Month: August 2014
Boccaccio criticized Petrarch and Dante with Theophrastus
In fourteenth-century Florence, Boccaccio worked in the shadow of his great predecessor Dante. Boccaccio figured Dante as an excellent father who called Boccaccio “my son.” Boccaccio also worked amid great regard for the European-wide celebrity Petrarch. Petrarch, a classical humanist writing Latin poetry, was crowned a new poet laureate of Rome (the first since the fall of the Roman Empire) in a ceremony at the Roman Capitol in 1341. Boccaccio referred to Petrarch as “my excellent and reverend teacher.”[1] Despite his high regard for Dante and Petrarch, Boccaccio with subtle irony used Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage to criticize both.
Boccaccio ironically praised Dante for achieving literary greatness despite being married. As imagined in his Vita Nuova, Dante at age nine fell madly in love with Beatrice. He may not have seen her again for another nine years. In any case, Dante’s parents arranged a marriage for him at age twelve to Gemma Donati. Dante and Gemma had four or five children. Beatrice died young. Dante never mentioned his wife Gemma in his writings. Beatrice, in contrast, was a major presence in Dante’s work, particularly his Commedia. From a literary perspective, Dante might as well have been unmarried.
Boccaccio deployed Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage in playful appreciation for Dante’s achievement. Writing in praise of Dante in a literary construction of his life, Boccaccio declared:
Academic endeavors (and especially those of philosophy, to which our Dante, as has been shown, devoted himself), usually require solitude, freedom from anxiety, and tranquility of mind. Instead of this serene retirement and quiet which Dante almost from the beginning of his life and up to the day of his death searched for, he had to endure an uncontrollable passion of love, a wife, familial and civic responsibilities, exile, and poverty, not to mention other special troubles which naturally arise out of these. I will explain all of them one by one, so that their burden may become more evident. [2]
In describing the burden of having a wife, Boccaccio lifted text nearly verbatim from Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage. Amid reciting from that well-known text, Boccaccio expressed concern about giving “too long a sermon.”[3] Then he wittily expanded upon a point in Theophrastus’ Golden Book:
it is enough to discuss one matter that pertains to almost all women: they believe that doing a good job always keeps the lowliest servant in the household, while doing the opposite leads to dismissal. As a result, they feel that if they themselves do their work well, they are simple acting like menials; they can remain great ladies only when they do their jobs poorly, but avoid the fate of the dismissed servant.
Boccaccio then winked at the reader:
But why should I want to keep on proving in detail what most of us already know? I believe it is better to hold my tongue than to offend our lovely ladies by my talk. [4]
Many men are deathly afraid of offending women. Boccaccio wasn’t. He went on to cite another point from Theophrastus’ Golden Book. Boccaccio concluded with a classical invocation of the highest love:
Let no one believe that I am suggesting, from what I have stated, that men should not take wives. In fact, I recommend this highly, but I must say that it is not for everyone. Permit philosophers to leave marriage to wealthy fools, to noblemen and peasants, and let them take their delight with Lady Philosophy, who is a far better bride than any other. [5]
The list “wealthy fools, noblemen, and peasants” light-heartedly casts a net over the major classes of medieval society. Philosophers, in contrast, remain apart from wealth, the world, and flesh-and-blood women. Boccaccio in the outrageous comic realism of his Corbaccio mocked the courtly love fantasy of Dante’s Vita Nuova. Boccaccio found inspiration in flesh-and-blood ladies, not the Muses on Mount Parnassus. Boccaccio admired and valued Dante’s civic engagement.[6] Boccaccio idealized the solitary, disengaged philosopher only to praise Dante’s achievement in real life. That real life was not with Beatrice, but with his flesh-and-blood wife Gemma.
