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===

Revision as of 13:26, 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);