UNLIMITED

Nautilus

The Point of Men’s Cults

Men’s cults are not universal, but they recur throughout history and across cultures. Does their pervasiveness tell us something important about evolution and human behavior?From The Cassowary’s Revenge (1997) by Donald Tuzin

One surprising thing about secret societies is how visible they are. In the ethnographic record, they can be found almost everywhere. They’re particularly well documented across Melanesia,1 the Amazon,2 and West Africa.3 There are mixed-sex,4 and all female,5 secret societies, but the ones that physically coerce, ritually deceive, and violently punish outsiders and taboo-violators are often entirely made up of males.6,7 These all-male secret societies are best described as “men’s cults,” because of their exclusionary nature and strong connection to male sex roles. They can be found among hunter-gatherer societies, horticulturalists, and agriculturalists alike, although many of those that have been described may no longer exist.8

The men’s cult is a conspiracy in plain sight. The “men’s house,” where the cult gathers, is often the largest structure in a village, built in a position of prestige at the center or top of a settlement. In villages across the Alaskan mainland This is where most adult males and teenage initiates spend most of their time when not hunting or foraging. Among other things, it’s a ritual center for the men, where the cult’s sacred paraphernalia—often masks and/or musical instruments—is kept hidden from women and children.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Nautilus

Nautilus9 min read
Argue Your Way to a Fuller Life
Agnes Callard wasn’t happy with her answer to one of my interview questions. I asked what she thought of a remark by evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins that existential “why” questions should never be asked because they’re unanswerable. Only “how
Nautilus7 min read
Pico Iyer’s Wide-Awake Silence
Pico Iyer’s Aflame: Learning from Silence opens with a scene that is becoming all too familiar: the loss of his home and all his worldly possessions to wildfire. He goes on to describe the death of his father, his mother’s rapidly failing health, and
Nautilus1 min read
Introducing the Nautilus Winter Reading List
The best journeys are those of the mind. Here at Nautilus, we get to embark on new adventures daily, many sparked by new books we read. And often we even get to call up these writers and have a chat with them—or better yet, have them write something

Related Books & Audiobooks