In emphasizing the burden of having a wife, Boccaccio elevated Dante relative to Petrarch. Petrarch did not marry, stood apart from contemporary civic concerns, and took delight in Lady Philosophy and a Laura no more real that Beatrice. Boccaccio wrote:
What will those say now whose houses are not sufficient for their studies and who thus seek solitude in the forests? Or, those who have complete repose, and whose ample facilities without any anxiety are supported by every opportunity? Or those who, free from wife and children, have as much leisure as they desire? Many of those are such that, if they were not sitting in comfort, or if they were to hear a murmur, they would not be able to read or write, let alone reflect, if their elbows were not at rest. [7]
Scholars have suggested that, “whether deliberate or unintentional,” Boccaccio is describing Petrarch.[8] Boccaccio was from the merchant class in which persons kept their elbows moving and sharp. Men from that class also had wives and were aware of women’s guile. Boccaccio followed Petrarch in recovering classical learning and creating new humanist literature in Latin. At the same time, Boccaccio was critical of Petrarch’s disengagement from everyday life.
Boccaccio further used Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage to assert his own sense of humanism against Dante’s theological ascent and Petrarch’s classical models. In Canto XVI of Dante’s Inferno, Jacopo Rusticucci, suffering in Hell, complained, “it is my fierce wife who pains me most of all.”[9] Boccaccio provided a conventional literal exposition of that line: Rusticucci’s shrewish wife drove him to seek satisfaction in sodomy to his eternal perdition. Then Boccaccio provided a round-about introduction to Theophrastus’ Golden Book:
St. Jerome writes in one of his books called Against Jovinianus the Heretic that Theophrastus, who was a venerable philosopher and student of Aristotle, composed a book that is called De nuptiis {On marriage}. In a part of that work, he questions whether a wise man should take a wife. [10]
Boccaccio then copied into his work the text of De nuptiis (Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage), which he silently translated from Latin into Italian. The only significant change Boccaccio made to De nuptiis was to excise these two outrageous sentences about the wife:
You have to show deference to her nurse and her maid, the servant from her father’s house, and her foster-child, and her handsome attendant and her curly-haired “assistant,” and her eunuch, gelded to prolong her pleasure and to make it safe: behind these titles there is an adulterer hiding. Upon whomever she sets her heart, they must have her love though they want her not. [11]
Boccaccio wasn’t afraid to write about women’s sexual eagerness and women’s guile. The problem with the above text for a learned, free-writing person is that eunuchs did not exist in Theophrastus’ Athens. The eunuch reference signals to the learned that Theophrastus’ De nuptiis is a post hoc literary artifice.[12] Boccaccio seems to have been in on Jerome’s ruse. Boccaccio concluded his account of De nuptiis and its relevance to Dante’s account of Jacopo Rusticucci with artful, more general moralizing:
Let those who prepare to take a wife, then, be alert and let them keep an eye on others, for all too rarely does it happen that a man gets a Lucretia, a Penelope, or someone of like ilk. As I have heard many men say, although they seem like angels in the daylight, they are devils in your bed at night. [13]
A woman who is a “devil in your bed at night” isn’t a conventional figure of a shrewish, domineering, selfish, and unsatisfying wife. In the Decameron’s story of Alibech and Rustico, Rustico urged Alibech to “put the Devil back into Hell” as means to have sex with her. With sound literary insight, the translator of Boccaccio’s text noted that a woman who is a devil in your bed at night “may not seem in modern times to be so bad.”[14] The classical heroines Lucretia and Penelope don’t represent true, humanistic understanding of men imagining wives. “Oh, my little devil” is a universal fantasy of real men throughout history.[15] More in the fullness of the real world than his father Dante, Boccaccio outwitted his teacher Petrarch in humanistic understanding.
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Read more:
- the Corbaccio‘s comic humanism rewrites Dante’s Vita Nuova
- Boccaccio’s inspiring ladies and Muses on Mount Parnassus
- Jerome’s great artifice: Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage
Notes:
[1] Filosa (2014) p. 220, citing Boccaccio’s De casibus virorum illustrium 8.16 and 9.23.7.
