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I still don't know exactly what you're getting at when you say a "norm". I appreciate that physical labour was seen by the aristocracy as something undesirable and laborious that only plebs engage in. But that's just it - it was seen as such by the aristocracy, who almost by definition are small in number relative to the human population as a whole.

It can be true that the aristocrats believe that physical labour is ignoble drudgery, and also true that the commoners believe that toiling in the fields is "real work" that requires you to get your hands dirty, unlike "women's work" that involves sitting at a desk all day. Both of these things can be true simultaneously, but because commoners are far greater in number than the aristocracy, the latter belief will be held by a far greater share of the human populace than the former.

You seem to be saying "the elites don't believe in X, therefore X isn't part of human culture and never was". But a recurrent theme of discussions in this space is that what the elites believe (or profess to believe) is often radically skew of what ordinary people believe. Modern Western elites are disproportionately likely to believe that a) male and female brains are biologically indistinguishable and any observed differences between them are solely attributable to socialisation; b) the police are unnecessary or actively detrimental to society, and hence ought to be defunded or outright abolished; c) God doesn't exist; d) homosexuality is natural and harmless.

By using your logic, I could point out that elites currently believe these things and conclude that all of humanity believes that men and women are the same, police are unnecessary, God isn't real and homosexuality should be tolerated. But doing so would give me a very skewed impression of what beliefs or norms are held by the human race as a whole, currently or historically.

I didn't claim that the attitudes of elites (and scribes, poets etc.) proved that they thought that earning a living through physical labour was considered undesirable by everyone. It does provide some evidence.

Now, what's the evidence that earning a living through physical labour was seen as a general gender norm for men in the past?

Wikipedia has a brief article on sexual division of labour, to start with. In numerous ancient societies, it was expected that men hunted and women stayed at home preparing food and raising children.

To be precise, you're referring to hunter gatherer societies. In such societies, women also do physical labour (foraging) and what tends to be esteemed for men is a particular type of physical labour, hunting. However, that's not evidence that earning a living through physical labour was historically the norm for men. (Note: "norm" and "normal" are not the same. It's normal to have an appendix, but it's not a norm.)

Physical labour in such societies is not so much a norm as a necessity for almost everyone, with hunting mainly esteemed not because it's physical labour, but because it's a difficult task that produces something that men and women both enjoy: the meats of the hunted animals.

It's true that hunting for a living is not longer a general norm for men (you don't look down on a particular man or disparage yourself for not being a professional hunter) but that's also been true in most civilizations. I don't think that the Ancient Romans were confused about their masculinity because almost no men made their living as hunters. Hunting for leisure has often been an esteemed activity, but that's a different thing.

It can be true that the aristocrats believe that physical labour is ignoble drudgery, and also true that the commoners believe that toiling in the fields is "real work" that requires you to get your hands dirty, unlike "women's work" that involves sitting at a desk all day. Both of these things can be true simultaneously, but because commoners are far greater in number than the aristocracy, the latter belief will be held by a far greater share of the human populace than the former.

Where to start...

No, this has nothing in common with "traditional society". No, America seen in 1950's sitcoms was not "traditional society".

Toiling in the fields was, in traditional societies, fate of 90+% men and 90+% women (may differ due to urbanization rate). Labor of peasant woman was lighter than one of peasant men, but still hard enough it would crush any modern man, no matter how tough he imagines himself to be.

Sitting at a desk - work of scribe - was extremely prestigious and desirable work, and it was for (elite) men only.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Satire_of_the_Trades

https://web.archive.org/web/20190308063715/http://www.reshafim.org.il/ad/egypt/texts/instructions_of_kheti.htm

See, there is no office free from supervisors, except the scribe's. He is the supervisor!

	

But if you understand writings, then it will be better for you than the professions which I have set before you.

I don't understand your comment. It sounds like we're in agreement on all the facts of the matter but you still act like you're disagreeing with me about something.

What we agree on:

  1. For most of human history, most men earned a living through physical labour

  2. Until very recently, the only men who did not have to earn a living through physical labour were the elites

  3. Elite men have always thought that physical labour was beneath them.

  4. The "great men" of history includes a mix of men who are noteworthy because of physical activities such as warfare, conquest and exploration, and also men who are noteworthy for other reasons

What, exactly, are you arguing with me about? I don't understand your bone of contention at all.

What, exactly, are you arguing with me about? I don't understand your bone of contention at all.

As you phrase it, by singling out men, it might look you imagine that women were not supposed to earn a living by hard labor, that ancient women were sitting on sofas and painting their nails while their husbands and sons toiled.

Let aside "earning a living", very modern term that implies wage labor, something not common to "most men" before modern time.

Okay. Perhaps I should have said something like "historically, most men in most cultures were expected to earn a living or otherwise ensure their own survival through physical labour, much of which was highly demanding and dangerous. By contrast, most women in most cultures were expected to carry out tasks which, while no less time-consuming or exhausting, were notably less physically demanding and dangerous than those which men were expected to carry out."