The nature-culture dochotomy and its projection on to the thought systems of non-western peoples.Questions the proposition that people in western societies universally make a distinction between that which is natural and that which is cultural, and that there is a universal equation between female and nature and male and culture.Questions the proposition that people in western societies universally make a distinction between that which is natural and that which is cultural, and that there is a universal equation between female and nature and male and culture.Categories of analysis in the social sciences include the binary pair 'nature' and 'culture', as defined by western societies. Anthropologists have often imputed these categories to the world-views of non-western people and the construct has acquired the status of a universal. It has been further argued that culture (that which is regulated by human thought and technology) is universally valued as being superior to nature (the unregulated); and that female is universally associated with nature (and is therefore inferior and to be dominated) and male with culture. The essays in this volume question these propositions. They examine the assumptions behind them analytically and historically, and present ethnographic evidence to show that the dichotomy between nature and culture, and its association with a contrast between the sexes, is a particularity of western thought. The book is a commentary on the way anthropologists working within the western tradition have projected their own ideas on to the thought systems of other peoples. Its form is largely anthropological, but it will have a wide appeal within the social sciences and the humanities, especially among those interested in structuralist thought and women's studies.List of plates; Preface; 1. Nature, culture and gender: a critique Carol P. MacCormack; 2. Women and the dialectics of nature in eighteenth-century French thought Maurice Bloch and Jean H. Bloch; 3lƒ!