[2] Giovanni Boccaccio, Trattatello in laude di Dante (Little Treatise in Praise of Dante, also know as Life of Dante), s. 3, from Italian trans. Bollettino (1990) p. 10, adapted slightly. The text has survived in three version, which apparently do not differ in this passage. In a letter on Dante to Boccaccio (Familiares 21.15), Petrarch declared:
my father, compelled by other matters and by concern for his family, resigned himself to exile, while his friend {Dante} resisted and began devoting himself all the more vigorously to his literary pursuits, neglecting all else and desirous only of glory. In this I can scarcely admire and praise him too highly when nothing — not the injustice suffered at the hands of his fellow citizens, not exile, poverty, or the stings of envy, not his wife’s love or his devotion to his children — diverted him from his course once he had embarked upon it, when many other great talents, being weak of purpose, would be distracted by the least disturbance.
From Latin trans. Bernardo (2005) v. 3, p. 203. Petrarch seems to have rewritten Boccaccio’s text into a veiled critique of Dante. Cachey (2009) pp. 25-8.
[3] Expressing concern about prolixity follows Jerome’s rhetorical strategy in Adversus Jovinianum.
[4] Andreas Capellanus feigned a similar reluctance in De amore 3.52-3.
[5] Boccaccio, Trattatello in laude di Dante, trans. Bollettino (1990) pp. 16-7 (previous three quotes above).
[6] Houston (2010).
[7] Gloss that Boccaccio added to shortened Chigi version of Trattatello in laude di Dante. From Italian trans. Filosa (2014) p. 219.
[8] Filosa (2014) pp. 219-20.
[9] Dante, Inferno, XVI.44-5, cited by Boccaccio, from Italian trans. Papio (2009) p. 577.
[10] Boccaccio, Esposizioni sopra la Comedia di Dante, “Canto XVI: Literal Exposition,” s. 28, from Italian trans. Papio (2009) p. 578.
[11] Liber De Nuptiis (Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage), from Latin trans. Hanna & Lawler (1997) p. 152, with the second sentence amended as described in note [12] here. Boccaccio replaced those two sentences with relatively bland sentiment:
indeed, more than any other person, he must show that he loves her father — and any other relative or person whom she holds dear.
Boccaccio, Esposizioni sopra la Comedia di Dante, “Canto XVI: Literal Exposition,” s. 34, from Italian trans. Papio (2009) p. 579.
[12] Scholars who have discussed the reference to eunuchs have rationalized it as later interpolation. The truth seems to be simpler: Jerome brilliantly created Theophrastus’ Golden Book on Marriage.
[13] Boccaccio, Esposizioni sopra la Comedia di Dante, “Canto XVI: Literal Exposition,” s. 46, from Italian trans. Papio (2009) p. 580.
[14] Id., notes, n. 16, p. 707. Papio added to his note a cautionary reference to Boccaccio’s exposition of Canto XV (15.83). There Boccaccio refers to the sin:
committed when a man and a woman (even a husband and a wife) come together in a fashion that is less than moral or against the rule of Nature or, indeed, against canon law.
Trans. id. p. 568. That’s the literal level of understanding “my little devil.” It’s inner meaning in life can be recognized in the sly gusto of Decameron 9.10 and innuendo Boccaccio made in the conclusion to the Decameron. See note [4] in post on masculine love. While devilish behavior has its attractions, medieval men also considered heterosexual intercourse preoccupied with intercourse of non-reproductive type to be oppressive, demoralizing, and wrong.
[15] Men’s fantasies about their wives and lovers are not equivalent to men admiring sluts or desiring a long-term relationship with such women. In Famous Women (De mulieribus claris), Boccaccio described the life of Leontium, a famous Greek female literary scholar:
prompted either by envy or feminine temerity, she dared to write an invective against Theophrastus, a famous philosopher of that period {late-fourth-century BGC Macedonian, about the time of Alexander the Great}.
Boccaccio condemned Leontium’s sexual behavior:
What disgraceful behavior! Living in the brothels among pimps, vile adulterers, and whores, she was able to stain Philosophy, the teacher of truth, with ignominy in those disgraceful chambers, trample it with wanton feet, and plunge it into filthy sewers — if indeed the splendor of Philosophy can be dimmed by the infamous action of an unchaste heart. We must certainly bewail the fact that so brilliant a talent, bestowed as a sacred gift from heaven, could be subject to so filthy a way of life.
