BOOK REVIEWS
Payback: The Logic of Retribution in
Melanesian Religions, by G W Trompf.
Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 1994. ISBN 0-521-41691-4, xx
+ 545 pages, figures, maps, tables,
photographs, notes, bibliography,
indexes. US$59.95.
Anthropologists are not the only practitioners of ethnography anymore.
Cultural difference is increasingly celebrated and anatomized, and scholars
from various disciplines and backgrounds have been called to represent
other people's ways of life and worldviews. This hefty volume, written by
an associate professor at Sydney University's School of Studies in Religion,
is an interesting example of what
might be called para-anthropology.
Although rooted in an interpretation
of Melanesian religions, the book
ambitiously attempts to account for a
gamut of Melanesian social practice,
ranging from warfare to exchange, to
legal codes, to marriage custom, to
etiology. Where anthropologists apply
their term culture to designate the universe of what they purport to describe,
and also evoke "culture" as an ultimate causal force, Trompf instead
employs religion. His tactic is to conceive of religion "much more as a people's 'way of life' than merely worship
or approaches to the 'non-empirical
realm' in particular" (xv). This ingestive definition of religion, like anthropology's culture, permits Trompf to
discover religious sensibilities and
motives almost everywhere in island
life.
Trompf's aim is to "better understand the modern history of Melanesia
... by analysing those forms of ratio-
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nality that have been bequeathed by
archaic, primal traditions" (25). He
locates one primary religious principle
to account for the contours of that
modern history. This is "payback," or
the "logic of retribution" in terms of
which Melanesians perceive life as "a
continuous interweaving of gains and
losses" (1). (He recasts, here, previous
anthropological totalized readings of
Melanesian societies in terms of "reciprocity" or "opposition scenarios. ")
Trompf uses this model of positive and
negative payback to organize his discussion of Melanesian religiosity cum
culture. The book is divided into three
historically organized sections: precontact "Tradition," colonial "Cargo
Cultism," and postcolonial "Modernization." Each section is further
divided into a discussion of negative
payback (eg, revenge, reprisal, and
recrimination), positive payback (reciprocity, redemption, and moneymaking), and payback as a pervasive
epistemological principle that Melanesians resort to in order to explain illness and health, death and well-being.
Although the book's declared focus is
Melanesian religions, most data in fact
come from Papua New Guinea, where
Trompf once taught. (The volume
recaps much of his earlier writing.)
Evidently, the book only slowly made
its way into print, as it refers to publications dating back to 1983 as
"recent. "
In many ways, this is Christian ethnography-a genre that was once not
uncommon in the days of early missionary-ethnographers. Trompf's narrative thesis is the transformation of
"primal," "tribal," or "small-scale"
Melanesian societies by Christianity
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THE CONTEMPORARY PACIFIC· SPRING
and other forces of modernity. The
volume's religious perspective is distinct and, in many ways, germane
given contemporary Christian influence in many island societies. Most
Melanesians are Christians, and a religiously-as opposed to anthropologically-informed ethnography recasts
cultural interpretation in interesting
fashion.
Ethnologically, however, the book
rubs up against current anthropological attitudes. Trompf pointedly
rebukes materialist theories of human
behavior and also notions of primitive
irrationality (eg, of cargo cultists). Retribution is a religious "logic." It boggles the mind, nowadays, to figure
who Trompf believes might still advocate either hard economic determinism
or crazed native mentalities to explain
Melanesian religiosity. Trompf also
offers, here and there, a variety of gratuitous religious typologies, descriptive
generalizations, and formal models,
nearly all of which he apologizes for as
inadequate and incomplete (which
they are). They function decoratively
and occasionally, it seems, to inspirit
his religious interpretations with a
social scientific aura-a ghost that
much of humanistic anthropology has
now exorcised.
The most conspicuous difference
between Trompf's religious ethnography and ruling anthropological
approaches is his attempt to contain
island lifeways within the bounds of a
single explanatory principle: almost
everything in Melanesia works as it
does because of the logic of payback.
