The Life and Work of Ernesto De Martino
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The Life and Work of
Ernesto De Martino
Italian Perspectives on Apocalypse and Rebirth
in the Modern Study of Religion
By
Flavio A. Geisshuesler
LEIDEN | BOSTON
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Cover Illustration: Ernesto de Martino in August 1956, during an ethnographic journey in the Southern
Italian region of Basilicata. Photograph by Franco Pinna.
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Contents
Acknowledgments
ix
Let the Earth Shake: From Crisis-Born Hero to Master of
Civilizational Crisis 1
1 The Decline of the West (1908–1929): The Rupture of Time in Modernity
and the Rise of the Prophets of Crisis 8
1
Student Years under Fascism and the Guidance of a Spiritual Prophet
of Crisis 8
2
The Arrow of Progress and the Unification of a Ruptured Modernity
in Need of Orientation 13
3
The Crisis of the First World War and the Rise of Oswald Spengler’s
Cultural Pessimism 18
2 Civil Religion (1929–1335): The Return to Something New as Modernist
Alternative to Mircea Eliade’s Politics of Nostalgia 23
1
Rudolf Otto and the Return to Religion as Experience 23
2
Mircea Eliade’s Politics of Nostalgia and the Rebirth of
Western Civilization 28
3
An Alternative to the Politics of Nostalgia: Modernism and
the Dialectic Conception of Palingenesis as the Return to
Something New 31
4
Questioning the Rupture of Modernity from a Dialectical Perspective:
The Self-Secularization of Religion and the Self-Mythicization of
Politics 39
3 The Crisis of the Presence (1936–1944): The Antifascist Sacralization of
Politics and the Rise of Magical Thinking during WWII 45
1
The Antifascist Turn in the Laterza Circle and the Continued
Sacralization of Politics 45
2
The Crisis of the Presence: Extreme States of Consciousness in
Primitive Societies and the Shamanizing of Hitler in Europe 52
3
The Dark Side of the Soul Resurfaces in Religious Studies: The Split
between the Insider-Phenomenological and the Outsider-Explanatory
Approaches 58
4
The Savior of the European Sciences: The Redemption of the
Presence and the Unifying Power of Magic 64
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Contents
4 De-historification (1944–1948): Shamanic Magic and the Dialectic
Movement between Mircea Eliade and Claude Lévi-Strauss 67
1
The Integration of Eliade and Lévi-Strauss: Sacred Poles and Songs of
Labor as Forms of De-historification 67
2
Historicizing the De-historifying Tendencies of the Modern
Magicians in the Study of Religion 75
3
The Magic Christ of Science: Heroic Historicism and the Active
Provocation of Crisis in Pursuit of Critical Thinking 84
5 Critical Ethnocentrism (1949–1959): The Southern Period and the
Articulation of a Post-colonial Anthropology alongside Claude
Lévi-Strauss 92
1
Notoriety without Success: Controversies with Croce and Intellectual
Isolation within the Roman School of History of Religions 92
2
Shaking Earth and Intellectual Transitions: Political Militancy and
Ethnographic Journeys in the Italian South 95
3
The Rise of the Cultural-Discursive Paradigm and Self-Reflexive
Anthropology 103
4
Tristes Tropiques, Critical Ethnocentrism, and the Anticipation of the
Cultural-Discursive Paradigm 105
4.1 Anticipating Said’s Orientalism: Anthropology of Guilt and the
Ethnographic Encounter 107
4.2 Anticipating Fabian’s Time and Other: Anthropology as
Self-Reflexivity and Introspection 109
4.3 Anticipating Smith’s Imagining Religion: Anthropology as
the Study of Culture and the Critical Questioning of Our
Categories 112
4.4 Anticipating the Writing Culture Movement: Anthropology and
the Language of the People 116
6 Loyalty to the Cultural Homeland (1960–1965): Critical Ethnocentrism
as an Anticipatory Defense against Relativism and Interpretative
Anthropology 122
1
A Critic of Interpretative Anthropology Ante Litteram:
The Anthropologist of Guilt Becomes a Philosopher of the
Apocalypse of Relativism 122
2
Moving with and beyond Antonio Gramsci: From Progressive Folklore
to a More Successful Colonialization 126
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Contents
3
4
Nostalgia for the Lost Homeland: An Anticipatory Analysis of
the Cultural Turn and the Surprising Parallels between Cultural
Relativism and the Insider-Phenomenological Approach 133
Science Is Not for the Stateless: An Anticipatory Critique of the
Cultural Turn Based on the Ethnocentric Imperative 139
7 The Ethos of Transcendence (1965–1977): Decision and the Moral
Imperative as Anticipatory Response to Postmodernism 146
1
The Philosophical Afterlife of The End of the World: Enzo Paci’s
Existentialist Historicism and the Moral Imperative Grounded in the
Contemporaneity of History 146
2
Impossible Nostalgia and the Anticipatory Analysis of the
Discursive Turn 152
3
The Ethos of Transcendence of Life in Value as an Anticipatory
Critique of the Discursive Turn 161
3.1 Finding Value in Concreteness, Practice, and Morality Instead of
Meaning, Interpretation, and Play 161
3.2 The Ethos of Transcendence as Dialectical Process: Between
Loyalty to the Past and New Valorization in the Present 165
Conclusion: Let the Earth Shake (Again) or Why Rebirth Must Lead to a
New Crisis 170
References 173
Index 200
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Acknowledgments
The communion with others populates our past and reaches, in our
memory, only a few faces of the people closest to us. It renews itself
continuously in the presence of a need, also physical, to maintain
old relationships and weave together new ones: Friendly conversations, the joy of a nice dinner amongst friends in an osteria outside
of town, the miscellaneous encounters of everyday life, the feelings
of a celebration experienced together. [All these] do not just bear
witness of ourselves to ourselves and get us used to the humility
that comes with a continuous confrontation of our ideas and of our
emotions. They also form our self, pulling it back, again and again,
from the edge of the abyss that is the moi haïssable; pushing it, again
and again, back to the green fields of life with growing courage
and certainty.
Ernesto de Martino, La Fine del Mondo
∵
It is impossible to write a book without the support of others. This is particularly true of the first book in an author’s career. Although my scholarship grew
into a strong tree, with the pages you are about to read being the most prominent fruit, it would have never come into being without the seed that was
planted fifteen years ago. It was during my time as a student at the University
of Lausanne that I was introduced to Ernesto de Martino and the Roman
School of History of Religions by Silvia Mancini. She was not only, to borrow
a term from the distant Himalayan world, a “lineage holder” of this scholarly
tradition, but also a passionate, generous, and demanding mentor. Later, as
a graduate student at the University of Virginia, I not only had the opportunity of whetting my intellectual curiosity in sheer endless directions, but my
perspective on de Martino was enriched through my exchanges with a series
of interlocutors from various disciplinary backgrounds, particularly Allan
Megill, Richard Handler, Roy Wagner, George Mentore, Kurtis Schaeffer, David
Germano, Larry Bouchard, Peter Ochs, Jalane Schmidt, Timothy Wilson, Bruce
Greyson, and Edward Kelly. I would like to express my particular gratefulness
to Asher Biemann, whose quiet, pragmatic, and realistic mindset offered an
invaluable force of stabilization to the dispositions of both myself and that of
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Acknowledgments
this book’s protagonist. Although he told me, during one of our first meetings,
that books are generally more accomplished teachers than people, I would still
choose our conversations over access to any library in the world.
The Swiss National Science Foundation generously supported an extended
stay in Rome, where I not only conducted the principal archival research for
this project, but also spent blissful afternoons writing on various benches
throughout the Villa Borghese gardens. I would like to thank the many scholars
in Italy (and beyond), who have offered their time and energy to engage me
and my thinking during this period, particularly Giovanni Casadio, Marcello
Massenzio, Ulrich van Loyen, Massimo Marraffa, Sergio Berardini, Adelina
Talamonti, Alessandro Testa, Fabrizio Ferrari, Valerio Severino, Pietro Angelini,
Emilia Andri, Fabio Dei, Nicola Gasbarro, Natale Spineto, and Michaela
Schäuble. I am also indebted to Carlo Ginzburg, who has not only mobilized
the full range of his impressive acumen to critically examine my thinking, but
has also served as an inspiration for what it means to be an intellectual in a
globalized world. Sitting in front of him in his home, surrounded by towering stacks of books, was both one of the most intimidating and exhilarating
moments of my journey as an academic so far.
I also want to acknowledge my time at the University of Bern, where
I defended the thesis out of which this book was developed. Besides the
Dr. Josephine de Karman Foundation, which provided me with the funds
to complete my dissertation, I am particularly grateful to Jens Schlieter and
Marco Pasi, who have been so enthusiastic about my work that they carefully
evaluated a dissertation that reached biblical proportions. Jens has been much
more than a Doktorvater for me, supporting my career even in the years after
I finished my Ph.D. In the spring semester of 2019, when he encouraged me to
teach a course on the life and work of de Martino, I had the good fortune to initiate bright and open-minded students into the Italian ways of thinking about
religion. I fondly remember the many hours we spent at the Länggass-Tee shop,
with me pitching them chapter after chapter, and them, in turn, responding
curiously and critically to what they had read.
I would also like to express my thanks to the Hebrew University of Jerusalem,
the Khyentse Foundation, and the Lady Davis Foundation, who have provided
me with yet another home away from home as a postdoctoral researcher over
the past year. I am especially appreciative of Eviatar Shulman, who has helped
me grow on professional and personal levels over what has been a challenging
period for many of us. There is no doubt that the outbreak of the pandemic,
coupled with the stimulating environment of Israel—with its rich histories
and persistent contradictions—created a field of energy that reverberated into
my manuscript during the final revisions. At Brill Publishers, my thanks go to
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Acknowledgments
xi
Tessa Schild, who has accompanied me and my book through the publication
process with a lot of patience and grace. I also thank the anonymous readers,
who devoted their time and wisdom to my study.
One of these reviewers critically observed that I often tend to quote secondary scholarship to say things that I could have said myself and that there are
moments, in which “de Martino’s work seems to drown in a sea of metatheoretical speculation.” While there is much truth to this, I decided—perhaps to
your chagrin—not to change my style of writing. On the contrary, the mixture
of voices in the book reflects the times during which it was written, as well
as the spirit of the book itself. Just like de Martino, who once self-reflectively
described himself as an “intellectual of transition,” this book embodies my
own transformations. When I started this study, I was a fledgling student in
Switzerland, who would absorb any new information like a sponge; as I finish
this book, I hold two Ph.D. degrees and teach my own university courses on
three continents. Accordingly, the various voices found in the book reflect my
own journey from what Jonathan Z. Smith once called a writer of a “dissertation,” marked by an “inability to argue and to accept responsibility for decisions
of inclusion and exclusion, […] a bland nodding to authority,” to the writer of a
“thesis,” characterized by a “combative and assertive” disposition and “painful
and argued decisions of choice” (Smith 2012, 39).