Boccaccio, Famous Women (De mulieribus claris), Ch. LX, from Latin trans. Brown (2001) pp. 251-2. Boccaccio may have invented this whole biography to provide an opportunity for him to defend Theophrastus and philosophy. Boccaccio’s criticism of Dante and Petrarch shouldn’t be interpreted to imply contempt for philosophy and endorsement of licentiousness.
[image] Petrarch teaching Boccaccio, illumination in Giovanni Boccaccio, De casibus virorum illustrium in French translation (Des cas des ruynes des nobles hommes et femmes), translated by Laurent de Premierfait, France, Central (Paris?), 1st quarter of the 15th century. British Library, Royal 20 C IV f. 269.
References:
Bernardo, Aldo S., trans. 2005. Francesco Petrarca. Letters on familiar matters = Rerum familiarium libri. New York: Italica Press.
Bollettino, Vincenzo Zin, trans. 1990. Giovanni Boccaccio, the life of Dante (Tratatello in laude di Dante). New York: Garland.
Brown, Virginia, trans. 2001. Giovanni Boccaccio. Famous women {De mulieribus claris}. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press.
Cachey, Theodore J. “Between Petrarch and Dante: Prolegomenon to a Critical Discourse.” Pp. 3-49 in Zygmunt G. Barański and Theodore J. Cachey. 2009. Petrarch & Dante: anti-Dantism, metaphysics, tradition. Notre Dame, Ind: University of Notre Dame Press.
Filosa, Elsa, 2014. “To Praise Dante, To Please Petrarch (Trattatello in laude di Dante).” Pp. 213-220 in Victoria Kirkham, Michael Sherberg, and Janet Levarie Smarr, eds. 2014. Boccaccio: a critical guide to the complete works. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.
Hanna, Ralph and Traugott Lawler, eds. 1997. Jankyn’s book of wikked wyves. Vol. 1: The Primary Texts (with translations). Walter Map’s Dissuasio; Theophrastus’ De Nuptiis; selections from Jerome’s Adversus Jovinianum. University of Georgia Press: Athens.
Houston, Jason M. 2010. Building a monument to Dante: Boccaccio as Dantista. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Papio, Michael, trans. 2009. Boccaccio’s Expositions on Dante’s Comedy. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
strong, independent Kenyan rejects Unbound gender bigotry
Like most cutting-edge international development organizations, the sponsorship organization Unbound has been attacking failures in poor communities to conform to world-elite standards of gender equality. In a recent mailing to Unbound sponsors, an article entitled online “Bank accounts offer independence and opportunity to families” got an extra super-title and cover billing: “MOTHERS KNOW BEST.” This article explains:
In countries such as India and Kenya, sponsorship benefits are distributed to families through individual bank accounts. With the assistance of Unbound staff members, the mothers of sponsored children manage the accounts until the children are of age. These bank accounts are created to empower mothers to decide how to best use the sponsorship funds for the development of their families. [1]
Notice how “distributed to families” is equated to “distributed to mothers.” Contrary to gender lies propagated through leading educational institutions and powerful media, males across all primates commonly have been excluded from equal relationships with their children. In the U.S., men face huge gender discrimination in decisions about child custody and child support. Nothing has been done to address that gender inequality. Unbound and many other international development organizations are perpetuating and worsening gender inequalities against men worldwide.
Unbound’s literature provides a fine case study in the soft power of cultural imperialism in spreading gender bigotry. A recent edition of an Unbound magazine had 12 pages (about half the total pages in the magazine) devoted to “girls and women.”[2] That’s a conceptual category largely unknown in relatively high-income, cosmopolitan cities and poor rural villages only a few decades ago. Are women really more akin to girls than boys are to girls? If you doubt that conceptual doctrine, then you aren’t fully educated to today’s world-elite standards.
