Mosuo: Difference between revisions

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"Geze [Duoji] says that many outsiders have the impression that Mosuo women lord it over men. In fact, he says, decisions are made democratically at family meetings, with each adult member having his or her say, and labor is divided in a humane and equitable fashion."<ref>Dawson, "Sweet."</ref>
"Geze [Duoji] says that many outsiders have the impression that Mosuo women lord it over men. In fact, he says, decisions are made democratically at family meetings, with each adult member having his or her say, and labor is divided in a humane and equitable fashion."<ref>Dawson, "Sweet."</ref>


The traditional shared leadership of women and men has eroded in recent times. According to ''NPR'', "Traditionally, the Mosuo's political leaders were often women. Today, most Mosuo officials are men, but this too is a division of labor, as the Mosuo feel men are better suited to act as envoys to the outside world of male-dominated politics."<ref>Anthony Kuhn, "The Place In China Where The Women Lead," ''NPR'', November 26, 2016, https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/11/26/501012446/the-place-in-china-where-the-women-lead.</ref>
The traditional shared leadership of women and men has partially eroded in recent times. According to ''NPR'', "Traditionally, the Mosuo's political leaders were often women. Today, most Mosuo officials are men, but this too is a division of labor, as the Mosuo feel men are better suited to act as envoys to the outside world of male-dominated politics."<ref>Anthony Kuhn, "The Place In China Where The Women Lead," ''NPR'', November 26, 2016, https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/11/26/501012446/the-place-in-china-where-the-women-lead.</ref>


=Economy=
=Economy=

Revision as of 14:25, 29 March 2022

in progress

The Mosuo are a matrilineal and arguably matriarchal people who live around southwestern China's Lake Lugo for at least 1600 years.[1] Today's Mosuo population is about 30,000 to 40,000.[2]

Culture

Perhaps the most remarkable quality about the Masuo is that, as The Guardian reports, "women are treated as equal, if not superior, to men."[3] Kelly Dawson writes in Refinery29:

"Mosuo women share a strong sense of identity, shaped no doubt in large part by a community that treats them as equals. The women are fiercely protective of their heritage, and quick to brag about their 'strong' and 'capable' female family members and friends."[4]

Mosuo practice "walking marriage" in which the husband stays with his family in daytime and with his wife's family during the night. The marriage can be ended at any time by either party. Most walking marriages are monogamous.[5]

Decisions

"Geze [Duoji] says that many outsiders have the impression that Mosuo women lord it over men. In fact, he says, decisions are made democratically at family meetings, with each adult member having his or her say, and labor is divided in a humane and equitable fashion."[6]

The traditional shared leadership of women and men has partially eroded in recent times. According to NPR, "Traditionally, the Mosuo's political leaders were often women. Today, most Mosuo officials are men, but this too is a division of labor, as the Mosuo feel men are better suited to act as envoys to the outside world of male-dominated politics."[7]

Economy

According to researcher Choo Waihong, the Mongols in medieval times imposed a feudal system that put a small landowning class of Mosuo in charge. While the rest of the Mosuo continued their matrilineal traditions, this landowning class became patrilineal, according to Waihong:

"It’s interesting. After Yunnan was conquered by Kublai Khan, he placed his people in charge of the whole province. In this area, he appointed a local family to act as the lord. By introducing the Mongolian culture to this elite, he allowed the man to say 'actually, you should get married, and you can have multiple wives.' The overlord had three to four wives over the years, and had this patriarchal set-up mandated by the government of the day.

But the rest of the Mosuo continued their matrilineal ways. It didn’t affect what the local people wanted to continue doing."[8]

Crime

Crime has been rare among the Mosuo.[9]


  1. Lamu Gatusa, "Matriarchal Marriage Patterns of the Mosuo People of China," Societies of Peace, http://www.second-congress-matriarchal-studies.com/gatusa.html.
  2. 30,000 comes from Gatusa, "Matriarchal Marriage Patterns." 40,000 comes from Mosuo Project, https://web.archive.org/web/20160814090823/http://www.mosuoproject.org/mosuo.htm.
  3. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/apr/01/the-kingdom-of-women-the-tibetan-tribe-where-a-man-is-never-the-boss.
  4. Kelly Dawson, "Sweet, Sweet Fantasy: Searching For A Land Where Women Rule," Refinery29, 17 December 2018, https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2018/12/219079/mosuo-women-rule-matriarchal-society-china-photos.
  5. Dawson, "Sweet, Sweet Fantasy."
  6. Dawson, "Sweet."
  7. Anthony Kuhn, "The Place In China Where The Women Lead," NPR, November 26, 2016, https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2016/11/26/501012446/the-place-in-china-where-the-women-lead.
  8. https://asianreviewofbooks.com/content/modernization-and-the-the-mosuo-an-interview-with-choo-waihong/.
  9. Kuhn, "The Place." Lamu Gatusa, "Matriarchal Marriage."