likely reference to a matrilocal system of wedlock. But later, Jacob, the son of Isaac, rejects the premise of matrilocality. He pledges to Isaac that he will return to his house, and after courting and marrying Laban's daughters, Rachel and Leah, he fulfills his vow. He takes his wives and their sons, camels, flocks of sheep, pottery, everything they can carry, back to the house of Isaac. To underscore the profound significance of her desertion, Rachel even steals her father's teraphim , his house gods, which represent the title to Laban's property. She accepts the overthrow of matrocentrism. She casts her lot with her husband and his primogeniture, and so pantomimes in her theft Jacob's right to claim her estate.
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The plight of Briseis, the exaltation of the hymen, woman's loss of her natal infrastructure all were hard enough on the cause of female autonomy. But when the goddess principle was expunged from the pantheon, women lost even their right to salute, however modestly, their fleshy fertility, the redemptive, regenerative power of the female body. Virtually all human cultures have had some sort of religion, some coherent creation narrative to consolidate and counterbalance human terrors, desires, limitations, and inclinations. Generally those religions are populated by a mix of animal and humanoid gods, some male, some female, some bisexual. Yet as Lerner convincingly shows, the ascendance of patriarchy is paralleled by a shift in the balance of power among the resident deities. "The development of strong kingships and of archaic states brings changes in religious beliefs and symbols," she writes in The Creation of Patriarchy . "The observable pattern is: first, the demotion of the Mother-Goddess figure and the ascendance and later dominance of her male consort/son; then his merging with a storm-god into a male Creator-God, who heads the pantheon of gods and goddesses. Wherever such changes occur, the power of creation and of fertility is transferred from the Goddess to the God."
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With the advent of monotheism, even a metaphorically ovariectomized goddess is banished from the tabernacle, for she is a threat, with her fat thighs and her outlandish udders and her taint of the old, beloved fertility cults that held sway among so many for so long. In Genesis we see the ultimate pact between males, Yahweh and Adam, to expropriate female procreative power. Adam agrees to honor a monotheistic vision, stripped of the Goddess, and Adam in turn wins the
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