Lady Sapiens
118 pages
English

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118 pages
English

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Description

Ground-breaking study of the role of women in prehistorical times. Accompanies feature documentary film Lady Sapiens.

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Publié par
Date de parution 12 septembre 2022
Nombre de lectures 7
EAN13 9781915054791
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 2 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0550€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

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HERO, AN IMPRINT OF LEGEND TIMES GROUP LTD
51 Gower Street
London WC1E 6HJ
United Kingdom
www.hero-press.com
Lady Sapiens first published in French by Les Ar nes in 2021
This translation first published by Hero in 2022
Les Ar nes, Paris, 2021
This edition is published by arrangement with Les Ar nes in conjunction with its duly appointed agent Books And More BAM, Paris, France
Translation Philippa Hurd, 2022
The right of the authors and translator to be identified as the authors and translator of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data available.
ISBN : 978-1-91505-478-4
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the publisher. This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not be resold, lent, hired out or otherwise circulated without the express prior consent of the publisher.
CONTENTS
Preface
Chapter 1: The Return of Lady Sapiens
Renancourt: A Paleolithic Pompeii
Casting off the Clich s
Ethnoarchaeology Comes to the Aid of Prehistorians
Chapter 2: The Real Face of Lady Sapiens
Sexing Fossils
Putting Flesh on the Bones
Chapter 3: Life, Pleasure, Seduction
Magnificent Personal Ornaments
Beautifying the Skin
Clothes - and Needles - Start a Revolution
The First Status Symbols?
Chapter 4: Sensuality and Sexuality
Sexual Behaviour as a Social Factor
Relationship Rituals between Men and Women
The Clues to Sexuality
Sexuality and Procreation
Chapter 5: Starting a Family
Getting Ahead
Giving Birth - Not Such a Risky Business
Mother of Many?
Discoveries about Breastfeeding and Weaning
Humans and Cooperative Reproduction
Grandmothers Go Down in History
Chapter 6: Women On All Fronts
Free Hands, Free Women
In Search of Women s Work
Was Lady Sapiens a Hunter or a Forager?
Humankind s First Women Millers
The Female Cook Feeds Our Evolution
Women Stone-workers
Essential Craft Skills
Women Artists
The Many Talents of Lady Sapiens
Chapter 7: Powerful Women
Power in Hunter-gatherer Societies
Women in Charge?
The Magnificent Lady of Cavillon
The Sleeping Beauty of Saint-Germain-la-Rivi re
The Power of Healing
What if God Was a Woman?
The Origin of the World
Afterword
Select Bibliography
Lady Sapiens
Key Dates and Evidence Relevant to the Project
Preface
For a long time, prehistory was written from the male point of view, and when women were mentioned, they were portrayed as helpless, frightened creatures, protected by overly powerful male hunters. Since women have begun to enter the ranks of prehistorians, a different picture has gradually emerged. But between the traditional image of a woman crushed beneath the male yoke and the equally exaggerated vision of a huntress as man s equal, we were missing a more nuanced, rigorous portrait that drew on archaeological sources while taking into account ethnographic approaches. It was with this in mind that I tried to draw up a list of all the archaeological evidence, whether direct or indirect, that tells us about the position of women in prehistoric hunter-gatherer societies. These sources can be the human bones themselves, as well as the objects that were buried in tombs alongside the dead, the prints accidentally left in the clay of the caves, the hands pressed into the walls, leaving the mark of a presence, material remains of skilled work, etc. This overview appeared in a collective work published by Oxford University Press in 2019. *
I first met ric Pincas and Thomas Cirotteau in 2018. They had already begun thinking about creating a documentary * on the position of women in prehistory, and I sent them my article, which had then just gone to press. They generously asked me to join them in their work and be their scientific advisor on the documentary, then on the creation of the virtual reality experience that supplements the film, as well as on this book. I accepted this collaboration enthusiastically. This is how my study, which had been published in English and which remained little known in France, became the starting point for the investigation that led to the making of the film with its wonderful title, Lady Sapiens . The aim of the documentary and of this book is to make the results of this overview on the position and role of women in prehistory available to as many people as possible.
