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MYTH AND GENDER
Gender vs The Springhill Mining Disaster
Digging into heroism
10 min readJun 3, 2024
In David Samson’s book on intentional communities, (2023), I found a fascinating exploration of gender and heroism . . . the preoccupations, in fact, of this series on Myth and Gender.
Samson makes the following points:
- We have an innate tendency to see gender. Gender is likely baked in cognitively.
- Gender roles are consistent across a wide swath of cultures, so gender is likely baked in behaviorally as well — but paradoxically, “gender-specific” traits don’t have a binary distribution.
- In fact, traits often considered as gender-defining are not that firmly attached to sex-at-birth at all. Although apparently innate, they nonetheless emerge situationally in all genders. An excellent (and surprising) example is heroism. Details below.
(I do a deeper dive into the first two points in the nerd-core version of this story.)
Samson is an academic with pedigrees in anthropology and evolutionary biology, but also someone who lives in a self-assembled tribe. Let’s consider his points in more detail.