Riane Eisler: Chalice & the Blade (was: I feel the same way as this blogger, about this book
http://www.leftyparent.com/blog/2009/05/10/the-chalice-the-blade/
The Chalice & the Blade
May 10th, 2009 at 20:47

In the early 1990s I read a book that, more so than anything I had read
before or since, transformed the way I look at the world and helped me
distill and inspired me to pursue my life’s purpose. The book is The
Chalice and the Blade by Riane Eisler, a feminist, activist and futurist
with degrees in sociology and law from the University of California.
Born in Vienna, Austria, her family fled from the Nazis to Cuba when she
was a child, and she later emigrated to the United States where she
continues to live and work today.
Her experience as a youth with Nazism infecting and eventually
overwhelming her country gave her frightful insight into a basic
paradigm of human society, which she calls “the dominator paradigm”
(which I often refer to as “patriarchy”), represented in its extreme by
the violent, authoritarian fascist German state. Eisler combines this
insight with the findings of archeologist Marija Gimbutas regarding
early European civilizations since 5000 BCE, who discovered in her digs
evidence of cultures consistent with the dominator paradigm, but also
those reflecting a very different organization, which Eisler labeled
“The partnership paradigm”.
In The Chalice and the Blade, Eisler lays out the Gimbutas’ evidence for
these two fundamentally different ways for organizing human society,
and then reinterprets biblical and other recorded history in terms of
the threading and conflict of these two paradigms through the
development of our contemporary Western civilization.
Summarized briefly, the dominator paradigm is the hierarchical
organization of people into a “pecking order” where each person’s place
in that order is marked by having “superiors” and/or “inferiors” that
encompasses gender, racial and age differences. As it is expressed in
Western culture and even our contemporary institutions, man has “power
over” woman, white over color, and adult over youth. This order is
maintained by rules reflecting institutionalized coercion backed by
violence when necessary, and in fact violence and war are generally
celebrated as the height of human endeavor and willingness to die as its
most profound expression. As a side note, because “power corrupts” and
particularly when not shared among peers, this form of organization
tends toward corruption unless it is accompanied by a strong moral code
involving fear of God.
The partnership paradigm is the non-hierarchical, egalitarian or “flat”
organization of people where power is exercised “with” rather than
“over” others. Peer relationships between equals are featured rather
than rigid codes of behavior between superiors and inferiors, and are
founded on the principals of peace, love, joy and non-violence,
expressed in the celebration of birth, life and sexual and other unions
between people. In contrast to the dominator paradigm, this form of
organization tends to be promoted and maintained by more secular
ideologies of democracy, gender and racial equality, and religious
tolerance.
According to Gimbutas’ findings, the civilizations that developed around
5000 BCE in the fertile valleys around the Mediterranean were agrarian,
relatively peaceful, relatively egalitarian, and (based on their art
and burial customs) celebrated life and the life-affirming mystery of
birth. But on the eastern periphery of Europe, what is now the steppes
of Russia, where sources of food at the time were scarce, a completely
different civilization (more an amalgam of nomadic tribes really)
emerged, that was warlike, hierarchical, with art and burial customs
that celebrated war and death. These people were herders rather than
farmers and were the original domesticators of the horse, using it as
their greatest weapon of war. Eventually, per Gimbutas, these warlike
tribes moved west and conquered the more peaceful peoples of the
Mediterranean basins and Fertile Crescent.
Eisler plays Gimbutas’ theory forward into recorded history, with the
superimposing of these dominator cultures over the conquered peoples’
more partnership values, thus creating the basis of the Mesopotamian,
Egyptian, Canaanite and Greek civilizations that most of us read about
studying ancient history in school. She analyzes classical Greek
civilization in particular, portraying it as an unlikely melding of
dominator militarism and male dominance superimposed over more
partnership democratic tendencies and life-celebrating art. She then
walks through recorded Western history showing the predominance of the
dominator thread (particularly when human society sees itself in a
context of fear and scarcity) but with the partnership thread always
alive and striving for resurgence (when the context is seen as more one
of fellowship and abundance).
Whether or not you buy Eisler’s (what I at least find compelling)
reinvention of the narrative of Western history, I find her dominator
and partnership paradigms a great tool for analyzing society as well as
individual institutions within society. The Protestant Reformation with
its more egalitarian “Be your own priest” individualist theology,
marked a partnership challenge to the more dominator hierarchy of the
Roman church, which spread to the political arena during the later
Enlightenment of the 18th Century, with the transition of many Western
countries from monarchy (dominator) to republic (more partnership) and
the gradual abolition of slavery (dominator) and later to a transition
from colonialism (dominator) to more self-determination (partnership)
for the people of the world (at least politically if not economically).
These trends are complex and I oversimplify here just to give you a
sense of the potential application of these two models.
What I find particularly fascinating is Eisler’s basic premise that we
humans are highly adaptable to our actual (or perceived) circumstances.
In a context of scarcity and fear, say not enough food and hostile
neighbors willing to fight us for that scarce resource, we tend to
create a more dominator society, male-dominant and hierarchically
organized with a strongman on top, and we celebrate our ability to fight
and raise our martyrs as the best of our society. In a context of
relative abundance when our neighbors are not seen as such a threat, we
tend more to a less male-dominated, more egalitarian society that
celebrates life and love.
In colonial America there was a great agricultural abundance, and after
settling differences with our neighbors in England, our society
experienced a flowering of the more partnership institution of
democracy. Yet most Americans lived in a theological context of fear of
the devil, and the vulnerability of all souls (particularly the
youngest among us) to his influence. Thus a parenting institution that
featured a very hierarchical family with children at the bottom (they
should be seen and not heard and speak only when spoken to) and corporal
punishment (spare the rod and spoil the child). Today family life
(with some notable exceptions) tends to be much more of the partnership
paradigm with children encouraged (or at least not routinely punished)
for speaking up and corporal punishment losing favor in many family
circles.
I recommend you try applying these two paradigms to the institutions and
venues within your own life: your family, your workplace, a school, a
religious community, etc. A more dominator organization would feature:
* A context or perceived context of scarcity and fear
* A hierarchical ranking of the people involved
* Maintenance of that ranking by rigid rules and coercion
* The application and even celebration of power over others rather than power with others
A more partnership organization would include:
* A context or perceived context of abundance and love
* A more egalitarian “circle” of people involved
* Maintenance of that circle by affirming relationships rather than rigid rules
* The application and celebration of power with others rather than power over others
♥Loving Alternatives to Mainstream Parenting (L-AMP)♥ and unconditional-parents (UCP) and crunchy moms and (RIB) Raising Intact Boys and (BIN) birth is normal and everyday mindfulness and The Science spot and Vegetarian & Vegan moms (VVM)
fascinating! will this go into the book club forum later? I hope to check this book out - thanks for sharing!
LETICIA (kind of rhymes with Patricia)
Mom to Felipe, born 11-24-2006
Group Owner - Unconditional Parenting, Earthy Tribal Mamas
Admin - Loving Alternatives to Mainstream Parenting
Interesting. I know I read this book years ago, as a student. I had a pagan friend with a taste for books that challenged the mainstream way of viewing religion, history, relationships between men and women, etc. and she recommended this. I should look at it again because my life is very different now and I'm sure at the time I didn't think much about how it relates to marriage, the workplace or parenting and I certainly would now! Thanks!


- Imamom4sure
(♥Kim) on Jul. 4, 2011 at 10:52 PM