Unbound’s literature aggressively disseminates cultural constructs of gender bigotry. Here are some more examples:
- Unbound entitled an article, “GIRL POWER / sponsorship provides opportunities for girls, women.” The phrase “girl power,” like “girls rule” and “boys are stupid, throw rocks at them,” now appear on girls’ t-shirts in the U.S. You can count on Unbound to bring these phrases to girls living in material poverty in villages around the world. After all, persons in high-income countries have an abundance of spiritual poverty. They can contribute their spiritual poverty to persons living in material poverty.
- Unbound entitled an article, “Women in India establish identity.” Western experts in lack of identity ask poor, under-educated others whether they have an identify. The other responds with a look of complete bewilderment. The Western expert records that the other does not have an identity. Western expert then helps the other “establish identity.”
- Unbound entitled an article, “Giving Girls the Power to Dream.” How can girls dream without the help of highly developed teen-girl magazines (“polish your nails with the color of your dreams!”)? How can girls dream without specially designed go-girl video programming (“Glamor and Drama in STEM — the adventures of supergirl hero who works 80 hours a week as a computer programmer at Facebook”)?
- Another Unbound article featured the exemplary indoctrination of Sonia in Guatemala. The article begins:
“I have so many dreams!” Sonia said as her mother looked on proudly. “I see myself graduating from the university as a business administrator or an auditor. I dream of working in a big company and doing important things.”
Sonia has thus received outstanding preparation for joining the global workforce of corporate drones. I’m sure when she’s fifty years old, shuffling papers and counting the days until she can retire and spend more time home alone with her cats, she’ll look back fondly on her original and truly inspiring childhood dreams.
- Unbound entitled an article, “Challenging Traditions.” This article describes how Sophia, a Greek-named woman living in “the traditional Maasai community in southern Kenya,” plans to “continue her education.” Making clear that Sophia has been well-educated, the article reports:
“I have learned that girls are equally as important as boys,” Sophia said. “I have been empowered to fight for the rights of the girls who are suffering in my community.”
How generous, empathetic, and community-spirited! To better understand how to serve her community, Sophia might examine how her values relate to sexist values in the World Values Survey.
- Unbound entitled an article, “Staff member sees effects of gender inequality.” Unbound staff member Sara Asmussen answers questions about “gender inequality.” Here’s a typical question, “How does {Unbound} help to empower women and their families?” Asmussen says nothing about gender inequalities disadvantaging men or disadvantaging boys. A reasonable inference is that Unbound doesn’t care about inequalities hurting men or hurting boys.
- Here’s a pull quote from Unbound founder Bob Hentzen: “My joy and inspiration is to work with strong, independent women. They are my heroes and I love them.” Unbound apparently is rooted in fashionable, old-fashioned, insipid sexism. Parroting the women-are-wonderful effect is not inspiring. [3]
Culturally dominant persons offering the poor desperately needed material resources and gender bigotry are an enormously powerful force worldwide. But heroic acts of resistance are possible. For example, David, a strong, independent Kenyan, stood up to Unbound’s gender-biased programming:
One requirement of {Unbound} sponsorship is the family taking an active part in the program. In some projects this can include being part of a mothers group. As the name implies, these small groups are typically made up of mothers. A main goal is to empower members to become economically self-sufficient through microlending.
Because Caroline {David’s wife) spent so much time at the market, she couldn’t attend the group meetings. So David went instead. “I am a member of a support mothers group, although I am a man,” David said. “My group is called Nguono group, and we have 30 members. It is from this group that I was able to grow and come up with the idea of starting my welding workshop.” [4]
Women and men worldwide should look for inspiration to courageous persons like David. The future of civilized life depends on such action.
* * * * *
Read more:
- United Nations criminalizes men in loving relationships as rapists
- World Values Survey reveals world-elite gender inequality
- international organizations massage gender gaps while men die
Notes:
[1] From feature article, p. 4, in Unbound’s publication Impact, Spring 2014 issue, cover title: “MOTHERS KNOW BEST / Celebrating mothers around the world.”
