Matriarchy in SF: Difference between revisions

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'''Matriarchy''' is a form of society in which women hold the power.  Distinct from ''[[matrilineality]]'' (families trace their lineage through the maternal side) and ''[[matrilocality]]'' (men are exogamous, moving to women's households on marriage).  
'''Matriarchy''' is a form of society in which women are the dominant sex/gender, holding power over men; it is contrasted with [[patriarchy]].  


==Relevant SFnal works==
==Comparison==
In general, please do not include [[woman-only worlds]] in matriarchies. Every all-woman world with any government is necessarily a matriarchy.  
* Contrast with ''[[patriarchy]]'', in which men are the dominant sex/gender, holding power over women.
* Distinguish from ''[[matrilineality]]'', in which families trace their lineage through the maternal side.
* Distinguish from ''[[matrilocality]]'', in which men are exogamous, moving to women's households on marriage.
* Compare to ''[[woman-only worlds]]'', which are "matriarchal" by definition, since there are no men; however, it is less meaningful to class these worlds/works along the matriarchy/patriarchy binary.


Note: Not all works representing matriarchies are [[feminist]]; some are quite sexist.


===Worlds===
===Worlds===
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* [[Gill Alderman]]. ''[[The Archivist]]'' (A young man is raised from the gutters to participate in, perhaps, a revolution; homosexuality is not feared or disdained, and the young man's mentor is also his lover.)
* [[Gill Alderman]]. ''[[The Archivist]]'' (A young man is raised from the gutters to participate in, perhaps, a revolution; homosexuality is not feared or disdained, and the young man's mentor is also his lover.)
* [[Donna Allegra]]. "[[A Toast of Babatine]]." ''[[Sinister Wisdom]]'' #34, Berkeley, CA, 1988. [an egalitarian woman-only society]
* [[Donna Allegra]]. "[[A Toast of Babatine]]." ''[[Sinister Wisdom]]'' #34, Berkeley, CA, 1988. [an egalitarian woman-only society]
* [[Eleanor Arnason]]. ''[[A Woman of the Iron People]]'' (1991) and Ring of Swords (1993) [not exactly a matriarchy, because there's very little "archy"; but separate sexed species, and women control most of what we would call civilization]
* [[Eleanor Arnason]]. ''[[A Woman of the Iron People]]'' (1991) and ''[[Ring of Swords]]'' (1993) [not exactly a matriarchy, because there's very little "archy"; but separate sexed species, and women control most of what we would call civilization]
* [[Catherine Asaro]]. ''[[The Last Hawk]]''
* [[Catherine Asaro]]. ''[[The Last Hawk]]''


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* [[Joy Chant]], ''[[When Voiha Wakes]]'' (1983) (3rd book in a trilogy)
* [[Joy Chant]], ''[[When Voiha Wakes]]'' (1983) (3rd book in a trilogy)
* [[Jo Clayton]]. ''[[Irsud]]'' (1978)
* [[Jo Clayton]]. ''[[Irsud]]'' (1978)
* [[Edmund Cooper]]. ''[[Gender Genocide]]'' (1972) (misogynistic)
* [[Edmund Cooper]], ''[[Who Needs Men?]]'' (also published as ''[[Gender Genocide]]'') (1972) (misogynistic); ''[[Five to Twelve]]''
* [[Parley J. Cooper]] ''[[The Feminists]]'' (1971) (anti-feminist. it's almost a rule: if it uses "the feminists" in the title it is critical.)
* [[Parley J. Cooper]], ''[[The Feminists (novel)]]'' (1971) (anti-feminist. it's almost a rule: if it uses "the feminists" in the title it is critical.)




