Dominator culture
Encyclopedia : D : DO : DOM : Dominator culture
Dominator culture is a term coined by futurist and writer, Riane Eisler. This term first appears in her book The Chalice & the Blade (Harper Collins San Francisco, 1987). This book outlines in detail her theory of hierarchical dominator cultures vs. egalitarian "Partnership" cultures.
Terence McKenna, a friend of Eisler, consciously borrowed and credited Eisler's ideas in his notes and the bibliographies of his books. He used the idea of dominator culture in part to illuminate what happened to cultures native to the Americas, and in part to describe the contrasting, antithetical character of Western patriarchal culture — indicating, for example, its perennial lack of social conscience, and its lack of concern for the environment. Furthermore, "The entire structure of the dominator culture ... is based upon 'our alienation from nature, from ourselves and from each other'". http://www.enlightenment.com/media/bookrevs/manmck.html As a result, McKenna reasoned, "Our ideas are exhausted-the ideas that we inherit out of Christianity and its half-brother science, or its bastard child science." http://www.well.com/user/davidu/tmalchemy1.html
See also: cultural imperialism
External links
- http://dim.com/~randl/tfour.htm
- http://www.partnershipway.org for details.
- [Alien Dreamtime] Talk by Terence McKenna that describes dominator culture in the context of his main ideas.
Notes and references
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License See Wikipedia Copyrights for details.
