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Is ‘Man the Hunter’ a Myth?

by Noah Carl
5 November 2024 5:30 PM

Man the Hunter is the name of 1968 book which highlighted the central role of hunting in human evolution. Although ‘Man’ here refers to ‘mankind’ rather than ‘males’, the title embodies the common assumption that hunting is a largely male activity. Indeed, the authors, Richard Lee and Irven DeVore, argued that the sexual division of labour in hunter-gatherer societies is such that men specialise in hunting and women specialise in gathering.

And this makes sense. We know men are both faster and stronger than women – attributes that would obviously give them an advantage in clubbing seals, arrowing wildebeests and spearing woolly mammoths.

Fast forward to 2023. Five female scientists published a paper titled ‘The Myth of Man the Hunter’, which sought to challenge “long-held perceptions of sex-specific gender roles”. Abigail Andersen and colleagues gathered data on 63 hunter-gather societies, and reported that 50 (or 79%) “had documentation of women hunting”. This led them to conclude that “females play an instrumental role in hunting”.

As you can probably guess, the paper received glowing coverage in the media (for heroically debunking a ‘sexist’ myth). “The Theory That Men Evolved to Hunt and Women Evolved to Gather Is Wrong” ran the headline in Scientific American. “Worldwide survey kills the myth of ‘Man the Hunter’” stated Science magazine.

The only problem? Andersen and colleagues’ study appears to be flawed. According to a newly published commentary, “claims that foraging societies lack or have weak gendered divisions of labor are contradicted by empirical evidence”.

Vivek Venkataraman and colleagues scrutinised the methods used by Andersen and colleagues, and found evidence of both coding errors and sample selection bias.

To begin with, Andersen and colleagues claimed they gathered all their data from a particular ethnographic database called D-Place. However, Venkataraman and colleagues discovered that 35% of the societies in their sample did not in fact come from D-Place. These 35% were highly likely to be coded as ones in which women hunt. What’s more, Venkataraman and colleagues identified 18 societies in D-Place that were omitted from Andersen and colleagues’ sample, and none of these showed evidence of female hunters.

When Venkataraman and colleagues examined how individual societies had been coded, they unearthed various inconsistencies with the ethnographic material on which the coding was supposedly based. For example, Andersen and colleagues coded the !Kung as a society in which women hunt. Yet one ethnographic account of this society stated that “women are totally excluded from hunting”.

Of the 50 societies Andersen and colleagues coded as having female hunters, Venkataraman and colleagues determined that women “rarely” or “never” hunted in 16. They also found that Andersen and colleagues overstated the proportion of societies in which women hunt big game by a factor of two. By their count, the proportion of societies in the sample where women “frequently” hunt big game is only 5%.

A visual summary of the coding errors and sample selection biases.

Venkataraman and colleagues do not dispute that there are societies in which women contribute to hunting, typically of small game like rabbits and quails. But they do uphold the conventional view regarding the sexual division of labour: in most hunter-gatherer societies, men do most of the hunting and women do most of the gathering. ‘Man the hunter’ is not a myth.

Tags: AnthropologyScientific AmericanSexism

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17 Comments
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Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
6 months ago

It does rather fit with male proclivities. Adventure, problem solving, overcoming one’s fears and limitation, bloodlust. Although if you can give a woman a taste for blood at a young age you can get her fired up for life. Hunting is seen as a bad thing in England in my experience by the middle class. Perhaps they think of foxhunting alone or perhaps their pussy-ass attitude pervades the whole of their thinking. Working class people have no problem hunting and killing animals in my experience.

3
-1
huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
6 months ago

Well I’m glad that’s been sorted out at last.

4
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huxleypiggles
huxleypiggles
6 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

Is ‘Man the Hunter’ a Myth?

I am fairly confident that the answer to this question will be confirmed within the next generation.

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Grim Ace
Grim Ace
6 months ago

Bear Grylls Idland series tells you all you need to know. Women are utterly crap at looking after themselves. Total societal collapse would occur if women take charge. Oh, wait…….

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Mogwai
Mogwai
6 months ago
Reply to  Grim Ace

Incel or cuck?🤔 Definitely a toss-up between the two…😂

0
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Jeff Chambers
Jeff Chambers
6 months ago

claims that foraging societies lack or have weak gendered divisions of labor are contradicted by empirical evidence.

Isn’t the concept of empirical evidence an invention of the white patriarchy? And doesn’t that mean that, from the point of view of some feminists, it couldn’t possibly exist in fact?

