Browse

Gender

Source

A Second Jean d'Arc

To those who considered Marat insincere and dangerous in his unrelenting populism, the true martyr was Charlotte Corday, who had come to Paris from Caen—a city then serving as a base for the federalist insurgency—apparently with the express intent of killing Marat.

Image thumbnail of Boys' Initiation Mask (keweke)
Source

Boys' Initiation Mask (keweke)

This mask worn by boys during initiation rituals in Papua New Guinea is made of painted bark cloth and canvas stretched over a cane frame. The long fiber fringe adds movement to the mask, which is worn during dances and other secret rituals that that comprise boyhood initiation rites.

American Indian Girls Playing with Dolls image thumbnail
Source

American Indian Girls Playing with Dolls

In this photograph, taken near the turn of the 20th century, American Indian girls in the southwestern United States are learning through play how to be mothers and keepers of the home.

Barbie Turns 21 magazine article
Source

Barbie Turns 21

Barbie—who is today the most famous doll in the world—was based on Lilli, a sexy and sassy German doll first produced in 1955.

Margaret Mead standing between two Samoan girls image thumbnail
Source

Margaret Mead, Coming of Age in Samoa

In 1928, Martha Mead published Coming of Age in Samoa, an anthropological work based on field work she had conducted on female adolescents in Samoa.

Miniature illustration of the Devishirme thumbnail image
Source

Devshirme System

This Ottoman miniature painting from 1558 shows a group of boys dressed in red, being registered for the devshirme (usually translated as “child levy” or “blood tax”).

Thumbnail image of Disciplining Children in the Codex Mendoza
Source

Disciplining Children in the Codex Mendoza

Aztec children were valued creations. Language used in rituals compared infants to precious stones and feathers, flakes of stone, ornaments, or sprouts of plants.

Birth Rituals in the Codex Mendoza thumbnail image
Source

Birth Rituals in the Codex Mendoza

The image from the Codex Mendoza (produced ca. 1535-1550) describes the Aztec birth ritual of bathing and naming the child, which, according to accounts from the 16th century, was usually held on the fourth day after birth.

Age of Menarche in Norway chart thumbnail image
Source

Age of Menarche in Norway

This graph shows us the average year of menarche, a female's first menstrual cycle (often considered the beginning of puberty), from 1860 to 1980 reported by adult female patients at maternity clinics in Norway.

Mencius and his Mother: A Lesson Drawn from Weaving thumbnail
Source

Mencius and his Mother: A Lesson Drawn from Weaving

This illustration depicts a scene from the Traditions of Exemplary Women (Lienü zhuan) of Liu Xiang (ca. 77-6 BCE), one of China's first didactic texts on feminine morality. The text to this story is provided below the illustration. The story recounts the upbringing of Mencius (ca.