Looking back, it becomes apparent that I wrote this biographical study of
de Martino precisely because my research has always been entangled in the
fabric of my own life’s trajectory. As the German idealist philosopher Johann
Fichte once put it, the kind of philosophy a man chooses depends upon the
kind of man he is. There is no doubt that my departure from Switzerland as a
young man has profoundly marked my identity. It is as if the drive to escape the
Kantönligeist, which stifled my creativity as a teenager, acted as the most productive catalyst over the past decade of my life. In the United States, I learned
what it means to be free, Rome has taught me how to enjoy life, and Israel
showed me how to find peace in contradiction.
Although I never suffered the bouts of famous Swiss nostalgia for mothers’
soups and Alpine folk tunes, my identity is nonetheless rooted in my family.
Thematically, for instance, the articulation of an Italian perspective on the
apocalypse can also be seen as an expedition into my own family’s history.
As they left Italy two generations ago to settle across the alps, it was a conscious choice to end one world in order to restart another. In terms of my way
of thinking, I was shaped by my parents. From my father, I inherited a deep
love for the construction of ideas, the laying out of arguments, the journeying
into the world of thoughts. My mother, by contrast, instilled in me a curiosity
for living cultures, a capacity for vision, as well as a commitment to practical
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Acknowledgments
resolve and courageous decision based on intuition. There is no doubt that this
project, like many others in my life, would have never been completed without
her support.
Writing a book on the dialectical nature of de Martino’s thought for an
Anglophone audience also reflects the future trajectory of my family. I thank
Katie, who has been a wonderful mother to our children and a human being
with whom I’ve grown tremendously over the past fifteen years. Finally,
although they once asked me to write about things that are relevant to them—
specifying that they would read anything about unicorns and LEGO cars—this
book evokes a spirit that I hope to instill in my three children: Loyal recovery of an old heritage and a transcendent assertion of one’s own place within
this larger tradition. Of course, I expect neither myself nor my children to ever
achieve such a complete coincidenta oppositorum. On the contrary, just like
Benedetto Croce, the Italian idealist teacher of de Martino, I see this way of
living as an ongoing project of world-building, always incomplete and continuously inviting for new construction. In this spirit, I would amend Fichte’s
previously invoked adage and state that the kind of philosophy a man chooses
depends not upon the kind of man he is, but rather upon the kind of man he
wants to become.
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Let the Earth Shake: From Crisis-Born Hero to
Master of Civilizational Crisis
A short while ago, the atrocious news of the earthquake of Messina
had reached Naples and the people stood bewildered in light of a
tragedy, which seemed to be of cosmic proportions. As people were
learning hour by hour more terrifying particulars, their imagination
fabricated even greater terror. The night before I was born, a convoy
for collecting clothing for the sufferers from the earthquake from
Calabria and Sicily was passing through Via Fonseca. My mother
used to tell me that, upon the signals by the men of the convoy,
which emerged as high-pitched shouts and invocations, the windows of the high apartment buildings would open up, the balconies would fill up with people, and the women would throw down
offerings: Bed sheets, gowns, shirts, underwear, socks, shoes, infant
straps, skirts, blouses for women and suits for men. In this downpour of paraphernalia, the shouting of those who were giving and
those who were receiving, the crying of the women, and the clamor
of the low gateways out of which ever more donors surfaced, the
street was transformed into an immense oblative phantasmagoria. It was difficult to distinguish pain from celebration, pity from
gratitude, receiving from giving. My mother, excited and moved,
was also on the balcony to make her offering. Then, so she used to
say, upon seeing a Sicilian refugee in mourning sitting on top of a
wagon of this convoy with a baby on her breast, she at once felt
her legs buckle. Asking for support from her neighbors, she was carried home. They sat her down in the nearest chair. […] When she
regained consciousness, she looked around with her eyes veiled in
tears and murmured: “We are ready.” The labor had started.1
∵
1 Ernesto De Martino, Vita di Gennaro Esposito, Napoletano, ed. Luigi Chiriatti (Calimera:
Edizioni Kurumuny, 2004), 10–11. All translations from works cited in Italian, Spanish,
French, and German are mine unless otherwise indicated.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_002
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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2
Let the Earth Shake
In this passage, which forms part of a larger collection of autobiographical
reflections, all of which are translated for the first time in this study, Ernesto
de Martino (1908–1965) retells the story of what happened the night he was
born. What is striking about this account is not only the author’s evocative literary style, in which the use of a term like “oblative phantasmagoria” gives the
reader an important hint at his identity as an intellectual trained in the study
of religion, but also that he intentionally located his birth within the context of
a cosmic drama. Entitled Via Fonseca, this passage depicts the dramatic scenes
taking place in the street in front of de Martino’s house after the earthquake
of Messina on December 28th, 1908 as the city of Naples was flooded with displaced victims in search of food, clothing, and shelter. The 1908-earthquake
shook much of Southern Italy in the early morning hours with a moment magnitude of 7.1. Lasting for a mere thirty seconds, it was a massive event of international dimensions. Leveling entire cities, permanently altering coast lines,
and causing the death of close to 100,000 people, it was the most destructive
earthquake ever to strike Europe in recorded history and left a lasting mark on
the collective psyche of Italians for decades to come.2
What makes de Martino’s retelling of his birth even more remarkable, is the
fact that it is mythopoeic in nature, consisting of a combination of historical
realities and the creative re-envisionings by its author. Indeed, while the devastating earthquake of Messina shook the Island of Sicily on December 28th,
1908, Ernesto was born in Naples on December 1st. In the same year, but almost
a full month earlier. The earthquake narrative sets the tone for the rest of de
Martino’s life as the trope of the shaking earth is a repeatedly invoked in his
writings. Throughout his career, the Italian thinker linked natural calamities,
particularly earthquakes, with socio-political crises and intellectual debates in
Italy, Europe, and the Western world as a whole. The idea of the earthquake
being an “extraordinary event,” which can stimulate an intellectual movement towards “deeper spiritual reflection,” stems from Ernst Cassirer, the
early twentieth-century neo-Kantian philosopher, whom de Martino greatly
appreciated.3 Just as the Lisbon earthquake of 1755 changed the thinking of
Goethe, Rousseau, Voltaire, and Kant, de Martino portrays himself as the
spawn of crisis to set the theme for the century-long intellectual, spiritual, and
2 Giorgio Boatti, La terra trema: Messina 28 dicembre 1908. I trenta secondi che cambiarono
l’Italia, non gli italiani (Milano: Mondadori, 2004).
3 Ernst Cassirer and James Haden, Kant’s life and thought (1918; repr., New Haven: Yale
University Press, 1981), 59. For a discussion of de Martino’s relationship to Cassirer, see chapter 6 of part II.
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Let the Earth Shake
3
cultural aftershocks that would follow the tremblor of his birth in the early
twentieth century.
Today, in light of a series of challenges—such as the corona virus pandemic,
climate change, or the refugee emergencies in Europe and North America—
debates surrounding the crisis of Western civilization seem as present as never
before. However, what common discourse frequently forgets is that none of
these ideas are as new as they might seem. On the contrary, the history of the
Western world is characterized by a long-standing tradition of crisis-thinking
that exerted a deep fascination on de Martino. As scholars since his untimely
death in 1965 have argued, de Martino’s work was dominated by the idea of
the “coexistence of modernity with that of the apocalypse.”4 Roughly one hundred years after the publication of Oswald Spengler’s Decline of the West (1918)
and the ravaging of the “Spanish flu” (1918–19), this first comprehensive study
of the life and work of Ernesto de Martino (1908–1965) in English language
retells the dramatic story of civilizational crisis in the twentieth through the
eyes of scholarship on religion.
While Ernesto de Martino is one of the greatest thinkers on religion that
Italy has ever produced, his work has remained largely unknown outside of
his native land until today. The reasons for this neglect, particularly in the
Anglophone world, are multiple. Not only have Italian thinkers generally
received less attention than their French and German counterparts, but de
Martino was also a particularly complex individual with a wide range of concerns and orientations. I remember that when I first envisioned writing a book
about de Martino in 2010, I climbed through the stacks of the old Alderman
library at the University of Virginia, having to collect his individual works from
various sections, many of them located on different floors: History of religions,
cultural anthropology, folklore, musicology, transcultural psychiatry, or moral
philosophy. While his thinking can be theoretically unified in its life-long fascination with the study of religion and its relationship to apocalypse and rebirth,
his explorations were broad: From Ancient Greek ritual to Marxist ideology,
from the Fascist sacralization of the state to Southern Italy’s folkloric practices
surrounding spider-bitten women, or from apocalyptic tendencies in modern
French literature to the Christian roots of secularism, de Martino had something to say about all of these issues. Finally, another factor contributing to his
relative neglect by international scholarship is that his thinking about crisis
always involved a political dimension. Here too, his persona was anything but
one-dimensional: After registering with the fascist party during his years as a
4 Placido Cherchi, “La Presenza Della Crisi, in « L’Indice » 20, 2 (1989),” L’Indice 20, no. 2
(n.d.): 36.
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4
Let the Earth Shake
student, he later joined the anti-fascist militia, before becoming a leading force
in Italian socialist and communist circles.
In light of this remarkable breadth, it is little surprising that his work has
provoked a flood of studies from many different orientations. Particularly in
Italy, de Martino has become a cult-like figure with followers from all possible
fields of research in recent years. During my years of research in Rome, where
I benefited from access to de Martino’s archives hosting a treasure-trove of
unpublished materials, I found knowledgeable admirers of his thinking not
only in the form of historians of religion and anthropologists, but also in socialist politicians, undergraduate students of musicology, experts of Italian philosophy, and pretty much anyone stemming from the mezzogiorno, the Southern
region of Italy. Although de Martino is still one of the most underestimated
scholars of religion of the twentieth century, the few international studies
dedicated to his work have emphasized how his true importance can be fruitfully compared to the likes of Mircea Eliade (1907–1986), Claude Lévi-Strauss
(1908–2009), and Clifford Geertz (1926–2006).5 What has never been comprehensively addressed, however, is that this uniquely colorful Italian thinker
positioned himself in the heart of the international discipline of religious
studies. Indeed, de Martino entertained a fertile exchange with the phenomenologist of religion Mircea Eliade with whom he shared an interest in religious experience and its relevance for the political circumstances during the
1930s. He engaged in a close reading of all the major works of the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, with whom he agreed that a distancing perspective
that moves beyond this experience was necessary for understanding religion.
Finally, he also articulated important anticipatory remarks on what would
become Clifford Geertz’s interpretative anthropology, sharing its emphasis on
a self-reflexive encounter with foreign religious cultures.
In all of these appointments with his time’s leading scholars of religion, de
Martino highlighted how the twentieth-century study of religion was shaped by
an underlying fascination with civilizational crisis. The Italian thinker believed
that scholars of religion, just like a thermometer for body temperature, were
5 George R. Saunders, “‘Critical Ethnocentrism’ and the Ethnology of Ernesto De Martino,”
American Anthropologist 95, no. 4 (1993): 875; Giordana Charuty, Ernesto de Martino: les
vies antérieures d’un anthropologue (Marseille: Parenthèses, 2009), 8; Vincent Crapanzano,
“Foreword,” in The Land of Remorse: A Study of Southern Italian Tarantism, by Ernesto De
Martino, trans. Dorothy Louise Zinn (London: Free Association Books, 2005), vii; Emilio
Giacomo Berrocal, “The Post-Colonialism of Ernesto De Martino: The Principle of Critical
Ethnocentrism as a Failed Attempt to Reconstruct Ethnographic Authority,” History and
Anthropology 20, no. 2 (2009): 123; Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion: The
Crisis and the Presence (Sheffield: Equinox Publishing, 2012), xii.
