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Men and women in the south of France: Public and private domains

In Rayna R. Reiter (ed.), Toward an Anthropology of Women. Monthly Review Press. pp. 252--282 (1975)

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  1. The Public/private – The Imagined Boundary in the Imagined Nation/state/community: The Lebanese case.Suad Joseph - 1997 - Feminist Review 57 (1):73-92.
    The nation/state as an imaginative enterprise encompasses multiple imagined subnational boundaries. The ‘public/private’, I suggest, is a ‘purposeful fiction’ constitutive of the will to statehood. As such, its configurations are impacted upon by the institutions and forces competing with and within state-building enterprises. Proposing the terms government, non-government and domestic as analytical tools to demarcate discursive and material domains, I argue that, in Lebanon, the fluidity of boundaries among these spheres is constitutive of patriarchal connectivity, a form of patriarchal kinship (...)
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  • Extending Lenski's schema to hold up both halves of the sky: A theory-guided way of conceptualizing agrarian societies that illuminates a puzzle about gender stratification.Rae Lesser Blumberg - 2004 - Sociological Theory 22 (2):278-291.
    This paper suggests that Lenski's classification of agrarian societies into simple versus advanced, based on the use of iron in the latter, obscures important variations in the gender division of labor and the level of gender stratification. In particular, his categories lump the gender egalitarian irrigated rice societies of Southeast Asia with the great majority of agrarian societies, which are strongly patriarchal. Based on my general theory of gender stratification and experience coding and analyzing gender stratification in the ethnographic databases (...)
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