![]() ![]() Women are often crucial to the hunting success of others, whether through logistical or ritual assistance. In contrast, women prefer to hunt in groups and focus on smaller, easier-to-capture prey closer to camps, often with the aid of dogs. Men tend to hunt alone or in small groups and target big game with projectile weapons, which often requires fast-paced, long-distance travel. In hunter-gatherers, men's hunting is risky, meaning it carries a high chance of failure. These constraints play a role in shaping risk preferences. This was supported in a recent review of women's hunting that surveyed traditional societies around the world the authors found that pregnant or lactating women do not often hunt, and those with dependents only hunt when child care is available or rich hunting grounds are close to camp. One prominent explanation, elaborated in 1970 by feminist anthropologist Judith Brown, is that the demands of hunting conflict with the provision of child care. After all, women are perfectly capable of hunting, yet in most hunter-gatherer societies they don't do it very often. And the focus on Man the Hunter distracts from the more important question of how a society with female big-game hunters might be constructed. In this context, ancient female hunters are an expectation, not a surprise. In fact, several accounts of women's hunting in foraging societies had emerged by the mid-1980s. According to this view, women are not bound by biology to gather, nor men to hunt. Through decades of field research, anthropologists have developed a more flexible and capacious view of human labor. That myth was born of assumptions, not careful empirical research. When anthropologist Carol Ember surveyed 179 societies, she found only 13 in which women participated in hunting.īut it is a mistake to conflate this pattern of "most hunters are men" among hunter-gatherers with the myth of Man the Hunter. Hunting wasn't the sole driver or unifying theory of human evolution after all.īy the late 1970s, as anthropologists carried out further research on hunter-gatherers and paid attention to issues of gender, the myth of Man the Hunter fell into disfavor.Įven so, subsequent research has affirmed a simple division of labor among hunter-gatherers: men mostly hunt and women mostly gather. And many hunter-gatherers were quite peaceful and egalitarian. Hunter-gatherer movement patterns were driven by a variety of ecological factors, not just game. Researchers showed that women worked just as hard as men, and plant foods gathered by women were crucially important in hunter-gatherer diets. It was there in Chicago that real-life data confronted the myth of Man the Hunter. ![]() In 1966, 75 anthropologists (70 of whom were men) held a symposium called "Man the Hunter" at the University of Chicago to address one of humanity's grand questions: How did people live before agriculture? The researchers had lived with and studied contemporary populations of hunting and gathering peoples around the world, from jungle to tundra. In fact, that theory died a well-deserved death decades ago. Responding to the finding, journalist Annalee Newitz wrote: "Nicknamed 'man the hunter," this is the notion that men and women in ancient societies had strictly defined roles: Men hunted, and women gathered. But I found most of the media coverage it generated disappointingly inaccurate. In this narrative, hunting also gave rise to the nuclear family, as women waited at home for men to bring home the meat.Īs an anthropologist who studies hunting and gathering societies, I was thrilled by the discovery of female skeletons buried with big-game hunting paraphernalia, a pattern that raises important questions about ancient gender roles. ![]() They viewed hunting-done by men-as the prime driver of human evolution, bestowing upon our early ancestors bipedalism, big brains, tools and a lust for violence. ![]() " Man the Hunter" is a narrative of human origins developed by early 20th-century anthropologists armed with their imaginations and a handful of fossils. ![]()
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