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Let the Earth Shake
5
particularly sensitive to the feverishly mercurial nature of their world. For
example, he argued that the scholarly projects of leading figures of the first half
of the century, like Rudolf Otto and Mircea Eliade, were largely driven by the
idea of civilizational crisis as a radical rupture from a premodern theological
worldview. More generally, commenting on the lack of unified vision in light
of the divergent perspectives, de Martino characterized the discipline itself as
a field ruptured by crisis. He not only diagnosed that the leading thinkers of
the study of religion in the twentieth century incarnated the socio-political
tensions surrounding them, but he also believed that this led to the materialization of distinct currents of thought within the discipline. Specifically,
in the twentieth century, the crisis-ridden discipline of religious studies was
operating on three tectonic plates: The insider-phenomenological approach of
Mircea Eliade, the outsider-explanatory approach of Claude Lévi-Strauss, and
the cultural-discursive approach of Clifford Geertz.
Beyond situating him within the global discipline of religious studies
through the relationship with Eliade, Lévi-Strauss, and Geertz, this study also
offers an interpretation of the comprehensive corpus of his published and
unpublished writings, introduces his major teachers amongst the Italian intelligentsia, and lays open the complex socio-political context that gave rise to de
Martino’s thinking. Born in Naples in 1908 and passing away in Rome in 1965,
he lived through some of the most turbulent years of recent history: Coming
of age after WWI and the time Mussolini took power to create a “third Italy,”
emerging as a scholar during the Civil War and the Resistance in the final years
of WWII, gaining the status of a leading intellectual during the reemergence of
the “Southern Question” in the 1950s, before dedicating the end of his life to
the investigation of apocalyptic movements in all realms of cultural production during the cold war years, de Martino was always on the forefront of intellectual and political debates that marked the Western world.
Despite his fascination with crisis as a rupture that encompassed civilization, politics, and science, de Martino’s fundamental attitude remained steadfastly committed to optimism. His thought reached its most radical expression
in the moments when he argued that crisis must be regarded as an opportunity
for civilizational renewal or rebirth. The greatest power of de Martino’s work
might lie in his insistence that intellectuals can only overcome crisis if they are
willing to generate a “unity of thought” that overcomes our culture’s tendency
to think in “separate entities” (“compartimenti-stagni”).6 This is even more true
for our globalized, digitalized, and rapidly changing world. As the coronavirus
6 Ernesto De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, ed. Stefano De Matteis (1941;
repr., Lecce: Argo, 1997), 56.
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Let the Earth Shake
pandemic has painfully reminded us, we are increasingly confronted with
complex crises that are just as biological as they are cultural, just as scientific as
they are social, just as virological as they are political. In this light, de Martino’s
eclectic research interests, his continuous composition of speculative theories
in light of empirical phenomena, and his fearless integration of contrasting
disciplinary perspectives are more relevant than ever.
In this book, I decode de Martino’s philosophy of civilizational crisis and
cultural palingenesis by means of seven concepts that marked his scholarship
over the course of his career. In the first chapter, I tell the story of the young
Ernesto’s early years as a student and explain how his scholarly interests in religion, like that of many of his contemporaries, can only be understood in light
of “the decline of the West” (la decadenza dell’occidente), a concept that stands
for the larger crisis of the modern world-view of progress and the rise of cultural pessimism during the interwar years. In chapter 2, I discuss “civil religion”
(religione civile) by juxtaposing it to Eliade’s “politics of nostalgia,” arguing that
the Italian scholar’s thinking was based on a palingenetic conception of time
according to which political religion is both the return to something from the
past and the invention of something new. In chapter 3, I elaborate on “the crisis
of the presence” (la crisi della presenza), arguing that de Martino used it not
only to explain the origin of magic in non-modern societies, but also to warn of
a contemporary crisis, namely the rise of magical thinking during the Second
World War. In discussing the theory of “de-historification” (destorificazione)
in chapter 4, I argue that it allowed the Italian thinker to integrate the positions of the insider-phenomenological approach of Eliade and the outsiderexplanatory approach of Lévi-Strauss as religion is both a flight from history
and an effective means to transform it. In chapter 5, I introduce the concept of
“critical ethnocentrism” (etnocentrismo critico), which de Martino developed
during his ethnographic explorations of the Italian South in the 1950s, arguing
that it is marked by a series of traits that can also be found in Lévi-Strauss’s
Tristes Tropiques and post-colonial anthropology. Centered on the “loyalty to
the cultural homeland” ( fedeltà alla patria culturale), chapter 6 shows that de
Martino, despite having much in common with interpretative and self-reflexive
anthropology of the likes of Clifford Geertz, virulently opposed any form of
cultural relativism, remaining firmly committed to the values of Western
civilization. Finally, chapter 7 explores de Martino’s final notes redacted
before his death in order to explore the “ethos of transcendence” (ethos del
trascendimento), a principle that forms the foundation for a strong cognitive
and moral model of truth, which promises to offer an effective alternative to
post-modern thinking.
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Let the Earth Shake
7
Thus, if much of recent scholarship on de Martino has started to celebrate him as an early harbinger of the various turns that characterize postcolonialism, poststructuralism, and postmodernism, this study makes a
different argument.7 De Martino’s work was profoundly dialectical in nature.
If it is post-modern, then only inasmuch as it remained deeply grounded in
modernity. As a consequence, his work should be regarded as an anticipated
analysis of and resolute response to the cultural-discursive paradigm that
came to dominate the humanities in recent decades. Although many of his
political and intellectual choices will sound questionable and smack of a naïve
form of modernism—particularly his youthful infatuation with fascism and
his steadfast commitment to ethnocentrism—his value lies precisely in his
commitment to a dialectical type of science. De Martino’s dialectical thinking
encourages us to Let the Earth Shake because any crisis offers science an opportunity to improve its methods and to increase our knowledge about the world.
Unlike contemporary scholars of religion, who have rightly been accused of
believing their science to be “incapable of learning from its mistakes or correcting its weaknesses,”8 de Martino was confident that science is capable of
growth and progress.
7 Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion.
8 Wouter J. Hanegraaff, “Reconstructing ‘Religion’ from the Bottom Up,” Numen 63, no. 5–6
(October 14, 2016): 590.
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chapter 1
The Decline of the West (1908–1929): The Rupture
of Time in Modernity and the Rise of the Prophets
of Crisis
1
Student Years under Fascism and the Guidance of a Spiritual
Prophet of Crisis
It is no coincidence that de Martino published his first scholarly article as a
twenty-one-year-old student at the University of Naples on Oswald Spengler’s
(1880–1936) The Decline of the West (1918), one of the most important books
published during WWI.1 Although scholarship has lamented that “The Decline
of the West” (La decadenza dell’Occidente) consists of only “two immature
pages,”2 and has hastily denied it the status of “insight, or, even less, formulation of specific hypotheses or theories,”3 it is of immense value to the historian
of ideas. In fact, it is the starting point of what would become the marking trait
of de Martino’s thinking for the rest of his life, namely a profound fascination
with the crisis of his own civilization.
Besides the fact that Ernesto de Martino was born in Naples on December
1st 1908, we do not know much about his childhood and upbringing. Ernesto’s
father, who gave his own name to his only son, was an engineer for the Italian
State Railway, and his mother Gina Jaquinangelo was a teacher. About Ernesto
Sr. it is said that he was secularized and patriotic.4 Introducing his mother,
scholars emphasize that she was secular yet open to mediumistic and spiritualistic experiences. De Martino’s family was required to move frequently due
to the profession of the pater familias. As a consequence, the young Ernesto
moved in between Florence, Naples, and Turin. After finishing the liceo,
1 Ernesto De Martino, “La decadenza dell’Occidente,” Rivista del gruppo universitario fascista
napoletano Mussolini I (1929): 28–29. For Spengler’s original work, see Oswald Spengler, Der
Untergang des Abendlandes: Umriss einer Morphologie der Weltgeschichte (Leipzig: Wilhelm
Braunmüller, 1918).
2 Domenico Conte, “Ernesto De Martino e la ‘mobilitazione dell’arcaico,’” in Ernesto De
Martino tra fondamento e “insecuritas,” ed. Giuseppe Cantillo, Domenico Conte, and Anna
Donise (Napoli: Liguori, 2014), 96.
3 Giuseppe Galasso, “La funzione storica del magismo. Problemi e orizzonti del primo de
Martino,” Rivista storica italiana 2, no. CIX (1997): 494.
4 Cesare Bermani, “Tra furore e valore: Ernesto de Martino,” Il De Martino—Bollettino
dell’Istituto Ernesto De Martino 5–6 (1996): 35.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_003
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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The Decline of the West ( 1908–1929 )
9
where he studied Latin and German, he enrolled at the Polytechnic University
(Politecnico) to study Engineering in 1927. Having done so in order to please his
father, he became quickly dissatisfied with this inherited course of studies. A
year later, de Martino left the Piemontese capital to return with his family to
Naples where he commenced his studies in philosophy and religion.
The ideas lived out by his parents—between religion and the nation—
thematically inform his early intellectual activities, which also move between
these two concepts. In fact, de Martino’s early explorations of religion were
closely related to his political engagement with fascism. Not unlike their generous treatment of other eminent Italian historians of religion—such as Raffaele
Pettazzoni (1883–1959) and Giuseppe Tucci (1894–1984)—scholars have been
slow to grasp the weight of de Martino’s youthful endeavors.5 In the case of de
Martino, commentators have generally reduced his involvement with fascism
to a mere outgrowth of the indoctrination in the Italy between the world wars.6
There is, of course, some evidence for such a reading. After the March on
Rome in late October 1922 and Benito Mussolini’s rise to power, the Duce
quickly made the myth of Italy as new nation and as herald of cultural rebirth
into his regime’s “political program.”7 To use a term coined by French sociologist Jean-Paul Willaime, Mussolini’s fascism became an “état éducateur.”8 In
practice, this was nowhere more apparent than in his endeavors to portray fascism as a movement of youth and in his efforts to establish a program of political catechism. This led to “a gigantic operation of ‘public relations’ and ‘social
pedagogy’,”9 which was first introduced in schools and universities, and then
in other realms of culture, until it pervaded most sectors of Italian society.10
5
6
7
8
9
10
Michael Stausberg, “Raffaele Pettazzoni and the History of Religions in Fascist Italy
(1928–1938),” in The Study of Religion under the Impact of Fascism, ed. Horst Junginger
(Leiden: Brill, 2008), 365–86; Gustavo Benavides, “Giuseppe Tucci, Anti-Orientalist,” in
Asian Horizons: Giuseppe Tucci’s Buddhist, Indian, Himalayan and Central Asian Studies,
ed. Angelo Andrea Di Castro and David Templeman (Melbourne: Monash University
Publishing, 2015), 3–15.
