Pre- European Influence on Native Americans

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From Native American “Two Spirited” peoples to fundamentalist Christians, the views of and acceptance of sexuality by Americans shows a nation that can’t make up its mind. The status quo when it comes to the ideas of gender identities and roles has shifted vastly many times. For many, the opinions of the masses affected daily life in every aspect from the clothes they wore, the family they lived in, to the life paths they followed.
Pre- European Influenced Native Americans
Many Native American tribes were matrilineal. In many North American societies, clan membership and material goods descended through women. This showed a quite different view of family structure from Europeans at this time. Clan matrons selected men to serve as their chiefs, and they deposed chiefs with whom they were dissatisfied. Women were also sometimes allowed to inherit tribal leadership positions. Since the jobs of both genders were considered equally important, both genders held respect for each other. Native women’s daily contributions were recognized by Native men and the tribe as a whole as vital to the prosperity of the community and worthy of respect. Traditionally, women were given great respect for their role in childbirth, and coming of age with menstruation was an important event.
At least forty Native American Cultures practiced sororal polygyny. This was in part because, in most cases, the number of women out numbered the number of men due to hunting accidents or war casualties.
The roles of women when it came to marriage and courtship varied drastically between the tribes. For example, in the Sioux culture the father arranged a marriage for his daughters with no input from them, with social or political motives. The girls would be mar...

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...l rape. (Marital Rape the Legislative Battle) It continues to be one of the least reported crimes due to its very personal nature and the long exposing legal process.
In the 1980’s feminists also exposed rape as not a solely heterosexual crime. Large changes were not made on this front until 2011, when the FBI revised its definition of rape, now, in Uniform Crime Reports; the FBI now includes any form of forced sexual penetration of a man or a woman as well as “non-forcible rape.”
Obviously much has changed over the course of several hundred years when it comes to sexuality and gender roles, and it will continue to evolve. Every generation has been different from the one before it, with sometimes grand and sometimes miniscule differences. Sexuality and the role of the genders effects everyday life as much as religion, dietary needs and economic systems.

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