[2] Christian Foundation for Children and Aging, renamed CFCA, renamed Unbound, publication sacredground (vol. 32, no. 2, fall/winter 2013), pp. 10-19, 22-23.
[3] All these examples are from sacredground, id.
[4] From feature article, p. 5, in Unbound publication Impact, Summer 2014 issue, cover title: “A FIRE WITHIN / Sponsorship sparks opportunities for fathers full of potential.” That title is misleading. One father’s refusal to accept being excluding by gender from Unbound’s programming allowed him to acquire resources to open his own welding shop. Here’s an online version of the article.
[image] Pith helmet in the Second French Empire style, worn by soldiers in the army of Madagascar Queen Ranavalona III (reigned 1883 – 1897). Thanks to Rama and Wikipedia.
virilocality & polygyny in evolution of communicative sex differences
Virilocality and polygyny probably have been common features of human groups across evolutionary time. Virilocality means heterosexual mates tend to establish a home near the man’s kin. Uxorilocality is the corresponding term for locating near the woman’s kin. Polygyny means one man tends to have concurrently either no or multiple heterosexual mates. Polyandry is the corresponding term for women. Among about 330 societies that European anthropologists have described at early dates of European contact, 70% were virilocal, 10% bilocal, and 20% uxorilocal. About 80% practiced polygyny to some extent.[1] Among societies classified as foragers, residence patterns have been summarized as flexible.[2] The independence and representativeness, over an evolutionarily relevant time scale, of the data points underlying these statistics are highly problematic.[3] The expansion of agricultural societies has strongly affected the distribution and ecology of hunter-gatherer societies and plausibly their residence arrangements as well.[4] More sophisticated phylogenetic comparative analysis indicates that Proto-Indo-European social organization was virilocal and Proto-Malayo-Polynesian, uxorilocal. Virilocality appears to be more stable than is uxorilocality.[5]
More interpretive social-geographic analysis associates key developments in human communication with virilocal and polygynous societies. Research systematically analyzing ethnographic data from around the world for patterns in social structure identified Middle Old World social structure:
The Middle Old World includes North and Northeast Africa, the Middle East, South and Central Asia, most of China, and the Vietnamese. … for most of history the economic center of Eurasia was in this region. … The Middle Old World has a combination of two kinds of constraints – it is constrained both to being unilineal and to being patricentric.
The ecology of the Middle Old World favored competition for assets – domesticated animals, pasture land, and other capital and land associated with capital-intensive agriculture. Probably driven by the interests of dominant, asset-rich men, social life in the Middle Old World strongly limited men’s and women’s freedom of association and freedom of sexual interaction:
the Middle Old World shows a strong tendency for women to be restricted from public roles, with little political or economic autonomy. Purdah, veiling of women, foot-binding, infibulation, the suttee, and the honor-shame complex, all originated within the Middle Old World.
The Middle Old World also was the locus of significant developments in human communication:
Most of the earliest Eurasian civilizations are in the Middle Old World – Egypt, Mesopotamia, the Indus Valley, and China. Most of the important empires of Old World history were in the Middle Old World, and all of the major world religions originated in this region, as did many of the world’s writing systems.[6]
Significant communicative developments thus occurred in social environments favoring virilocality and polygyny.
Virilocality and polygyny bias men’s communication toward kin and women’s communication toward non-kin. Virilocality implies men’s continuing communication with kin. Women, in contrast, under viriloclity have to establish intensive communicative relationships with new, non-kin. Under polygyny, men’s mate-typical communication occurs across multiple mates. Those mates, living in a common familial space, have more complex communicative relationships among each other. The human evolutionary history of virilocality and polygyny together suggests that non-kin social communication has been more evolutionarily significant for women than for men.
