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MYTH AND GENDER

Gender vs The Springhill Mining Disaster

Digging into heroism

10 min readJun 3, 2024

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Image Creative Commons with Attribution — Canada Library Archives

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:

  1. We have an innate tendency to see gender. Gender is likely baked in cognitively.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.

Alan Tabor
Alan Tabor

Written by Alan Tabor

Music, Nature, and Evolutionary Biology Geek. Occasional Psychonaught. System Builder, Coder, Community Organizer.All my projects at

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