Eco Patriarchy

The Origins and Nature of Hunting

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Ria Montana: Eco Patriarchy (Paperback)

Paperback

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From hominin to Homo sapiens, the story of the human ape’s relationship with other species and Earth has been more tragic than not. From human origins, ever emerging brutal lifeways turned humans’ predators into prey, paving a blood path of conquest over the planet.

As the growing human brain honed inventiveness of the hunt, it too cultivated an intensified compassion. This palpable incongruence sparked a mind adaptation utilizing language to rationalize killing. Rationalizing through mythologies and rituals served as an evolutionary strategy to overcome anxiety in slaying other animals. ‘Man the Hunter’ entwined humans with other animals onto an apocalypse-bound course.

This thesis picks up from the 1990’s debate between Feminists for Animal Rights (FAR) and Deep Ecology. Through the lens of resistance anthropology observing wildness, the ‘Man the Hunter’ narrative is reinterpreted as eco-patriarchy, a trap set in the roots of the origins of early humans’ adaptation into hunting. …

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