Green - 11/10/22

    In going back over my classmate's presentation, Chapter 6 "Life on the Edge" struck me as interesting. One point they went over was women as the inventors of agriculture, and how men "stole" it as their own doing. I had never been presented this idea with agriculture being a dichotomy of sorts, only its impacts on the world as the greatest turning point in civilization.


    Past lectures have brought up some of the gender disparities in environmental justice and ecological development, but not this point in particular. "Nature" had been presented in class as something not necessarily accessible to all as it may seem. Just as women's history had not been accessible to them, our resources and more scenic lands are throttled by those in power. 


Though man and woman are of one species, oftentimes the contributions of the latter are written off as the former's. Hunters left to gather meat and pelts while women took on the brunt of the labor at home, maintaining a steady supply for when the hunts did not go well. Women in this way essentially maintained the balance between the two methods of gathering food. Thus it only makes sense that women were the ones to initially pioneer a way to ease their heavy burden, but this was soon taken over and industrialized into the behemoth industry we see today. Interesting to think about.

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