The volume combines an extraordinary, even numbing, assortment of ethnographic detail with a simple, unitary,
199 6
explanatory premise. Anthropology,
lately, has fretted over its previous renderings of "culture" as an organized,
holistic system. Disciplinal interests
encourage a search for cultural multiplicity, internal ambiguities and
contradictions, and partial truths.
Trompf's discovery of a solitary
Melanesian logical structure may help
reveal the common foundations of
apparently disparate cultural features
(eg, illness belief and bridewealth), but
it can wash out differences and inconsistencies within island societies.
Trompf also borrows a little functionalism, in addition to structuralism,
from an earlier anthropology. The
logic of retribution functions to maintain the boundaries of local groups or
"security circles" (within which people
engage in positive payback, and
between which they perpetrate negative paybacks including revenge killings and warfare). Functionalist
explanation, too, can digest cultural
variation and incongruity, all of which
is interpreted as feeding the same basic
social need.
As a religious ethnographer, Trompf
is a therapist. He is not just interested
in tracing the history of Melanesia in
light of payback logic, but also in curing social ills-in particular, the problems of youth-gang crime, theft, rape,
and political corruption that beset Port
Moresby, Trompf's erstwhile hometown. The implicit question here, is
why Christianity has failed in Melanesia. Melanesians are Christian, but not
yet always Christian enough to
renounce revenge, payback killing,
tribal warfare, and the like. Trompf's
answer is that people are still too traditional (the logic of payback persists)
BOOK REVIEWS
and also sometimes too modern, having shot right through Christianity into
secular humanist criminality. His suggested therapy is increased moral
education and acknowledgment of
Melanesia's pervasive payback logicthat "most of the problems and most
of the best answers to them revolve
around ethics and moral choices"
(458). Trompf is a Tocqueville in
Melanesia, but his criticism of payback
may be less compelling, in future readings, than that earlier pundit's anxious
appreciation of democracy.
LAMONT LINDSTROM
University of Tulsa
*
*
Tradition and Christianity: The Colonial Transformation of a Solomon
Islands Society, by Ben Burt. Studies in
Anthropology and History, volume 10.
New York: Harwood Academic Publishers, 1994. ISBN 3-7186-5449-0,
xii + 299 pages, maps, figures, photographs, notes, bibliography, index.
us$ 58.
Despite a current profusion of theoretically sophisticated and empirically rich
ethnographies, the field of Melanesian
anthropology still gives scant attention
to the now all-pervasive role of Christianity in most corners of the region.
This well-written book on the
Kwara'ae of Malaita by British anthropologist Ben Burt is a most welcome
and engrossing exercise in just the
opposite direction, taking issues of
Christianity in the context of Kwara'ae
"tradition" as its main substantial
focus and analytical challenge. The
book is a joy to read; the text is clear,
uncluttered, and easily accessible to a
wide audience, and the copious photographs form an engaging, complementary chronicle in their own right.
The book builds on research carried
out by the author since 1979, including fieldwork periods in Solomon
Islands totaling about a year, and is the
first general book-length ethnography
of the Kwara'ae, who are one of the
major linguistic groups of Solomon
Islands. Constituting a rich historical
account of more than a hundred years
of colonial and postcolonial transformations of Kwara'ae culture and
society, Burt's book is in some ways a
parallel to the late Roger Keesing's
recent Custom and Confrontation: The
Kwaio Struggle for Cultural Autonomy (1992). The Kwara'ae of Kwai
district described by Burt remain "a
people fiercely attached to the tradition of their ancestors," but unlike
their neighboring Kwaio "pagans"
they are now predominantly Christians
who have "adopted with [equally
fierce] conviction a new religion which
contradicts some of the fundamental
values of this tradition" (I).
Not unexpectedly, then, Ben Burt's
major aim is "to document and
explain how and why [the Kwara'ae of
Kwai] have transformed their society
by changing their religion" (I). This
initial question is not an easy one
to answer, but it does set the tone
whereby the author persistently and
lucidly brings to the forefront the
agency and active, innovative role of
generations of Kwara'ae through processes of confrontation, resistance,
compromise, and reorganization, leading to their creation of a "new social
order through which [the Kwara'ae]