizes that Goddess is a Verb, Be-ing, a
    process that is bio-philic (life-loving).
  • She sees resistance to patriarchy in border
    dwelling

33
Patterns Detected by Feminist Approaches to
Religion
  • Women have greater input in formative stages of
    new religions, than in highly institutionalized
    forms
  • Religions that favor the experiential dimension
    often have greater participation by women.
    Religions explicitly opposed to mysticism, or
    highly legalized in modality, are often hostile
    to womens participation.
  • Healing is a key dimension of religion for women
    in many cultures

34
More Patterns Detected by Feminist Approaches to
Religion
  • In a study reviewed at the American Academy of
    Religion in 2003, the following traits were found
    in many religions started by or featuring
    feminist perspectives
  • 1) ambivalence
  • 2) immanence
  • 3) revelatory power of the ordinary
  • 4) relationality
  • 5) healing

35
Patriarchy is a Protection Racket!What is a
Protection Racket?How does male supremacydiffer
from other formsof oppression?
36
Some Religious Studies Theories
37
TAXONOMY OF RELIGIONS Taxonomy the science or
technique of classification To perform taxonomy,
one must develop a variety of categories, which
function as vectors of classification
38
Vectors of Religious Taxonomy
  • Distance between Sacred and Human Realms
  • Number of Deities
  • Philosophic Cosmology
  • Scope of Membership and Recruitment
  • Social Organization (Basic Types)
  • Social Identities and Locations (class, race,
    status, gender, education, etc.)
  • Types of Practices and Modes of Knowledge
    (literate/oral, legal/mystic, ritual/philosophy)
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