The Very, Very First
Woman
Our very earliest ancestor,
prehistoric woman was a person probably of great charm, intelligence, ingenuity. She was neither chattel nor slave then, but
rather an inventor, with other women of the possibilities of bending straw to
make baskets, discovery of the cohesive quality of clay, researcher of
healthful aspects of certain herbs, and, of course the bearer of children. She, as well as males, learned to harvest
grains after they planted seeds, and they kept part of the harvest for
winter. She lived at peace with
environment, realizing that earth, fire, water and air could sustain or destroy
her. This is the portrait obtained from
the insightful scholarship of Elaine Morgan, who, in The Descent of
Woman, 1972, noted fallacies in the generally unquestioned wisdom of
masculinists.
So, far from being the despised
outcasts of Jean Auel’s novels, it is much more likely that our female
ancestors bonded for support and companionship, admitting males on their own
terms. The adventures of these original
achievers should be portrayed be creative authors.
Centuries later, when people moved
into caves, our ancestor must have been an art patron who permitted her
portrait as the bearer of children and the source of fertility to be painted on
walls of the caves. Her deification as
the Great Goddess followed.
Marilyn French continues the saga
in Beyond Power, 1985, with men turning to wars for territory control,
the subsequent slavery of the women of the defeated group, and their males of
the winners to install male gods.
However, underground movements kept Isis alive well into the Roman era.
Germanic tribes continued the worship of women until replacement by Christian
saints. Jean Markale, in Women of the
Celts, 1975, identifies the original strong position of women, honored in
saga, song and folktale.
Today’s struggles for peace, economic
equity, political representation and justice for all have roots in
antiquity. While unsuccessful in the
past, our glorious history can sustain actions and encourage faith in ultimate
success. Women’s Studies programs
provide a great service as they explore the past, examine the present and
create blueprints for the future.