How can we be certain of customs in the primitive age?

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The Durants' work is not history, or anthropology, or archaeology. The claims made are unknowable, in part due to bad theory and method on the part of the Durants; and, in part as the elements of the claims are unknowable.

Scholars can use burials or camp structures to look at the gendered division of labour in preliterate societies. To the extent that ritual objects in burial can be associated with non ritual objects some elements of the gendered work process can be divined. Similarly middens.

Then, through comparative anthropology based on contemporary preliterate societies we can guess at the likely proportions of divisions of labour in past gathering societies.

For example, in most gatherer societies women are responsible for the majority of hunting: the hunting of small game. We ought to expect then that, if the comparative method holds water, that the majority of past gathering societies had the majority of hunting conducted by women.

But with social analysis there are always exceptions.

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There's likely no such thing. Different societies have different ways of doing things, regardless of how relatively "primitive" they are. That's why we call them "cultures".

Take your topic of the roles and status of women. It varies by culture, and is ultimately fairly random. There will usually be a division, as men will likely insist on taking the more dangerous work (eg: hunting large game and war), but otherwise it can be fairly arbitrary what roles get assigned to what genders, and how strict the segregation is.

For instance, in North America, farming was viewed by most tribes as "women's work", which ended up being a huge cultural barrier once Europeans arrived on the continent.

Marriage standards (eg: linearity, level of official monogamy) also appear to be a cultural thing. Many societies outside of the Eurasian sphere were/are matrilineal, while similar neighbors are not. Within Eurasia, European societies tended more to very strict monogamy, near east societies to polygamy, and Chinese society to a kind of middle-ground.

Point being it really doesn't make sense to try to talk about specifics of gender roles solely based on societal development, because all evidence we have points to it not being based on that at all.*

* - Of course we could do something silly like arbitrarily call our own culture "advanced", and then start to reason all about other societies with other systems like they are inferior entities who simply have yet to achieve our own level. But we wouldn't do that, would we?

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