* [[Ellison, Harlan]]. "[[World of Women]]" in Fantastic, Feb. 1957. [insane matriarchal ruler must be stopped]
* [[Harlan Ellison]], "[[World of Women]]" in Fantastic, Feb. 1957. [insane matriarchal ruler must be stopped]




* [[Farmer, Philip Jose]]. ''[[Flesh]]'' (1969) [strange]
* [[Philip Jose Farmer]], ''[[Flesh]]'' (1969) [strange]
* [[Freireich, Valerie J.]] ''[[Testament]]'' (1995)
* [[Valerie J. Freireich]], ''[[Testament]]'' (1995)




* [[Hall, Sandi]]. ''[[Wingwomen of Hera]]'' (1987)
* [[Sandi Hall]], ''[[Wingwomen of Hera]]'' (1987)
* [[Hossain, Rokeya Sakhawat]]. "[[Sultana's Dream]]" (1905) (a short story in which the Sultana visits Ladyland, where purdah has been reversed to the great benefit of the land)
* [[Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain]], "[[Sultana's Dream]]" (1905) (a short story in which the Sultana visits Ladyland, where purdah has been reversed to the great benefit of the land)




* [[Jones, Gwyneth]]. ''[[Divine Endurance]]'' (1984) [post-apocalyptic societies]
* [[Gwyneth Jones]], ''[[Divine Endurance]]'' (1984) [post-apocalyptic societies]




* [[Kettle, Pamela]]. ''[[The Day of the Women]]'' (1969). [anti-feminist]
* [[Sylvia Kelso]], ''[[Amberlight]]''
* [[Pamela Kettle]], ''[[The Day of the Women]]'' (1969). [anti-feminist]




* [[Laumer, Keith]]. "[[War Against the Yukks]]" (1965) [anti-feminist]
* [[Keith Laumer]], "[[War Against the Yukks]]" (1965) [anti-feminist]
* [[Le Guin, Ursula K.]] "''[[The Matter of Seggri]]"
* [[Ursula K. Le Guin]], "''[[The Matter of Seggri]]"
* [[Leigh, Stephen]]. ''[[The Bones of God]]'' (1986)
* [[Stephen Leigh]], ''[[The Bones of God]]'' (1986)




* [[Moskowitz, Sam]], editor. ''[[When Women Rule]]'' [anthology of matriarchal stories, many of them sexist]
* [[Charles Eric Maine]], ''[[World Without Men]]'' (1958; revised and republished in 1972 as ''[[Alph]]'')
 
 
* [[Sam Moskowitz]], editor. ''[[When Women Rule]]'' [anthology of matriarchal stories, many of them sexist]




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; Others
; Others
* [[Dathomir]] in the [[Star Wars]] Expanded Universe
* [[Dathomir]] in the [[Star Wars]] Expanded Universe
* [[The Faerie Queene]] by Edmund Spenser: [[Britomart]] helps to overturn a gender-reversal society and return things to the natural order
* [[The Faerie Queene]] by Edmund Spenser: [[Britomart]] helps to overturn a gender-reversal society and return things to the "natural" (patriarchal) order
* [[Robert Jordan]]'s ''Wheel of Time'' series includes a number of semi-matriarchal societies
* [[Robert Jordan]]'s ''Wheel of Time'' series includes a number of semi-matriarchal societies
* "[[Angel One]]" episode of ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]''
* "[[Angel One]]" episode of ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]''
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[[Category:Social themes]]
[[category:Social themes]]
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]
[[category:Works featuring matriarchies| ]]

Latest revision as of 14:00, 28 January 2011

Matriarchy is a form of society in which women are the dominant sex/gender, holding power over men; it is contrasted with patriarchy.

Comparison

  • Contrast with patriarchy, in which men are the dominant sex/gender, holding power over women.
  • Distinguish from matrilineality, in which families trace their lineage through the maternal side.
  • Distinguish from matrilocality, in which men are exogamous, moving to women's households on marriage.
  • Compare to woman-only worlds, which are "matriarchal" by definition, since there are no men; however, it is less meaningful to class these worlds/works along the matriarchy/patriarchy binary.


Worlds


Titles













  • Mack Reynolds. Amazon Planet (1975) [Amazonia presents itself to the universe as a matriarchy, but that's really a front for the planet's actual system -- anarchist experiment with ostensible gender equality.]






Others

Films

  • "FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions" (2004; dir. Carlos Atanes) (a matriarchy governs Europe) [1]

Other suggestions

  • "Samantha Lee's 'Childe Roland' (actually set in some kind of post-disaster Scotland -- Lesley Hall)
  • something by Storm Constantine the name of which I've forgotten (could it really have been something like 'In the Mother's Country'--or was this something else entirely? -- Lesley Hall);