A notable exception is the recently published article by Roberto Alciati, in which the
author clearly shows that de Martino’s later theories of religion were already adumbrated
in his writings on fascism as a civil religion. Roberto Alciati, “La religione civile di Ernesto
de Martino,” Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni 85, no. 1 (2019): 285–317.
Robert Wohl, The Generation of 1914 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1979), 178.
Jean-Paul Willaime, “La religion civile à la française et ses métamorphoses,” Social
Compass 40, no. 4 (1993): 574.
Carlo Tullio Altan, Italia: una nazione senza religione civile. Le ragioni di una democrazia
incompiuta (Udine: Istituto editoriale Veneto Friulano, 1995), 55.
Victoria De Grazia, The Culture of Consent: Mass Organization of Leisure in Fascist Italy
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981), 16.
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De Martino entered the University of Naples in 1928 and immediately joined
in the Neapolitan section of the GUF,11 the Fascist University Groups (Gruppi
Universitari Fascisti), which served as the central vehicle for political persuasion
in university education. Two years later he registered with the National Fascist
Party (Partito Nazionale Fascista, PNF) and, in 1932, he joined the Blackshirts
(Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale). In her influential book, entitled
Ernesto De Martino: Les vies antérieures d’un anthropologue (2009), the French
anthropologist Giordana Charuty has convincingly shown that the newly
established GUF were aimed at making university students into “apostles of
the revolution [who] operate the pen just as well as the sword.”12 The fascist
groups offered the students many benefits, such as a center to study, a library,
and medical services. Charuty notes that all of these were “measures of ‘assistance’ through which the regime favors the learning process of variant competences necessary for the progression within the new social hierarchies, while
simultaneously endeavoring to exercise ideological control on the teachers as
well as on the students.”13 This being said, it is imperative to acknowledge that
de Martino’s fascism was much more than merely convenient opportunism. In
fact, I will demonstrate that he regarded fascism as a result of and response to
a profound crisis affecting the modern Western world.
As for his early intellectual formation, de Martino was shaped by a trident
of teachers: Adolfo Omodeo (1889–1946), Raffaele Pettazzoni (1883–1959),
and Vittorio Macchioro (1880–1958). In 1932, he defended his dissertation on
Greek ritual practices under the supervision of his most official teacher, Italy’s
foremost historian of Christianity, Adolfo Omodeo. Two years later, as he proceeded to publish his research in Italy’s preeminent journal for scholars of
religion, Studies and Materials in the History of Religions (Studi e materiali di
storia delle religioni), he did so upon the invitation of the journal’s founder, the
towering figure of religious studies in Italy, Raffaele Pettazzoni.
This being said, the theme of his earliest piece of academic scholarship,
the “gephyrisms,” ritual jeers performed on the bridge of Cephisus in Athens
during the procession of the Eleusian mysteries, point to the third and most
esoteric of de Martino’s teachers. Vittorio Macchioro, indeed, wrote a highly
influential book on Greek mystery religion by the name of Zagreus (1920/30),
which offered an analysis of the paintings in the Villa of the Mysteries (Villa
dei Misteri) in the Ancient Roman city of Pompei after their discovery in 1909.
11
12
13
Domenico Conte, “Decadenza dell’Occidente e ‘fede’ nel giovane de Martino,” Archivio di
storia della cultura 23 (2010): 486.
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 92–93.
Charuty, 93–94.
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The villa in the South of the peninsula is famous for a series of spectacular and
well-preserved frescos. Pursuing a career as curator in archeological museums,
Macchioro had privileged access to these frescos, which are generally believed
to depict the initiation of a young woman into the Greco-Roman mystery cult.
Largely due to the neglect by the official Italian academic world—unlike the
two renowned professors at the universities of Rome and Naples, de Martino’s
third guide would never fulfil his dream of gaining access to a university
position—Macchioro’s massive impact on his student’s thought has remained
obscured for a long time.14 Considering that the creative interpreter of Greek
religion was lecturing at some of the world’s most prestigious institutions and
cultivated contacts with such luminaries as Mircea Eliade and Aby Warburg, it
is indisputable that he is one of the most underestimated Italian intellectuals
of the twentieth century.
De Martino and Macchioro maintained a fertile correspondence that
started in the summer of 1930 when de Martino was stationed as a military
cadet in Northern Italy. It would last for nearly a decade and provide us with
precious insights into a profound and complex relationship. After the initial
letters in 1930, the correspondence was interrupted for almost five years during which Macchioro traveled to lecture throughout the world—particularly
in Europe, the United States, and India. During this time, the teacher’s career
was “in full bloom,”15 while de Martino, finishing his dissertation in 1932 and
making his first forays into religious studies journals in 1933 and 1934, matured
from student to scholar. When their correspondence resumed, Macchioro still
resided in India and prepared for his return to Trieste. De Martino, on the other
hand, lived in the Southern Italian city of Bari where he taught history and philosophy at the Liceo Scientifico A. Scacchi. Around the same time, de Martino
married his guru’s favorite daughter Anna (1911–72), who after finishing her
studies in art history became a teacher at the technical institute of Molfetta,
in December 1935. Just as Mussolini and the women of his nation—giving
up their gold wedding rings in exchange for rings of steel during the “Day of
14
15
Riccardo Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de Martino,” in I greci selvaggi. L’antropologia
storica di Ernesto de Martino (1989; repr., Roma: Manifestolibri, 1999), 17–40; Riccardo Di
Donato, “Una preistoria rivisitata,” in I greci selvaggi. L’antropologia storica di Ernesto de
Martino (Roma: Manifestolibri, 1999), 139–55.
Riccardo Di Donato, “Introduzione: Dioniso in Europa. Esperienza e storia delle religioni,” in Le intrecciate vie: carteggi di Ernesto de Martino con Vittorio Macchioro e Raffaele
Pettazzoni, ed. Riccardo Di Donato and Mario Gandini, Carteggi, I; Anthropoi, 9 (Pisa:
Edizioni ETS, 2015), 30.
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Faith”—entered into a “state of mystic communion,”16 the wedding between
Ernesto and Anna played a unifying role in the relationship between him and
his new father-in-law. Vittorio, isolated from his own family, was relying on
his new son-in-law for some of his emotional connection with his daughter
and wife, who lived with him in an apartment on Corso Vittorio Emanuele in
Bari. With the birth of Ernesto’s first daughter Lia in 1936, the bond between
the two men deepened further. At this time, de Martino started to address his
mentor no longer as “illustrious professor,” but rather as “dear professor,” “dear
friend,” and, finally, “dear Papa.” The same is true for Macchioro who extended
his paternity from his daughter to his son-in-law, signing every letter as
“your father.”
What strikes the reader of their correspondence is not its content, but
rather the apocalyptic atmosphere, the prophetic hope, and the overall dramatic tone expressed therein. Macchioro’s existence was marked by moments
of intense crisis, religious experiences of rebirth, and radical metamorphosis.
First and foremost amongst them was a “disheartening and aporetic” moment
as a volunteer during WWI.17 According to Triestine scholar’s own account, it
was during the night of Maundy Thursday (Giovedì santo) in 1916 when he was
saved by divine hand and encouraged to dedicate the rest of his life to religion. What followed were multiple spiritual conversions, leading him first from
Judaism to Catholicism, then to Protestantism, and finally back to Catholicism.
In this vein, Macchioro liked to assume the mantle of the spiritual guide or
the prophet towards the young Ernesto. In a letter he sent from Calcutta on
September 3 1935, we read:
These are great days, my son. Apocalyptic days: God is revealing himself.
If we could chat, I would tell you other things that provide you with a
more complete picture of the apocalypse. I feel it like an enormous
power: It started with my sickness that destroyed and reconstructed me,
and now it continues with the testament and with the marriage. No one
can tell what the apocalypse is yet to bring and how the revelation will
continue, but I believe that one thing is certain: God is with us.18
It is apparent that Macchioro felt a deep spiritual connection to his son-in-law,
projecting the atmosphere of apocalypse and rebirth into their relationship.
16
17
18
Emilio Gentile, The Struggle for Modernity: Nationalism, Futurism, and Fascism (Westport:
Praeger, 2003), 118.
Di Donato, “Introduzione,” 22.
Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de Martino,” 28.
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The Decline of the West ( 1908–1929 )
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He described their bond, in a letter sent to de Martino in 1939, as a “spiritual
symbiosis” and a “progressive fusion of two destinies and two souls.”19 There
is little doubt that de Martino felt quite likewise for most of the 1930s. In his
first letter, he told his prophetic guide about being “saved by a personal religious experience” in his quest to study Italian myths through the lens of Rudolf
Otto’s numinous.20 A few years later, he mentioned a first adolescent “religious
crisis” during his years in Florence,21 before he wrote the following lines in
January 1939:22
From now on, I should look at you with other eyes, and this means not
the way one looks at the scientist or the artist, but the prophet. You might
be suspicious of my enthusiasm. Nonetheless, I am certain, very certain,
that the things are this way. My studies, of which you are the guardian
angel, confirm it for me every day. Your existence does not solely concern
the realm of my ideas, in which case it would not be that big of a deal. It
concerns all of my spiritual life, my feelings, my character. I now look at
things differently; I judge and feel differently.23
2
The Arrow of Progress and the Unification of a Ruptured Modernity
in Need of Orientation
While the letter exchange does not leave any trace of Macchioro ever offering his new son the “complete picture of the apocalypse,” de Martino himself
would go on to dedicate much of his academic research to the revealing of
such a vision. Throughout his career, he identified the radical rupture brought
about by modernity as the most fundamental factor contributing to the crisis of his civilization. The idea that modernity represents a moment of crisis
would remain remarkably stable throughout de Martino’s life. Consider, for
instance, the following reflections stemming from the end of his life, where
he makes a distinction between “traditional civilizations,” which “base themselves on the intellectual intuition of a transcendent and sacred eternal truth,”
on the one hand, and the modern Western world, on the other. Describing it is
19
20
21
22
23
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 117.
Charuty, 117.
Emilia Andri, Il giovane Ernesto de Martino: storia di un dramma dimenticato (Massa:
Transeuropa, 2014), 27.
The letter of de Martino seems to have been lost, but Macchioro cites long passages of it
in a letter written in mid-February.
Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de Martino,” 34; Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 209.