* * * * *
Read more:
- sex differences in parent-offspring bodily contact
- physical size and voice pitch: biology of physical versus social advantage
- men biologically inferior to women in social communication
Notes:
[1] Based on data and coding for Murdock’s Ethnographic Atlas, as reported in Burton et al. (1996), Table 1. Number of societies: 311 coded for marital residence, 348 coded for mating (marriage) type. The societies are almost exclusively non-European societies that European-oriented anthropologists described at early dates of European contact.
[2] Alvarez (2004) and Marlowe (2004).
[3] Marlowe (2004) uses the Standard Cross-Cultural Sample (SCCS), which he describes as “186 societies with good ethnographic coverage that have been chosen to create an unbiased sample of the world’s societies with respect to geographic region, language family, and cultural area.” However, the definition of society is highly problematic and not external to the SCCS. In addition, geographic region, language family, and cultural area do not together define a consistent, well-defined sampling frame that would make the statistical concept of “unbiased sample” meaningful. Id. p. 278, ft. 4, notes:
North America is overrepresented among foragers (83% in the EA {Ethnographic Atlas}, 50% in the SCCS {Standard Cross-Cultural Sample}) because there were many foragers there when ethnographies were first written, while the Circum-Mediterranean region is completely absent because foragers had disappeared there before ethnographies were written.
Even in geographic regions where foraging societies exist, the advance of agricultural societies has strongly affected the distribution of foraging societies. Alvarez (2004) analyzes fifty hunter-gathering societies selected from the Ethnographic Atlas. The relevance of this sample to general patterns of human social organization is unclear.
[4] For example, starting from about 4000 years ago, Bantu farmers from southern Cameroon spread across sub-equatorial Africa and displaced foragers living in locations propitious for agriculture. Wood et al. (2005). The social organization of ethnographically described hunter-gather societies may not be more evolutionarily relevant than the social organization of non-human great apes, or the social organization of ethnographically described humans in non-hunter-gatherer societies. Given human-Neandertal interbreeding, dispersed development of agriculture prior to 11,000 years ago, and relatively rapid genetic evolution, significant human evolution may have occurred in social circumstances different from those of current (marginalized) human foraging societies.
[5] Fortunato & Jordan (2010). Copeland et al. (2011), using much different methods, finds evidence of virilocality in ancient hominin species.
[6] Burton et al. (1996) pp. 100-1 (previous three quotes).
[image] wedding of Miss Watts of Bonmahon, Co. Waterford, Ireland, on 29 Apr. 1907 at Watts family home. From original glass plate negative. Thanks to National Library of Ireland and flickr Commons.
References:
Alvarez, Helen Perich. 2004. “Residence Groups Among Hunter-Gatherers: A View of the Claims and Evidence for Patrilocal Bands.” Pp. 420-441 in Bernard Chapais and Carol M. Berman, eds. Kinship and behavior in primates. Oxford: Oxford University Press: .
Burton, Michael L., Carmella C. Moore, John W. M. Whiting and A. Kimball Romney. 1996. “Regions Based on Social Structure.” Current Anthropology 37(1): 87-123.
Copeland, Sandi R., Matt Sponheimer, Darryl J. de Ruiter, Julia A. Lee-Thorp, Daryl Codron, Petrus J. le Roux, Vaughan Grimes, and Michael P. Richards. 2011. “Strontium isotope evidence for landscape use by early hominins.” Nature. 475 (7357): 532.
Fortunato Laura, and Fiona Jordan. 2010. “Your place or mine? A phylogenetic comparative analysis of marital residence in Indo-European and Austronesian societies.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological Sciences. 365 (1559): 3913-22.
Marlowe, Frank W. 2004. “Marital Residence among Foragers.” Current Anthropology 45(2): 277-284.
Wood, Elizabeth T., Daryn A. Stover, Christopher Ehret, Giovanni Destro-Bisol, Gabriella Spedini, Howard McLeod, Leslie Louie, Mike Bamshed, Beverly I. Strassmann, Himla Soodyall and Michael F. Hammer (2005). “Contrasting patterns of Y chromosome and mtDNA variation in Africa: evidence for sex-biased demograhic processes.” European Journal of Human Genetics 13: 867-876.