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Woman - Culture and gender roles |  | Woman - Culture and gender roles: Encyclopedia II - Woman - Culture and gender roles |  | Main article: gender role
In many prehistoric cultures, women assumed a particular cultural role. In hunter-gatherer societies, women were generally the gatherers of plant foods, while men hunted meat. Because of their intimate knowledge of plant life, most anthropologists argue that it was women who led the Neolithic Revolution and became history's first pioneers of agriculture.
In more recent history, the gender roles of women have changed greatly. Traditional gender roles for middle-class women typically involved dome ...
See also:Woman, Woman - Etymology, Woman - Biology and sex, Woman - Legal rights of women historically, Woman - Biblical law, Woman - Culture and gender roles, Woman - Terms |  | | Woman, Woman - Biblical law, Woman - Biology and sex, Woman - Culture and gender roles, Woman - Etymology, Woman - Legal rights of women historically, Woman - Terms, Famous women in history, Feminism, Matriarchy, Gender and sexuality studies, Gynaecology, Heroines in literature, Female roles in the World Wars, Misogyny, New Woman, Obstetrics, Women in science fiction, Women's cinema |  | |
|  |  | Woman: Encyclopedia II - Woman - Culture and gender roles
Woman - Culture and gender roles
Main article: gender role
In many prehistoric cultures, women assumed a particular cultural role. In hunter-gatherer societies, women were generally the gatherers of plant foods, while men hunted meat. Because of their intimate knowledge of plant life, most anthropologists argue that it was women who led the Neolithic Revolution and became history's first pioneers of agriculture.
In more recent history, the gender roles of women have changed greatly. Traditional gender roles for middle-class women typically involved domestic tasks emphasizing child care, and did not involve entering employment for wages. For poorer women, especially among the working classes, this often remained an ideal, for economic necessity has long compelled them to seek employment outside the home, although the occupations traditionally open to working-class women were lower in prestige and pay than those open to men. Eventually, restricting women from wage labor came to be a mark of wealth and prestige in a family, while the presence of working women came to mark a household as being lower-class.
The women's movement is in part a struggle for the recognition of equality of opportunity with men, and for equal rights irrespective of sex, even if special relations and conditions are willingly incurred under the form of partnership involved in marriage. The difficulties of obtaining this recognition are due to historical factors combined with the habits and customs history has produced. Through a combination of economic changes and the efforts of the feminist movement in recent decades women in most societies now have access to careers beyond the traditional one of "homemaker". Despite these advances, modern women in Western society still face challenges in the workplace as well as with the topics of education, violence, health care, and motherhood to name a few.
These changes and struggles are among the foci of the academic field of women's studies.
Other related archives16th century, 1970s, 45, X, Christian, English, English language, English-speaking, Famous women in history, Female roles in the World Wars, Feminism, Gender and sexuality studies, Gynaecology, Heroines in literature, Human, Legal rights of women, Matriarchy, Middle English, Misogyny, Mosaic law, NIV, Neolithic Revolution, New Woman, Obstetrics, Old English, Proto-Germanic, Unicode, United Kingdom, United States, Venus, Women in science fiction, Women's cinema, Womyn, academic, adult, agriculture, alcohol, androgen insensitivity syndrome, androgens, anthropologists, archaism, asymmetry, bear children, biological sex, biology, chastity, child, cigarettes, congenital adrenal hyperplasia, copper, cultural, derogatory terms for women, divorce, economic, equal rights, equality of opportunity, estrogen, etymologically, female, femininity, feminist, gender identity, gender role, gender roles, genes, genetics, girl, gynaecology, health, homemaker, honor, human, hunter-gatherer, inappropriate, inherit, inter alia, intersex, karyotype, legal, male, man, mannaz, matter, menarche, menopause, middle-class, military service, mirror, muliebrity, ovaries, pregnant, prehistoric, reproductive organs, secondary sex characteristics, sex, sex chromosomes, sex organs, sex-related illnesses, sexist, slave, sociology, spirit, suicide, transgendered, transsexual, uterus, virginity, virility, wer, women's studies, working classes
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Culture and gender roles", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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