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as “the only existing anti-traditional culture,” a “monstrosity,” and “a barbarity,”
de Martino elaborates his time’s key attributes:
With the modern age […], the patrimony of the eternal, metaphysical,
and sacred truths has entered into crisis. Disorder, individual opinions,
loss of unity, dispersion in groundless multiplicity […] agitation, lack of
superior principles. […] Democracy is the separation of the temporal
from the spiritual, the social order from the sacred […], the formation of
modern nations, another element of dispersion and of disorder, of division and contradiction in the modern civilization.24
Elsewhere, de Martino found the first signs of modernity’s crisis in the
Renaissance period, which he similarly described as “the source of this loss of
unity.”25 More importantly, he argued that the true issue might not simply lie in
a loss of unity, but rather in its inability to reestablish cultural coherence: “The
Renaissance was the time when the nascent modern civilization very quickly
manifested an insufficient power of expansion and incorporation of the relics
of the past, a defect that later on remained, at least to some extent, its constant
characteristic.”26
If we look a bit deeper, it becomes apparent that this loss of unity was due to
two major transformations that dominated our culture during the eighteenth
and nineteenth centuries: The secularization of politics and the scientification
of reason. On the one hand, it was a time during which the old Christian worldview was gradually abandoned and a new secular vision started to dominate
the Western world.27 Liberalism, as a set of political ideas, arose out of the
sixteenth- and seventeenth-century wars of religion and culminated “in the
Treaty of Westphalia,” which drastically recalibrated the balance between politics and religion in Europe. In the political realm, modernization meant that
religion would be “replaced by an autonomous politics,” which was “based on
purely secular foundations,”28 conceived in exclusively “human terms, without
24
25
26
27
28
Ernesto De Martino, La fine del mondo. Contributo all’analisi delle apocalissi culturali
(Torino: Einaudi, 1977), 496.
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 56.
De Martino, 56.
Mark Lilla, The Stillborn God: Religion, Politics, and the Modern West (New York: Alfred A.
Knopf, 2007), 60.
Bernhard Giesen, “Tales of Transcendence: Imagining the Sacred in Politics,” in Religion
and Politics Cultural Perspectives, ed. Bernhard Giesen and Daniel Šuber (Leiden: Brill,
2005), 94.
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The Decline of the West ( 1908–1929 )
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appeal to divine revelation or cosmological speculation.”29 As de Martino put
it in some hand-written notes in the early 1930s: “Westphalia: When the interest in that which you believe in diminishes, one declares ‘religious tolerance.’
The peace of Westphalia only represents a decline in Christian faith, both catholic and reformed.”30
Mattias Koenig, more comprehensively, summarizes the most important
modernization theories as being marked by their common emphasis on the
“rationalization of previously religious world-views,” “a differentiation of religion and non-religious institutions,” “a pluralization and privatization of religious beliefs,” “a general decline of religion,” and then rightly elaborates on “the
core of the classical paradigm of secularization, namely the thesis of a differentiation between politics and religion.”31 In Germany, this process was accelerated after the establishment of the German Reich in 1871, which brought a
further distancing from the traditional Christian worldview by means of an
unprecedented urbanization and industrialization. On the other hand, these
political, industrial, and economic revolutions had significant scientific consequences as they allowed for the enlightenment of culture. Of particular importance was the unprecedented collection of data. Not only did Western people
learn more about their bodies and the material world surrounding them, but
they also accrued a massive amount of information about other cultures and
other times through historical and philological research.
These transformations in the political realm—where the sacred world of
Christianity gave way to a new political vision premised on the autonomy of
man—and in the scientific realm—which was marked by an unprecedented
accrual of new data about the world in its full cultural and temporal reach—
had important consequences for the self-depiction of Western modern
humanity. Indeed, although Western culture was empowered by its new sociopolitical and scientific accomplishments, the rupture of the old worldview and
confrontation with many others, caused an unprecedented “need for orientation (Orientierungsbedarf).”32
29
30
31
32
Lilla, The Stillborn God, 4.
Eugenio Maria Capocasale, “Gli appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per
un ‘Saggio sulla Religione civile’” (Napoli, Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli,
Università degli Studi “Federico II” di Napoli, 1997), 55.
Mattias Koenig, “Politics and Religion in European Nation-States: Institutional Varieties
and Contemporary Transformations,” in Religion and Politics Cultural Perspectives, ed.
Bernhard Giesen and Daniel Šuber (Leiden: Brill, 2005), 292. He mentions Peter L. Berger,
Thomas Luckmann, Niklas Luhmann, and Bryan Wilson.
Volkhard Krech, Wissenschaft und Religion: Studien zur Geschichte der Religionsforschung
in Deutschland 1871 bis 1933 (Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2002), 39. Aleida Assmann, similarly, speaks of a “continuous crisis of orientation.” Aleida Assmann, “Transformations of
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Modernity’s preferred tool to reestablish order in its socio-political, scientific, and, ultimately, cultural self-understanding was temporal in nature. For
much of modernity, at least since the Enlightenment, the single most valuable
tool for making sense in this new world was “progress.” Reinhard Koselleck—a
wonderfully insightful expositor of modernity—has laid bare that modern
man’s relationship to time changed dramatically between 1750 and 1850, what
he calls the Sattelzeit or Neuzeit.33 It was during this period that the Western
world experienced the “temporalization of history” (“Verzeitlichung der
Geschichte”).34 This meant that the term “history” was for the first time thought
of as a “linear and irreversible ‘arrow of time’,”35 as a totalizing force capable of
encompassing all the particular histories, events, and processes.36
As experts have demonstrated, in light of the overwhelming rise of alterity
through new discoveries, the discipline of religious studies appropriated this
new “time regime”37 because it offered its scholars a “comprehensive paradigm
for ordering the new data.”38 With Hanegraaff, we could say that “the concept
of ‘religion’ emerged, during the early modern period, in response to a crisis
of comparison caused by the increasingly overwhelming evidence for global
diversity in human belief and modes of worship.”39 Without much hesitation,
students of religion used it to reestablish order in a godless world by locating
any new culture, language, or religion that they encountered along a temporal
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
the Modern Time Regime,” in Breaking up Time Negotiating the Borders between Present,
Past and Future, ed. Chris Lorenz and Berber Bevernage (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck &
Ruprecht, 2013), 40.
Reinhart Koselleck, “Einleitung,” in Geschichtliche Grundbegriffe, ed. Otto Brunner,
Werner Conze, and Reinhart Koselleck, vol. 1 (Stuttgart: Klett, 1972), xv.
Reinhart Koselleck, Vergangene Zukunft: zur Semantik geschichtlicher Zeiten (Frankfurt
am Main: Suhrkamp, 1979), 19.
Aleida Assmann, Ist die Zeit aus den Fugen?: Aufstieg und Fall des Zeitregimes der Moderne
(München: Hanser, 2013), 24.
Koselleck, Vergangene Zukunft.
The term “régime d’historicité” has been propagated by François Hartog (cf. François
Hartog, Régimes d’historicité: présentisme et expériences du temps (Paris: Éditions du Seuil,
2003) and has since been widely used by other thinkers concerned with modernity and
its particular conception of time. See, for example, Assmann, Ist die Zeit aus den Fugen?.
James S. Preus, Explaining Religion: Criticism and Theory from Bodin to Freud (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1987), 149.
Hanegraaff, “Reconstructing ‘Religion’ from the Bottom Up,” 598. Emphasis in original. As
a thoughtful reviewer noted, it might be better to speak of an exacerbation of the crisis of
comparison during the early modern period. Indeed, the problem of cultural and religious
encounters not only existed much earlier in “Western” society (the rise of Christianity, the
encounter with Islam), but also represents a global phenomenon (Buddhism as a transnational entity in South, Southeast, and East Asia).
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axis that was driven by progress and moved inexorably from primitive cultures
to the Western world’s superior sophistication.40 This became particularly evident in anthropology, where Auguste Comte’s (1798–1857) positivist model of
cultural development and Charles Darwin’s (1809–1882) biological theory of
the evolution of species found their places within the humanistic framework
of “evolutionism” developed by Herbert Spencer (1820–1903).
The creation of the concept “religion” coincided with the coining of others,
such as “savage,” “barbaric,” and “civilized.” Serving the purpose of giving meaning to a disoriented civilization, these concepts turned the “heavy, tumultuous
thickness of history, into an airy, die-straight thread.”41 The evolutionary current of religious studies was offering orientation in response to the overwhelming number of new discoveries in space by lining them on a temporal string.
As one scholar noted many years ago: While the sighting of alternate histories
“encouraged men to see parallels between primitive and civilized practices,”
the theory of progress and evolution “drew the sting and the stimulus from the
comparison by regarding the former as relics, aliens from another era.”42 Since
then, especially in the wake of post-colonialism, an impressive cohort of scholars from diverse disciplines, primarily history, religious studies, and anthropology, has continued to argue that modern thinkers organized special realms
(cultures, natures, and people) along a temporal axis that was based on evolution. As Eric Sharpe noted for the term “religion:” “Religion became something
which it had never really been before. From being a body of revealed truth, it
became a developing organism.”43 Thanks to these types of studies, I can move
on without digging deeper into the petrified soil of our past to unearth the
skeletons buried by scholars of religion.44
In the modern time regime, the political and the scientific transformations
were ultimately mapped onto the model of progress. If progress provided the
axis, “religion” and “liberalism,” as well as “irrationalism” and “reason” were used
40
41
42
43
44
Matilde Callari Galli and Antonio Colajanni, Gli argonauti: l’antropologia e la società italiana (Roma: Armando, 2000), 192–93.
Daniel Dubuisson, The Western Construction of Religion: Myths, Knowledge, and Ideology,
trans. William Sayers (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2003), 153.
J. W. Burrow, Evolution and Society: A Study in Victorian Social Theory (London: Cambridge
University Press, 1966), 240.
Eric J. Sharpe, Comparative Religion: A History (London: Duckworth, 1975), 48.
Gustavo Benavides, “Modernity,” in Critical Terms for Religious Studies, ed. Mark C. Taylor
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 186–204; Dubuisson, The Western Construction of Religion; Louis Dumont, Essays on Individualism: Modern Ideology in Anthropological Perspective (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986); Talal Asad, Genealogies
of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam (Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1993).
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to indicate specific positions along the axis. Indeed, religion and irrationalism
were henceforth seen as a “tradition,” an inferior form of culture, relegated to
some early strata of civilizational development, considered as conservative,
and usually studied in cultures far removed from our own secularized world.
Liberalism and science, by contrast, were considered to be “modernity,” that is,
progressive and future-oriented categories used to describe our own culture
and its advanced principles.
3
The Crisis of the First World War and the Rise of Oswald Spengler’s
Cultural Pessimism
Everything would change with the devastating events of WWI. With the “sacred
canopy” of religious order lifted, the “traditional structures and lifeways” torn
into pieces,45 the pre-modern embeddedness within fixed conceptions of time
and space “emptied out,”46 and with “progress” no longer a viable option in
light of the destructive historical circumstances, a new sense-making crisis
ensued.47 De Martino, like many of his contemporaries, started to doubt the
validity of the premises of liberalism. In unpublished archival notes, written
during the early 1930s, he commented that “the liberal individual is still a slave
because of the existence of nature, an evil that dodges the jurisdiction of its
will, an evil that it needs to endure.” Consequently, so de Martino concluded,
“the liberty of the individual of liberalism [is] a useless declamation.”48 As
political thinkers started to doubt the validity of liberalism, scholars of religion
too abruptly abandoned their faith in reason and in evolutionary theories while
getting pulled into the whirlwind of crisis.49 Talk about crisis and decline was
one of the most popular responses to the collapse of the progress-liberalismscience nexus. In his analysis of the discourse of the crisis of modernity during
the Weimar years, Michael Makropoulos has not only identified “crisis” and
“contingency” as the two key terms for this period, but also emphasized the
tremendous impact of WWI on the consciousness of modernity. “The 1920s,”
45
46
47
48
49
Fredric Jameson, The Seeds of Time (New York: Columbia University Press, 1994), 84.
