"Domestic domain" and the evaluation
of women's work in past societies
Session Organiser: Dr Sandra Montón
(Cambridge University)
Some of the activities carried out
by women in practically all societies form the cornerstone upon which daily
and long-term reproduction of human communities depend. Despite the crucial
character of these activities, they have been considered minor and repetitive
by most scholars and have seldom found a place in mainstream archaeological
discourse. Only very recently (since the early nineties), and stemming
mainly from Gender Studies approaches, have these activities begun to be
considered important in archaeological analyses, which in turn has led
to the construction of the "domestic domain" as an independent analytical
category.
This still under investigated area
'domestic domain' needs further investigation to gauge its full implications
for archaeology as a discipline. This session will include different approaches
evaluating and challenging this concept:
- theoretical approaches to the study
of the "domestic domain".
- space/s and time/s associated with
this sphere.
- the articulation of the domestic
sphere of production within the general context of social production and
reproduction.
- studies of specific realms of production
encompassed by the term "domestic" activities (for instance, feeding, public
health, socialization of the children, etc).
- concrete methodologies and analytical
techniques to study this sphere of production.
Dr. Paloma G Marcen & Dr Marina Picazo
(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona
(Spain) and Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain)
"What needs to be done everyday": the creation
of maintenance activities
This paper will stress the fact that
women have traditionally dedicated an important part of their time in adult
life to the creation and maintenance activities of society. In order to
perform these activities, women have developed through history networks
and practices of relationships with other women and also with men. We intend
to point out two main aspects related to this argument: the first one has
a sociological content and the second one will be developed in connection
with archaeology.
In most societies women have had the
primary responsibility in children's sustenance and welfare. The study
of historical and contemporary women-headed households shows that to maintain
their families women develop strong networks of support that imply a specific
kind of social relationship traditionally relegated in historical and archaeological
research.
On the other hand, the existence of
local networks of social relations are best shown in the realm of those
activities that organize and allow the reproduction of daily life. In this
sense, the archaeological record, far from representing features of an
abstract social structure, should be considered as the best indicator of
specific processes of this human agency.
Sam Burke
(University of Leicester, Leicester)
Contested space: a discussion of gendered household
division in Ancient Greece
It is a stated ideal in Classical
literature that women remained within the confines of the family house
and had few legitimate reasons for leaving it bounds, to fetch water, attend
festivals or funerals, and to help neighbours and friends.
Classical archaeology has perpetuated
the notion of the ancient Greek house being spatially divided according
to gender, providing separate areas for the men and the women of the household.
'Andrones' or men´s quarters have been identified and associated
with drinking parties and meetings while so-called 'women´s quarters'
(gunaikontes) remain enigmatic. These are thought to have been upstairs,
and so conveniently absent from the archaeological record, or limited to
'loom rooms', when these are found. Though, women may well have spent most
of their time in a single room, even to distance themselves from the presence
of non-kinsmen, is both impractical and unlikely.
A strict dichotomised 'genderd' division
of space continues through modern scholarship. I propose to develop the
work of Nevett and Jameson, and suggest a more fluid use of space within
the ancient Greek house, based on time and circumstance as opposed to simple
male/female gender divisions.
Stella Souvatsi
(University of Cambridge, Cambridge)
Identifying households in Neolithic Greece:
conceptions and misconceptions
The domestic domain in its
own merit has very rarely formed a subject of research in prehistoric archaeology.
I will outline the broad
interdisciplinary debate that drew attention to this long neglected sphere,
with an emphasis on the notion of household. Furthermore, I will attempt
to show the relevance of this theoretical background using evidence from
the Greek Neolithic.
