How does a matriarchy really work? Argentinian writer Ricardo Coler decided to 
find out and spent two months with the Mosuo in southern China. "Women have a 
different way of dominating," the researcher told SPIEGEL ONLINE.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Mr. Coler, you are from Argentina, where macho behavior is not 
exactly unheard of. What was it like living for two months in the matriarchical 
society of the Mosuo in China?

Coler: I wanted to know what happened in a society where women determine how 
things are done. How do women tick when, from birth onwards, their societal 
position allows them to decide everything? We men know what a man is, we put 
that together quickly -- but what constitutes a woman? Although, I didn't get 
any wiser on that point.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Is Mosuo society a paradise for feminists?

Coler: I had expected to find an inverse patriarchy. But the life of the Mosuo 
has absolutely nothing to do with that. Women have a different way of 
dominating. When women rule, it's part of their work. They like it when 
everything functions and the family is doing well. Amassing wealth or earning 
lots of money doesn't cross their minds. Capital accumulation seems to be a 
male thing. It's not for nothing that popular wisdom says that the difference 
between a man and a boy is the price of his toys.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: What is life like for a man in a matriarchy?

Coler: Men live better where women are in charge: you are responsible for 
almost nothing, you work much less and you spend the whole day with your 
friends. You're with a different woman every night. And on top of that, you can 
always live at your mother's house. The woman serves the man and it happens in 
a society where she leads the way and has control of the money. 

In a patriarchy, we men work more -- and every now and then we do the dishes. 
In the Mosuo's pure form of matriarchy, you aren't allowed to do that. Where a 
woman's dominant position is secure, those kinds of archaic gender roles don't 
have any meaning.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: What astonished you the most?

Coler: That there is no violence in a matriarchal society. I know that quickly 
slips into idealization -- every human society has its problems. But it simply 
doesn't make sense to the Mosuo women to solve conflicts with violence. Because 
they are in charge, nobody fights. They don't know feelings of guilt or 
vengeance -- it is simply shameful to fight. They are ashamed if they do and it 
even can threaten their social standing.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: And when there's no solution to a problem?

Coler: Either way, there won't be an altercation. The women decide what 
happens. Some of them do it more strictly and others in a friendlier way. They 
are strong women who give clear orders. When a man hasn't finished a task he's 
been given, he is expected to admit it. He is not scolded or punished, but 
instead he is treated like a little boy who was not up to the task.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Are men raised to be incompetent?

Coler: For the Mosuo, women are simply the more effective and reliable gender. 
However, they do say that the "really big" decisions -- like buying a house or 
a machine or selling a cow -- are made by the men. Men are good for this kind 
of decision-making as well as physical labor. The official governmental leader 
of the village, the mayor, is a man. I walked with him through the village -- 
nobody greated him or paid him any attention. As a man he doesn't have any 
authority.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: How does this division of roles function when it comes to love?

Coler: In the matriarchal society, love and eroticism are omnipresent. But 
there is a big difference between the two. They constantly crack 
double-entendre jokes. Someone always wants to present you with a woman and 
there is always a woman there who is smiling at you. Like I said, these are 
very strong women who give the orders and yell at you as if you were deaf. 

But when it comes to seduction, they completely change. The women act shy, look 
at the floor, sing softly to themselves and blush. And they let the men believe 
that we are the ones who choose the women and do the conquering. Then you spend 
a night together. The next morning, the man leaves and the woman goes about her 
work like before.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: A paradise of free love, in other words?

Coler: The sexual life of the Mosuo is very distinctive and very active -- 
partners are changed frequently. But the women decide with whom they want to 
spend the night. 

Their living quarters have a main entrance but every adult woman lives in her 
own small hut. The men live together in a large house. The door of every hut is 
fitted with a hook and all the men wear hats. When a man visits a woman, he 
hangs his hat on the hook. That way, everybody knows that this woman has a male 
visitor. And nobody else knocks on the door. If a woman falls in love, then she 
receives only the specific man and the man comes only to that woman.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: What makes a man attractive to a Mosuo woman?

Coler: When she can talk with a man, have sex, and go out, then she is in love. 
Love is more important for them than partnership. They want to be in love. The 
one reason to be with another person is love. They aren't interested in getting 
married or starting a family with a man. When the love is over, then it's over. 
They don't stay together for the kids or for the money or for anything else.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Does the concept of marriage exist for the Mosuo?

Coler: Yes, the children are even threatened with it: "If you aren't good, then 
we will marry you off." The children understand marriage as a horror story. 

They asked me how we live. I said: man meets woman, they fall in love, have 
children and live together for their entire lives. Oh, they said, that must be 
great. But you know that they laugh at the fact that we constantly repeat 
something that even we know doesn't work.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: May we ask if you also hung your hat on a hook?

Coler: One woman wanted to have a child with me. I told her, no, I can't have a 
child with you because you live here in China and I live in Argentina. "So?" 
was the reaction. The children always stay with the mothers. I said that I 
couldn't have any children whom I could never see. She just smiled as if I took 
it too seriously. When they have kids, the children are theirs only -- the men 
don't play a role. 


SPIEGEL ONLINE: In Chinese society, there is more value placed on the sons than 
on the daughters -- is it the other way around with the Mosuo?

Coler: A family without daughters is a catastrophe. Furthermore, these families 
do worse economically because the women are the ones who deal with money. One 
family has 15 to 20 members. Although, there are also small families with five 
or six members. They are allowed to have up to three children, which is unusual 
in China, where the urban populations are only allowed one child and people in 
the countryside can only have two. But the roughly 25,000 Mosuo have the status 
of ethnic minority and thus they can have three.


SPIEGEL ONLINE: Do the Mosuo actually have a word for "father"?

Coler: Yes, there is a word but nothing like our concept of what a father 
should be. These duties are taken over by the mother or the family. Often, the 
women don't know which man is responsible for the pregnancy. So the children 
also don't know who their biological father is. But for the women it is usually 
not important because the men barely work and have little control over things 
of material value. 

The family is what's important and they would never separate themselves from 
it. 

http://www.spiegel.de/international/zeitgeist/0,1518,627363,00.html





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