Anthony Giddens, The Consequences of Modernity (Stanford: Stanford University Press,
1990), 17.
Roger Griffin, Modernism and Fascism: The Sense of a Beginning under Mussolini and
Hitler (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 48.
Capocasale, “Gli appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per un ‘Saggio sulla
Religione civile,’” 59.
Donald Wiebe, The Politics of Religious Studies (Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan,
1998), 292.
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so he remarks, “were not in this perspective the crisis of modernity, modernity
was itself the completion of the historical crisis of the modern age.”50 Put differently, only with the cataclysmic failure of the myth of progress following the
First World War does the crisis becomes so acute that even the past centuries
are read under the category of “crisis.”
As a student at the University of Naples, when the young Ernesto published
his first article, he did so by standing on the shoulder of one of the twentiethcentury’s greatest crisis-thinkers, Oswald Spengler (1880–1936). Spengler’s
eponymous The Decline of the West (1918) had a “seismological”51 impact when
it was first published in 1918; hitting the “nerve of time,”52 it became an immediate bestseller in the post-WWI climate of Germany. Even Ernst Cassirer, a
neo-Kantian philosopher of a radically different orientation, was impressed by
the book’s fortune noting that “the cause of Spengler‘s success is to be sought
rather in the title of his book than in its contents,” as it “was an electric spark
that set the imagination of Spengler‘s readers aflame.”53 Based on its pseudoscientific morphology of world history according to which each culture
functions like a biological organism, moving through a series of stages that
invariably culminate in a final period of destruction, it perfectly reflected the
pessimistic worldview that dominated those years.
Although there existed individual voices of pessimism before the outbreak of
the war—I am thinking here particularly of Jacob Burckhardt (1818–1897) and
Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)54—and Spengler started his epoch-marking
50
51
52
53
54
Michael Makropoulos, “Krise und Kontingenz. Zwei Kategorien im Modernitätsdiskurs
der Klassischen Moderne,” in Die “Krise” der Weimarer Republik: zur Kritik eines Deutungsmusters, ed. Moritz Föllmer and Rüdiger Graf (Frankfurt: Campus-Verlag, 2005), 56.
Charles R. Bambach, “Weimar Philosophy and the Crisis of Historical Thinking,” in Weimar
Thought: A Contested Legacy, ed. Peter Eli Gordon and John P. McCormick (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2013), 136.
Thomas Rohkrämer, Eine andere Moderne?: Zivilisationskritik, Natur und Technik in
Deutschland 1880–1933 (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 1999), 285.
Ernst Cassirer, The Myth of the State (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1946), 289.
Note that many of Fritz Ringer’s mandarins, Fritz Stern’s politicians of cultural despair,
David Harvey’s modernists, and Isaiah Berlin’s Counter-Enlightenment figures were active
before WWI. Fritz K. Ringer, The Decline of the German Mandarins: The German Academic
Community, 1890–1933 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1969); Fritz Richard Stern,
The Politics of Cultural Despair: A Study in the Rise of the Germanic Ideology (Berkeley:
University of California Press, 1961); David Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity: An
Enquiry into the Origins of Cultural Change (Cambridge: Blackwell, 1989); Isaiah Berlin,
“The Counter-Enlightenment,” in The Proper Study of Mankind: An Anthology of Essays,
ed. Henry Hardy and Roger Hausheer (London: Chatto & Windus, 1997), 243–68. While
these thinkers are right in observing that certain pessimistic trends existed earlier, I tend
to agree with Georg Iggers when he says, “Before the war […] not only the broad masses,
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work before its outbreak, it was Germany’s disastrous defeat in 1918 that “tilted
[its] delicate balance,”55 throwing the country in an unprecedented crisis. Even
more, the war has been described as “the great seminal catastrophe of this
century,”56 as a caesura that “initiated the European self-destruction and the
end of European supremacy in the world,”57 and as the beginning of a thirtyyear long “European civil war.”58 It is therefore not surprising that Spengler’s
Untergang and its “epic metanarrative of how the sun of an entire civilization
was setting, [turned] into an international bestseller.”59
While this cultural pessimism might have been particularly prominent in
Germany—perhaps, as Ian Kershaw speculates as a consequence of the “widespread feeling of national degradation” resulting from the Treaty of Versailles
(1919), the blame for the war, and the significant debt payments—the sense
of crisis was a pan-European phenomenon. Consequently, Spengler was only
the most prominent of a series of prophets of crisis proclaiming the West’s
downfall in increasingly apocalyptic tones. Italy was pulled into the war in
the summer of 1915, a year after the assassination of the heir to the Austrian
throne. Unsurprisingly, the nation, which already before the war was one
of the “weakest of those states that had developed a minimal level of modern
industrialization,”60 was “plunged into an even deeper structural crisis after
the cessation of hostilities,”61 which claimed the lives of six hundred thousand
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
but also the academic world remained relatively immune from the underlying currents of
cultural pessimism.” Cf. Georg G. Iggers, The German Conception of History: The National
Tradition of Historical Thought from Herder to the Present (Middletown: Wesleyan
University Press, 1969), 240. Similarly, Paul Fussell noted, “The Great War was perhaps
the last to be conceived as taking place within a seamless, purposeful ‘history’ involving a
coherent stream of time running from past through present to future,” defining it further
as the war that “reversed the Idea of Progress.” Cf. Paul Fussell, The Great War and Modern
Memory (New York: Oxford University Press, 1975), 8, 21.
Dumont, Essays on Individualism, 154.
George F. Kennan, The Decline of Bismarck’s European Order: Franco-Russian Relations,
1875–1890 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1979), 3.
Jörg Fisch, Europa zwischen Wachstum und Gleichheit: 1850–1914 (Stuttgart: Ulmer,
2002), 14.
Walther L. Bernecker, Europa zwischen den Weltkriegen: 1914–1945 (Stuttgart: Ulmer,
2002), 13.
Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 212.
Stanley G. Payne, “Foreword,” in The Struggle for Modernity Nationalism, Futurism, and
Fascism, ed. Emilio Gentile (Westport: Praeger, 2003), x.
Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 212.
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The Decline of the West ( 1908–1929 )
21
of its young men. Besides Spengler, who was well received in Italy, the peninsula had its own share of cultural pessimists.62
In some ways, both the prophetic figure of Macchioro and the young Ernesto
were part of this group of people. This is not only apparent if we look at their
correspondence, but also if we examine de Martino’s writings during those
years. Between 1932 and 1934, a few years after his inaugural writing on his century’s most famous pessimist, the newly-minted PhD published three articles in
which he furthered his inquiries into the crisis of his civilization63—“Letter to
the Universale” (1932), “Current Observations” (1934), and “Critique and Faith”
(1934). Here too, de Martino’s message remained the same: He spoke of the
“days of crisis,” of the “explo[sion] of the crisis of the System,”64 of the “disorientation of the consciousness facing its fate to change its own Weltanschauung
‘toto caelo,’”65 and of “a crisis […] that befalls the West to this day.”66
De Martino was aware of the fact that the change on the temporal axis—the
replacement of “progress” with “decline”—had to be accompanied by a critique of the ontological and the epistemological convictions of modernity. In
describing the latter, he struck up one of the most reverberant tunes of the
pessimist’s swan song by blaming the “excessive development of our critical
faculty [which is] locking itself into the lucid concept of the philosopher” for
the crisis of modernity.67 Experts have noted that de Martino’s “critical faculty”
can be identified with “critical reason,” the “calculating and utilitarian ratio of
Enlightenment origin.”68 Regarding the ontological crisis, de Martino appreciated that the conceptualization of religion is the result of a backward-looking
attitude that was “armed with historicism”69 and characterized by an exclusive
“enthusiasm [for] historical considerations: One could even say that for [the
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
Domenico Conte, Catene di civiltà: studi su Spengler (Napoli: Edizioni scientifiche italiane, 1994), 144–67; Michael Thöndl, “Die Jahre der Entscheidung im faschistischen
Imperium. Die Rezeption von Oswald Spengler in Mussolinis Italien,” in Oswald Spengler
als europäisches Phänomen der Transfer der Kultur- und Geschichtsmorphologie im Europa
der Zwischenkriegszeit 1919–1939, ed. Zaur Gasimov and Carl Antonius Lemke Duque
(Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2013), 239–62.
These three articles have recently been republished by Domenico Conte: Conte,
“Decadenza dell’Occidente,” 509–17.
Ernesto De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” L’Universale 5, no. 10 (March 1934): 2.
De Martino.
Ernesto De Martino, “Critica e fede,” ed. Domenico Conte, Archivio di storia della cultura
23 (1934 2010): 515.
Ernesto De Martino, “La decadenza dell’Occidente,” ed. Domenico Conte, Archivio di storia della cultura 23 (1929 2010): 508.
Andri, Il giovane Ernesto De Martino, 28.
De Martino, “Critica e fede,” 1934 2010, 516.
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historian] only the past holds dignity and grandiosity.”70 He also defined the
darkness surrounding him as a “crisis of ideals and faith” and, citing a paragraph of Ernest Renan’s The Future of Science (1891) that he “holds particularly
dear,” he blamed “the critical spirit” for “prohibiting chimeras by poisoning
them.” De Martino juxtaposed the modern conception of religion as historical fact to that of pre-modern times, when religion was conceived as myth,
which is always marked by “propulsive,” “enthusiastic,” and based on a sense of
“duty-to-be.”71 As we will see in the following chapter, “civil religion,” which de
Martino developed as an intellectual category with political relevance, can be
regarded as an attempt to revive such a pre-modern form of religion in the garb
of a modern movement, namely fascism.
70
71
Ernesto De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” ed. Domenico Conte, Archivio di storia della
cultura 23 (1934 2010): 511.
Ernesto De Martino, “Critica e fede,” L’Universale 4, no. 17 (September 1934): 269–83.
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chapter 2
Civil Religion (1929–1335): The Return to Something
New as Modernist Alternative to Mircea Eliade’s
Politics of Nostalgia
1
Rudolf Otto and the Return to Religion as Experience
During his early twenties, Ernesto de Martino published not only “The Decline
of the West” and the three previously mentioned articles in the journals of the
propagandistic apparatus of the GUF, but was also privately writing on a neverpublished monograph entitled “Essay on Civil Religion” (“Saggio sulla religione
civile”).1 The draft consists of a total of 59 pages, written by hand in fountain
pen and pencil on sheets of various different formats and sizes.2 Collectively,
these writings make it plain that the young Ernesto was both an active participant in the ideological formulation of fascism as a religion and an emergent
historian of religion. For de Martino, civil religion was a program of cultural
rebirth that was not only born from an acute sense of civilizational crisis, but
also propelled by an indestructible faith that the union of religion and politics
in the form of fascism would bring about renewal and greatness to a declining continent.
