A RE-ENVISIONING OF HUMAN HISTORY, AND THE ORIGINAL TABOOS
Evelyn Reed (1905 - 1979) was a women's rights activist and an influential member of the Socialist movement in this country; she was the Socialist Workers Party candidate for President in 1972 in several states, for example. She has written/coauthored a number of other books, such as 'Sexism and Science,' 'Problems of Women's Liberation: a Marxist Approach,' etc.
She wrote in the Introduction to this 1975 book, "The early history of half the human species---womankind---has largely been hidden from view. To bring it to light requires a reinvestigation of anthropology, where the role and accomplishments of women in prehistoric society are buried. This book is a contribution to unveiling that remarkable record... This book affirms that the maternal clan system was the original form of social organization and explains why. It also traces the course of its development and the causes of its downfall... This book... presents a new theory about totemism and taboo... The ancient taboo existed---but it was primarily directed against the perils of cannibalism in the hunting epoch." (Pg. xiii, xviii)
She states, "none of the familiar arguments, whether biological, instinctual, or psychological, can sustain the proposition that the primitive sex taboo was directed against incest." (Pg. 11) Later, she asserts, "Our rejection of cannibalism, therefore, is not innate; it is a social acquisition." (Pg. 25) She adds, "To drink one another's health with wine is a vast departure from the practice of eating the flesh and drinking the blood of humans... it is a tribute to the human victory over cannibalism." (Pg. 42)
She argues, "It is far more likely... that in the beginning it was the females, not the males, who reacted to any perils involving their offspring and sustenance. So long as males remained hobbled by individualism, competition, and striving for dominance over other males, they could not respond to the need for group preservation. But the females, already equipped by nature with their highly developed maternal functions and... capable of cooperating with other females, could achieve the self-restraint and foresight required to take the measures necessary for group survival. They instituted taboo." (Pg. 69)
She suggests, "in the matriarchal period women decided for themselves whether they would eat meat, and usually they did not." (Pg. 93) She says, "in the period of the maternal clan, when men were occupied with hunting and fighting, women were the principal producers of the necessities of life for all the members of the community." (Pg. 104) She summarizes, "Women then were not simply the procreators of new life, the biological mothers. They were the prime producers of the necessities of social life: the social mothers." (Pg. 129) She notes, "The matrilineal kinship system testifies to the priority of the matriarchy... the maternal clan [was] the unit of society that preceded the father-family." (Pg. 132)
She says near the book's conclusion, "The matrifamily... emerged at the beginning of barbarism, about eight thousand years ago... What took place in the middle period of barbarism to bring about this transition from the matrifamily to the father-family... This is a largely uninvestigated question... Clarification of this subject will also shed light on the central mystery of anthropology---the transition from the matriarchal order to patriarchal, class-divided society." (Pg. 393)