Last edited 6 months ago by Jeff Chambers
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Monro
Monro
6 months ago

The reality is plain, and well researched:

‘Among modern foraging societies, men hunt more than women, who mostly target relatively low-quality, reliable resources (i.e., plants and shellfish). This difference has long been assumed to reflect human female reproductive constraints, particularly caring for and provisioning mates and offspring. Long-term studies of chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) enable tests of hypotheses about the possible origins of human sex differences in hunting, prior to pair-bonding and regular provisioning. We studied two eastern chimpanzee communities (Kasekela, Mitumba) in Gombe, Tanzania and one (Kanyawara) in Kibale, Uganda. Relative to males, females had low hunting rates in all three communities, even where they encountered red colobus monkeys (the primary prey of chimpanzees) as often as males did. There was no evidence that clinging offspring hampered female hunting. Instead, consistent with the hypothesis that females should be more risk-averse than males, females at all three sites specialized in low cost prey (terrestrial/sedentary prey at Gombe; black and white colobus monkeys at Kanyawara). Female dominance rank was positively correlated with red colobus hunting probability only at Kasekela, suggesting that those in good physical condition were less sensitive to the costs of possible failure. Finally, the potential for carcass appropriation by males deterred females at Kasekela (but not Kanyawara or Mitumba) from hunting in parties containing many adult males. Although chimpanzees are not direct analogs of the last common ancestor (LCA) of Pan and Homo, these results suggest that before the emergence of social obligations regarding sharing and provisioning, constraints on hunting by LCA females did not necessarily stem from maternal care. Instead, they suggest that a risk-averse foraging strategy and the potential for losing prey to males limited female predation on vertebrates. Sex differences in hunting behavior would likely have preceded the evolution of the sexual division of labor among modern humans.’

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC5570454/

Last edited 6 months ago by Monro
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EppingBlogger
EppingBlogger
6 months ago

Nah!

Weve always used Tesco.

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Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
6 months ago

It is obvious really just look at a group of primary school boys and primary school girls. The same goes for teenage years. Their pursuits are so different that each one almost requires a separate emotional language. And this is despite the attempts of parents to iron out the differences. But it is difficult when you have a predatory class that seeks to neutralize the male and the female in order to reduce the potency of any resistance. The less perspicacious are left in a state of confusion and neurosis.

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sskinner
sskinner
6 months ago

The only problem? Andersen and colleagues’ study appears to be flawed.
No S**t.
I don’t need to review their work to know that, and I also don’t need a degree to know what a women is.

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Jack the dog
Jack the dog
6 months ago

My empirical experience is that I like shooting and hard physical exercise and my wife PBUH likes picking olives, wild strawberries collecting eggs and what have you.

It’s a no-brainer.

Baked into the DNA.

4
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Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
6 months ago

We have rather restricted access to weapons. Just look at how weak British airguns are. I suppose you could argue that it improves accuracy. You can’t even buy a low calibre rifle in this country without a firearms certificate. The twentieth century was a slow motion removal of gun rights. You aren’t even allowed to carry a full length sword in England I think the limit is a 10 cm not locking blade. How are you supposed to slice someone up with that you are more likely to chop your fingers off in the process. We need to allow men to carry any reasonable weapon. I don’t care about spree killings and mass shootings that is a small price to pay.

2
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Ron Smith
Ron Smith
6 months ago
Reply to  Jabby Mcstiff

My BSA Supersport 177 is powerful. And you can’t go wrong with a good Axe!

0
0
davidcraig68
davidcraig68
6 months ago

Yes, but what is a woman? Just asking for my mate Keir.

7
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Jabby Mcstiff
Jabby Mcstiff
6 months ago

The move towards the androgyne has been documented to be a sign of the falling of a civilisation,Tits, dick, scrotum you name it.It always happens. The notion of the most certain things being turned on their head. You can’t engage with it you can’t stop the decline. And it roots in deeper and deeper. Yesterday you looked in your trousers and had a penis. Today you barely have a clit. What does one do in such a situation? How does one endure?

3
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MajorMajor
MajorMajor
6 months ago

Nowadays “objective” science is so ideologically driven that if the woke left demanded that the moon is made of cheese immediately there would be publications popping up in all the scientific magazines proving that this is indeed the case.
After all it wouldn’t be any more absurd than saying that a person with a penis can be a woman and there are 72 genders.
Science these days is not a method of enquiry to determine objective truth, it is mostly just a support vehicle for political power.
(By the way, having seen my wife pregnant and looking after our babies, my personal experience is that motherhood is not conducive to activities such as hunting.)

Last edited 6 months ago by MajorMajor
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ELH
ELH
6 months ago

Elaine Morgan’s “The Descent of Woman” puts forward an aquatic ape theory which is very interesting: that we spent a lot of time at the water’s edge and that fishing and eating shell fish enabled our brains to grow and our bodies to store fat under the skin and to lose a lot of body hair, among other theories. Well worth a read. She wrote it in response to Bronowski’s the Ascent of Man because she felt that he had left out half the human race….

2
0

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