De Martino further believed that the discipline of religious studies played
a particularly central role in dealing with the crisis befalling Western civilization. “In the whole cultural sphere,” de Martino would write later in his life,
“it is the history of religion that is the weakest and most sensitive sector.” The
discipline of religious studies, so the Italian scholar was convinced, is “the one
in which the conflicts and contradictions break out with greater ease, […] the
domain, which, once the entire cultural world of which it is part enters into
1 The mutual references between his political and his scholarly work are rare, but not inexistent. In his letter to the Universale, for example, he wrote that the reader “should know
that who is writing is actually a scholar of primitive religions and not, as it would seem, a
politician by profession.” Ernesto De Martino, “Lettera a ‘L’Universale,’” ed. Domenico Conte,
Archivio di storia della cultura 23 (1932 2010): 510.
2 For a study and careful transcription of this text, see the doctoral thesis by Capocasale, “Gli
appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per un ‘Saggio sulla Religione civile.’” Because
I only had limited access to Capocasale’s thesis, I cite the “Essay” in part from his transcribed
text and in part from the handwritten version found in the archives.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_004
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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crisis, manifests the first and the most extended signs of decline.”3 Even more
importantly, and here de Martino decisively distanced himself from the pessimism of Spengler—accusing him of “dreaming up horrible massacres in which
Germany acts as sadist gravedigger”4—he was also certain that it was the discipline of religious studies that had the energies necessary to bring about a
rebirth of Western civilization.5 In an article entitled “Myth, Religious Studies,
and Modern Civilization,” published a quarter of a century later, he retroactively identified the final years of WWI as the key moment of his time, not only
because of their political import but also because they provoked a decisive
response within the Western intelligentsia:
It was precisely in 1917 that a theologian and historian of religions of
the University of Marburg published a little book, whose fate would
be extraordinary and which carried a notable influence, not only on
the historical-religious methodology and the revaluation of the sacred,
but on the consciousness and the cultural sensibility in general. […] In
some sense, the work of Rudolf Otto inaugurates the cultural era that
is characterized by the crisis of historicism in Germany […]. Indeed, in
1918 Spengler’s Untergang des Abendlandes appears, while in 1919 the first
edition of the Barthian Römerbrief, together with Jasper’s Psychologie der
Weltanschauungen, opens up the so-called Kierkegaardian Renaissance.6
Despite the dearth of detailed studies on their relationship, Rudolf Otto (1869–
1937) and his immensely influential book—The Idea of the Holy—exerted a significant influence on de Martino’s thinking about religion.7 Published in 1917, a
year before Spengler’s epochal work, Das Heilige was “not a direct response to
the War [but rather] the culmination of a […] program that had begun to take
3 Ernesto De Martino, “La storia delle religioni. In margine ad un congresso internazionale,”
L’Unità, April 27, 1955, 3.
4 De Martino, “La decadenza dell’Occidente,” 1929 2010, 507.
5 De Martino first appreciates “the prophetism” of Oswald Spengler as “one of the most interesting manifestations […] of the problem of the West,” before making it clear that his position differs in one key point, namely his belief in a “real rebirth.” De Martino, 508.
6 Ernesto De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” in Furore, simbolo, valore
(1959; repr., Milano: Feltrinelli, 2002), 36–37.
7 A notable exception is the recent article by Sergio Fabio Berardini: Sergio Fabio Berardini, “Il
sacro nella storia : Ernesto De Martino critico di Rudolf Otto,” Archivio di filosofia LXXXVI, no.
3 (2018): 139–48.
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Civil Religion ( 1929–1335 )
25
shape almost twenty years earlier.”8 Yet it propelled Otto “almost overnight
[…] into international notoriety”9 as it was “in such accordance with the mood
of the times”10 that it went through 30 editions before 1936.11 As one scholar
would summarize its impact on the Zeitgeist: “[Das Heilige was] probably the
most widely read German theological work of the twentieth century.”12 In Italy
too, Otto’s magnum opus made a splash in intellectual circles, provoking a host
of commentaries early on.13
Contemporary scholars agree that Otto’s book not only outlined the “hypotheses and methodological consideration of almost the entire study of religion
during the Weimar period,”14 but it was generally central to the establishment
of “the science of religion [as] a normative science.”15 De Martino, similarly,
consistently applauds Otto’s contribution to religious studies and recognizes
its immense methodological and theoretical value.16 The most curious thing
about Otto’s book, in the eyes of de Martino, was that it had a dual function,
which he called the “double-character of the Numinous”17 or the “ambivalent
wholly other”:18 It was just as much “enacted religion” as it was “philosophy of
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
Todd A. Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity: An Interpretation of Rudolf Otto’s Philosophy
of Religion (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2000), 135.
Gooch, 133.
Adolf Von Harnack, “Rezension zu Rudolf Otto, ‘Das Heilige,’” Deutsche Literaturzeitung
45, no. 993 (1924).
Kocku Von Stuckrad, The Scientification of Religion: An Historical Study of Discursive
Change, 1800–2000 (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2014), 125.
Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity, 1.
See, for example, Ernesto Buonaiuti, “La religione nella vita dello spirito,” Ricerche religiose 2 (1926): 193–217; Benedetto Croce, “Recensione a R. Otto, ‘Il Sacro,’” La Critica 26
(1928): 192. Unlike Der Untergang, Otto’s book was already available to de Martino in its
Italian version Rudolf Otto, Il sacro: l’irrazionale nell’idea del divino e la sua relazione al
razionale, trans. Ernesto Buonaiuti (Bologna: Nicola Zanichelli, 1926).
Rainer Flasche, “Religionsmodelle und Erkenntnisprinzipien der Religionswissenschaft
in der Weimarer Zeit,” in Religions- und Geistesgeschichte der Weimarer Republik, ed.
Hubert Cancik and Hermann Bausinger (Düsseldorf: Patmos, 1982), 267.
Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity, 56.
Ernesto De Martino, “Il concetto di religione,” in Scritti minori su religione marxismo e
psicoanalisi, ed. Roberto Altamura and Patrizia Ferretti (1933; repr., Roma: Nuove edizioni
romane, 1993), 49–51. Ernesto De Martino, “‘Alter’ e ‘ater,’” in Scritti minori su religione
marxismo e psicoanalisi, ed. Roberto Altamura and Patrizia Ferretti (Roma: Nuove
edizioni romane, 1993), 86–88.
De Martino, “Il concetto di religione,” 50; Rudolf Otto, Das Heilige: Über das Irrationale in
der Idee des Göttlichen und sein Verhältnis zum Rationalen (Breslau: Trewendt & Granier,
1917), 39.
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 39, 41, 63.
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religion.”19 As a consequence, he defined the numinous as a “hybrid product,
in which the historical science of religious life and religious life in action blend
together.”20 Again, de Martino’s insights resonate with contemporary scholarship. Indeed, as Todd Gooch, an expert on Otto’s thought, recently noted, Das
Heilige was “not only a book about religion [but] also a religious book.”21 While
many scholars have noted that Otto’s argument was marked by a “doubleness,”22
few have recognized that the root cause for this doubleness must be sought
in the historical context of modernity and its crisis, which I adumbrated in
chapter 1.
Inserting the doubleness of Otto’s book into this study’s narrative, it becomes
apparent that the Marburgian’s view was premised on a decisively anti-modern
stance. If the secular liberal politics and the rise of science and reason were the
marking traits of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, Otto reversed these
priorities: The theologian stood for the return of religion and the revaluation
of the irrational. The two elements are, of course, intimately linked. Indeed,
what made Otto’s book so attractive was not only that it attempted to respond
to the civilizational crisis of meaning by campaigning for the “‘rediscovery’ of
religion,”23 but that this “religion” had a particular nature. The rediscovery was
to proceed not through reason, but through the religious experience of the
numinous, which was based on a method of “listening inwardly in a spirit of
empathy and intuition.”24
Otto’s emphasis on religion and the irrational perfectly reflected the
German context of the interwar years, which was marked by an opposition
to technology and ritual and an obsession with “individualism, spontaneity,
and immediate experience.”25 As Kippenberg noted, for much of Europe of
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
De Martino, “Il concetto di religione,” 48.
Ernesto De Martino, “Storicismo e irrazionalismo nella storia delle religioni,” in Scritti
minori su religione marxismo e psicoanalisi, ed. Roberto Altamura and Patrizia Ferretti
(1957; repr., Roma: Nuove edizioni romane, 1993), 128.
Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity, 132.
Lynn Poland, “The Idea of the Holy and the History of the Sublime,” The Journal of
Religion 72, no. 2 (1992): 175; Dubuisson, The Western Construction of Religion, 60; Ivan
Strenski, Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century History: Cassirer, Eliade, Levi Strauss
and Malinowski (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 1987), 113; Hans G. Kippenberg,
Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
2002), 179; Gregory D Alles, Religious Studies: A Global View (London: Routledge, 2008), 19.
Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity, 197.
Hans Thomas Hakl, Eranos: An Alternative Intellectual History of the Twentieth Century,
trans. Christopher McIntosh (Montréal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2014), 311.
Sharpe, Comparative Religion, 161.
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the interwar years, a “Verseelichung,” such as the one proposed by Otto, was
seen as the only means of cultural renewal.26 The Neapolitan scholar also
regarded the Marburgian theologian’s writings on religion as irrational experience as a perfect reflection of the spiritual condition of post-WWI Germany. He
described Otto’s Das Heilige as the beginning of “a new period of the cultural
history of Europe (or, if you will, Euro-American)” marked by “the sacred, the
myth, the ritual, the primitive, the magic, the verdant varieties of religions.”27
De Martino believed that “the ‘ambivalent wholly other’ configures itself as a
moment beyond reduction to something else, as a given that is the ultimate
Thule of analysis: One can relive it, describe it, and suggest it in some way, but
one cannot properly regenerate it in thought.”28
The letter exchange with his mentor and future father-in-law even shows
that de Martino even flirted with the idea of getting himself absorbed in a
conception of religion as something beyond reason, as an “experience.” In his
first letter, written in the summer of 1930, de Martino thanked Macchioro for
encouraging him to read Rudolf Otto’s Il Sacro and confessed that “this book
has made a big impression” on him. He then introduced his most recent project on “the history of paganism” by shedding light on “the hidden meaning”
of the usually neglected “Italian myths and legends.”29 In that same letter, he
also revealed that the myths are illuminated through the power of two flaming
torches, the first one being Otto’s book, the second being his “own religious
experiences.”30 It is well known, of course, that the Marburgian thinker’s work
has been described as an “experientialist theology”31 and that Das Heilige contains a famous passage in which he urged the readers, who have not experienced the numinous “to not read any further.”32
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
Hans G. Kippenberg, Discovering Religious History in the Modern Age (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2002), 179.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 258.
Ernesto De Martino, Furore, simbolo, valore (Milano: Feltrinelli, 2002), 39–40.
This letter was written in Moncalieri on August 18 1930. Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 117.
Di Donato, “Una preistoria rivisitata,” 144. Riccardo Di Donato and Mario Gandini, eds., Le
intrecciate vie: carteggi di Ernesto de Martino con Vittorio Macchioro e Raffaele Pettazzoni,
Carteggi, I; Anthropoi, 9 (Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2015), 36.
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 117. Di Donato, “Una preistoria rivisitata,” 144. Di Donato and
Gandini, Le intrecciate vie, 36.