Katerina Skortopoulo
(University of Cambridge, Cambridge)
Craftsmen and craftswomen? Everyday life and
stone tool production in Neolithic Greece
It has been argued for long
that craft specialization has played a major role in the changing social
structuring during the Neolithic of Greece. However, in the various studies
concerned with the social significance of technological activities there
has been little discussion on the possibility of identifying gender roles
and meaning in the everyday life of the communities. Work on the microscale
of the domestic, household activities and their relationship with the public
or communal arena has been very restricted, if it exists at all, whereas
technological practicing is viewed in terms of rather solidified contexts,
mainly of economic character.
In this paper I will attempt
to focus on people as actors in the everyday life of the community, and
I will discuss the feasibility of viewing gender attitudes, by looking
at the intra-site variation of strategies involved in chipped stone production
and use.
Dr. Joana Bruck
(University of Cambridge, Cambridge)
Was there a 'domestic domain' in the English
Early Bronze Age?
The develoment of a spatially and
functionally distinct 'domestic domain' in modern British society is the
product of a historically-specific set of gender relations. In the modern
western world, the domestic sphere is separated and marginalised from other
areas of practice. The home is characterised as private and passive, the
locus of reproduction and consumption, and as 'woman´s place'. The
universality of such a 'domestic domain' has beed questioned by anthropologist
who have demonstrated that other societies do not draw such a categorical
distinction between domestic, ritual, political and economic practice.
The archaeological invisibility of
Early Bronze Age settlements is one of the classic problems of English
Bronze Age studies. I propose that this is not a 'real' feature of the
archaeological record but results from the problematic assumption that
a distinct 'domestic domain' existed in the Early Bronze Age. I argue that
a spatially or functionally distinct category of domestic sites cannot
be identified. Instead, evidence for food activities that archaeologist
might usually label as 'domestic' (such as food preparation and consumption)
are found at a whole range of morphologically different sites. This suggests
that Early Bronze Age people did not have a conceptual category equivalent
to our notion of the 'domestic'. This has important implications for gender
relations. In particular, the notion of women as passive reproducers, spatially
removed from the active, public world of men centred on the productive,
political and ritual activities cannot be supported.
Dr. Jonathan Last
(University of Cambridge, Cambridge)
Moving house: altered visions of the domestic
in the Neolithic of Europe
'Domestication' (in its broadest sense)
and 'the domestic' are concepts by which the Neolithic is frequently defined
and recognised. The house, as the focus of domestic life, has therefore
been considered to be a material expression of the economic, social and
symbolic organisation of Neolithic culture. However, because of our tendency
to impose normative concepts of house and household we are in danger of
failing to acknowledge the variety of ways in which Neolithic communities
organised their settlements and social relationships. By considering some
of the different modes of spatial organisation evident across Europe and
the Near East, I will argue that the Neolithic shows a diversity of responses
to processes of domestication which challenge traditional concepts like
'village', 'farming', 'sedentism' and 'house' -familiar ideas whose origins
should in fact be sought in much later periods of prehistory.
Marjolin Kok
(University of Leiden, The Netherlands)
The homecoming of religious
practice in the Netherlands
Selective use of data and presuppositions
about what to accept as religious have caused a focus on male public domain
in the research of the prehistory of the Netherlands. By doing so, they
have neglected and ignored evidence that might indicate religious practice
in the domestic domain. This putting aside of the domestic domain in research
on religious practice has also led to the exclusion of women in these practices.
New approaches to the data and new points of attention at excavations may
led to a more balanced view in which the domestic domain and women can
also take part
Dr. Laia Colomer & Dr Sandra Monton
(University of Leiden, The Netherlands
& University of Cambridge, Cambridge)
Feeding societies: cooking as foregrounding
social dynamics
Activities related with women´s
work and the sphere of women´s social experiences have traditionally
been undervalued or misunderstood in many archaeological studies. However,
these activities are fundamental both to keeping the matrix of social life
going on and in foregrounding social dynamics. Feeding and cooking, some
of the activities more consistently performed by women in most known societies,
illustrate these claims.
In this paper, we will discuss the
sphere of food production and consumption and redefine some aspects related
with fundamental concepts such as food.