I insisted that nothing should be imagined or left to chance and that all the assumptions made in the film should be supported by the relevant evidence. It was on this basis that the project gradually took shape. Of course, ric and Thomas did most of the work, but we consulted together at length to come up with a list of the best specialists in the field who could contribute. This is how they conducted their investigation, which turns out to be the very first on the subject. Prehistorians as well as paleogeneticists, paleoanthropologists, art historians, ethnologists and other specialists have been called upon to contribute. The documentary is structured like a puzzle or a treasure hunt that can be enjoyed like a real police investigation. Every piece of evidence is pursued, from the excavation site to test-tube laboratory experiments, and the questions are not answered in haste - they are assessed, and any diverging points of view are addressed. The result is a nuanced account, and any argument that s even slightly partisan has been omitted in order to achieve the highest possible degree of objectivity.
This book continues the adventure described in the documentary and takes up the arguments it developed. While remaining highly rigorous, it has been written using clear language in order to be accessible to a large audience of non-specialists. Jennifer Kerner has told the story of the investigation conducted by ric and Thomas in a way that is both lively and vivid. Both ric and Thomas read each draft of Jennifer s work, and I personally made sure that every claim was substantiated. Thanks to this highly original collective adventure, the reader should have a more accurate idea of what we can reasonably say about Lady Sapiens today.
But why have we made such a documentary and such a book now? Advances in prehistoric research, which rely on increasingly acute and sophisticated laboratory analyses, are providing answers to mysteries that were impossible to solve a few decades ago. DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) analysis can, for example, determine the sex of a skeleton in the absence of osteological evidence. And it is now possible to uncover pathologies resulting from work-related stress, an impossible task just a decade ago. In addition, today there are more women scientists, who have naturally broadened their research to include subjects that had been totally ignored, if not looked down upon, by their male colleagues. Activities traditionally considered male, such as hunting and stone-working, took pride of place, in part, truth be told, because they are the tasks that leave behind the most archaeological evidence. Supposedly female activities - preparing animal hides or food, caring for young children - were seen as minor, almost incidental, domestic chores, and attracted little research, no doubt because the first prehistorians were men of the nineteenth century, when women were regarded as subservient, their activities restricted to the domestic field and considered to be of hardly any social value.
ric and Thomas s project took them to excavation sites and laboratories in France, Germany, Central Europe, the Middle East and the United States. It is not my intention to disclose here the details of this meticulous investigation and the results it produced. In the following pages readers will discover the portrait they were able to create of this woman who lived during the period called the Upper Paleolithic (between 40,000 and 10,000 years ago). They will learn what we can now say about her real role and involvement in daily chores, in the quest for food resources, and about her talents in the field of art and crafts. And finally, they will find answers to questions about her ability to balance her role as a mother with being a full member of the community.
Once the pieces of the puzzle have been assembled, the reader will perhaps be astonished to find that men s and women s roles were not so clear-cut, and that it was cooperation between all members of the group, regardless of their gender or age, which ensured their survival. It is because of them, and especially Lady Sapiens, that we too have survived and are who we are today.
Sophie A. de Beaune
Professor at the Universit Jean-Moulin-Lyon III and Researcher at the Arch ologies et Sciences de l Antiquit laboratory, Environmental Archaeology team, scientific advisor for Lady Sapiens

_______________
* Sophie A. de Beaune, A Critical Analysis of the Evidence for Sexual Division of Tasks in the European Upper Paleolithic in K.A. Overmann and F.L. Coolidge (eds.), Squeezing Minds from Stones: Cognitive Archaeology and the Evolution of the Human Mind (Oxford/New York: Oxford University Press, 2019), pp. 376-405.
* Lady Sapiens , a documentary by ric Pincas, Thomas Cirotteau and Jacques Malaterre, directed by Thomas Cirotteau, produced by Little Big Story and Ideacom International, 2021.
Chapter 1
THE RETURN OF LADY SAPIENS
On 11 July 2019 at 4:30 p.m., a prehistoric figurine emerged from the sands of Picardy - it was female, six centimetres tall, and it was the first such discovery in France for over sixty years. The Venus of Renancourt - as she was baptized - had come to light, evoking a distant echo of every woman in prehistory. Among the scientific community, emotions ran high, and even the

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