Matthew Keville — bemusedlybespectacled: I always find it kind of...

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See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
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bemusedlybespectacled

I always find it kind of weird that matriarchal cultures in fiction are always “women fight and hunt, men stay home and care for the babies” because world-building-wise, it makes no sense

think about it. like, assuming that gender even works the same in this fantasy culture as it does in ours, with gender conflated with sex (because let’s be real, all of these stories assume that), men wouldn’t be the ones to make the babies, so why would they be the ones to care for the babies? why is fighting and hunting necessary for leadership?

writing a matriarchy this way is just lazy, because you’re just taking the patriarchy and just swapping the people in it, rather than actually swapping the culture. especially when there are so many other cool things you could explore. like, what if it’s not a swap of roles but of what society deems important?

maybe a matriarchy would have hunting and fighting be part of the man’s job, but undervalued. like taking the trash out or cleaning toilets: necessary, but gross, and not noble or interesting. maybe farming is now the most important thing, and is given a lot of spiritual and cultural weight.

how would law work? what crimes would exist, and what things would be considered too trivial to make illegal? who gets what property? why?

how would religion work? how would you mark time or the passage into adulthood? what would marriage look like? if bloodlines are through the mother, bastardy wouldn’t even be a concept - how does that work?

what qualities would be most important in a person? how would you define strength or leadership? what knowledge would be the most coveted and protected? what acts or roles are considered useless or degrading?

like, you can’t just take our current society and say you’re turning it on its head when you’re just regurgitating it wholesale. you have to really think about why things are the way they are and change that

matthewkeville

I cannot recommend Gail Dayton’s One Rose Trilogy enough as an example of a fictional matriarchy done right.  She has carefully thought through many of the aspects mentioned above - religion, the basis of power, “men’s work” and why it’s valued less, the institution of marriage as restructured to benefit women’s needs (oh, especially that last one) - and incorporated them with no comment.  Neither the characters nor the narrative felt the need to scream LookI  It’s a matriarchy!  It was just their world and they took it for granted, as people do.  Heck, she even remembered to make the Generic Person a woman in her setting.  For more details, check out my post on the series here.

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