Peter Eli Gordon, “Weimar Theology: From Historicism to Crisis,” in Weimar Thought:
A Contested Legacy, ed. Peter Eli Gordon and John P. McCormick (Princeton: Princeton
University Press, 2013), 162.
Otto, Das Heilige, 9.
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chapter 2
Mircea Eliade’s Politics of Nostalgia and the Rebirth of
Western Civilization
Scholarship has described what happened in the discipline of religious studies
in the wake of Rudolf Otto’s work as an “irrationalist turn.”33 Ernesto was in
many ways part of this general trend as he was attracted to Otto’s oeuvre not
only for its foundational role for the discipline of religious studies, but also
because it was helpful in his own mission to lead Western civilization to experience its rebirth. As the world of progress was replaced by a world in decline,
the belief in reason was superseded by an infatuation with the irrational, and
political liberalism was replaced with religious forms of politics.
Now, the anti-modern nature of the response to ontological secularization
and scientification points to the fact that the revaluation of religion and the
turn to irrationalism are further accompanied by a temporal dimension. In
Otto, the irrational dimension of the experience of the sacred is deeply associated with the longing for the primitive and archaic. This temporal attitude has
been described as “the politics of nostalgia,” one of the dominant tropes in
interpreting the work of one of Otto’s most influential heirs, namely Mircea
Eliade (1907–1986). One year older than the protagonist of this book, Eliade
not only became a historian of religion through the turbulent and war-ridden
years of the twentieth century, but he also shared de Martino’s understanding of modernity as crisis. In a letter to Emile Cioran from 1935, for instance,
Eliade wrote not only that “Europe is dying,” but also expressed a general “disgust for Europe” as a “continent that discovered profane sciences, philosophy,
and social equality.”34
At the same time, Eliade also shared the Neapolitan thinker’s aspirations
for religious rebirth through totalitarian politics. The Romanian thinker
33
34
Flasche, “Religionsmodelle und Erkenntnisprinzipien der Religionswissenschaft in
der Weimarer Zeit”; Rainer Flasche, “Religiöse Entwürfe und religiöse Wirkungen von
Religionswissenschaftlern,” in Die Religion von Oberschichten: Religion, Profession,
Intellektualismus, ed. Peter Antes and Donate Pahnke (Marburg: Diagonal-Verlag, 1989),
203–217; Rainer Flasche, “Der Irrationalismus in der Religionswissenschaft und dessen Begründung in der Zeit zwischen den Weltkriegen,” in Religionswissenschaft und
Kulturkritik: Beiträge zur Konferenz The History of Religions and Critique of Culture in the
Days of Gerardus van der Leeuw (1890–1950), ed. Hans G. Kippenberg and Brigitte Luchesi
(Marburg: Diagonal-Verlag, 1991), 243–257. Horst Junginger, “Introduction,” in The Study of
Religion under the Impact of Fascism, ed. Horst Junginger (Leiden: Brill, 2008), 53–54.
Mircea Eliade, Europa, Asia, America: corespondență, ed. Mircea Handoca (București:
Humanitas, 2004), vol. 1: 151. The translation of this passage comes from Moshe Idel,
who, in a footnote, explicitly links Eliade’s cultural pessimism to that of Oswald Spengler.
Moshe Idel, Mircea Eliade: From Magic to Myth (New York: Peter Lang, 2014), 230.
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understood his field of study to be a “saving discipline,”35 and commentators
have noted that he was driven by the idea that “the history of religions has
a mission,” representing a “scientific and academic discipline […] that presents itself as the champion of a form of renewed religiosity.” Although Natale
Spineto is correct when he remarks that this “trust in the history of religion”
and this “positive judgment on the possibility of the religious renewal of the
contemporary world” could make us critically revisit the common scholarly
perception, “which sees in Eliade a nostalgic of archaic forms of religiosity,” it
is nonetheless true that the Romanian scholar was fascinated by pre-modern
spirituality.36 The first use of the term “politics of nostalgia” goes back to Armin
Geertz and Jeppe Sinding Jensen, who paradigmatically observed that “some
historians of religion have advocated a personal and existentially relevant
attitude to the world’s religious traditions.” “Foremost amongst these,” so they
continue, “is Mircea Eliade who presented modern man’s estrangement from
tradition as fundamentally detrimental to individual and social balance, hence
the politics of nostalgia which seeks, on the basis of a universalist interpretation of religions, to restore Man as a complete and inherently spiritual being.”37
Another excellent example of the politics of nostalgia comes from Ivan Strenski,
who argues that in Eliade’s work, the “radical traditionalism of the Romanian
right [was translated into] a sweeping ontological judgment upon the material, secular, modern world, asserting the value of nostalgia for the archaic,
cosmic, and telluric understood as fundamental human categories.”38 Finally,
Russell T. McCutcheon describes Eliade’s politics of nostalgia as “a romantic,
redemptive project, a political program for constructing a modern social reality on the basis of the presumed difference between tradition, understood as
influential, original, and real, and modernity, understood as devolution, repetition, and unreal.”39
The nexus of nostalgia-religion-irrationalism has frequently been tied to
both fascism as a political movement and the methodological discussions
35
36
37
38
39
Mircea Eliade, Fragments d’un journal, I, 1945–1969, ed. Luc Badesco (Paris: Gallimard,
1986), 537.
Natale Spineto, “Mircea Eliade: materiale per un bilancio storiografico,” in Esploratori
del pensiero umano: Georges Dumézil e Mircea Eliade, ed. Julien Ries and Natale Spineto
(Milano: Jaca Book, 2000), 240–41.
Armin W. Geertz and Jeppe Sinding Jensen, “Tradition and Renewal in the Histories
of Religions: Some Observations and Reflections,” in Religion, Tradition, and Renewal
(Aarhus: Aarhus University Press, 1991), 13.
Ivan Strenski, Thinking about Religion: An Historical Introduction to Theories of Religion
(Cambridge: Blackwell, 2006), 102.
Russell T. McCutcheon, Manufacturing Religion: The Discourse on Sui Generis Religion and
the Politics of Nostalgia (New York: Oxford University Press, 1997), 158.
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within religious studies during the Weimar years. In point of fact, even Otto
had quasi-political convictions of a specifically German type of Christianity
during the Nazi reign.40 While fascism is a notoriously difficult term to define,
the belief that it is associated with “religion”41 and “irrationalism”42 is as old
as fascism itself. Since the works of Popper and Lukács in the 1940s and 1950s,
we witness an unebbing stream of scholars who argue for the intimate link
between fascist politics and separate forms of “philosophical irrationalism.”43
International scholarship has recently solidified this link between the “irrationalist” turn, the origin of fascism, and religious studies.44 In the Italian context,
the “Sandro Italico Mussolini School of Fascist Mysticism” (Scuola di mistica
fascista Sandro Italico Mussolini) was the flagship of fascist irrationalism. As
one commentator recently noted, the “term “mistica” (mysticism) was used at
the school to represent a series of ideas to be relied upon and adhered to by
means of a tradition or feeling, even if these ideas could not be justified in a
rational manner.”45 In scholarship on fascism, its irrationalist tendencies have
usually been identified with a series of parallel key attributes, which share
40
41
42
43
44
45
Pierre Gisel, Jean-Marc Tétaz, and Valérie Nicolet Anderson, eds., “Statut et forme d’une
théorie de la religion,” in Théories de la religion: diversité des pratiques de recherche,
changements des contextes socio-culturels, requêtes réflexives (Genève: Labor et Fides,
2002), 31.
Emilio Gentile, “Fascism as Political Religion,” Journal of Contemporary History 25, no. 2/3
(1990): 230; Emilio Gentile, Il culto del littorio: la sacralizzazione della politica nell’Italia
fascista (Bari: Laterza, 1993), 276. See also Michela Nacci, “La crisi della civiltà: fascismo
e cultura europea,” in Tendenze della filosofia italiana nell’età del fascismo, ed. Eugenio
Garin and Ornella Pompeo Faracovi (Livorno: Belforte editore libraio, 1985), 64–65.
Peter Davies and Derek Lynch, The Routledge Companion to Fascism and the Far Right
(London: Routledge, 2002), 92.
Karl R. Popper, The Open Society and Its Enemies (London: Routledge, 1945); György
Lukács, Die Zerstörung der Vernunft (Berlin: Aufbau-Verlag, 1954).
Hans G. Kippenberg, “Einleitung: Religionswissenschaft und Kulturkritik,” in Religionswissenschaft und Kulturkritik: Beiträge zur Konferenz The History of Religions and Critique
of Culture in the Days of Gerardus van der Leeuw (1890–1950), ed. Hans G. Kippenberg and
Brigitte Luchesi (Marburg: Diagonal-Verlag, 1991), 27; Georg Dörr and Hubert Mohr, “Religionswissenschaft und Kulturwissenschaft: Die ‘Schule von Rom’ und die deutsche Religionsgeschichte des zwanzigsten Jahrhunderts,” in Epitomē tes oikoumenēs: Studien zur
römischen Religion in Antike und Neuzeit, ed. Hubert Cancik et al. (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner,
2002), 268; Daniel Gold, Aesthetics and Analysis in Writing on Religion: Modern Fascinations (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2003), 57; Gustavo Benavides, “Irrational
Experiences, Heroic Deeds and the Extraction of Surplus,” in The Study of Religion under
the Impact of Fascism, ed. Horst Junginger (Leiden: Brill, 2008), 263–82; Junginger, “Introduction,” 88–89, 94, 97–98, 164–65, 308–12.
Antonio Morena, Mussolini’s Decennale: Aura and Mythmaking in Fascist Italy (Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 2015), 37.
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irrationalism’s refusal to share in the enlightenment model of a world based on
human reason: Revival of myth,46 the primacy of experience,47 and the value
of emotions.48
3
An Alternative to the Politics of Nostalgia: Modernism and
the Dialectic Conception of Palingenesis as the Return to
Something New
While I have pointed to de Martino’s experientialist traits in his study of religion and in his fascist leanings, it would be a mistake to place his civil religion into this regressive-nostalgic current that longs for the irrational. Unlike
Eliade, the Italian thinker boasted a much more ambivalent conception of
religion, irrationalism, and nostalgia. In Naturalism and Historicism, written
in the late 1930s, he distanced himself from Otto’s conception of religion as
a “unique,” and “sui generis sentiment,” arguing that it is nothing more than a
“murky mode of romantic feeling,” a “sick (malsano) love for the primitive.”49
In the same text, he invokes the writings of his university teacher, Adolfo
Omodeo, who sharply critiqued the German fascination with the primitive
world.50 Accordingly, de Martino located the irrationalist-nostalgic position
in “certain recent forms of political-religious practice, certain dispositions of
spirit, certain calls for ineffable experience,” which are becoming increasingly
important amongst “German intellectuals,” who seem to be obsessed with the
prefix “Ur.”51
46
47
48
49
50
51
Emilio Gentile, Qu’est-ce que le fascisme? Histoire et interprétation (Paris: Gallimard, 2004),
405. See also Emilio Gentile, “Fascism, Totalitarianism and Political Religion: Definitions
and Critical Reflections on Criticism of an Interpretation,” Totalitarian Movements and
Political Religions 5, no. 3 (January 1, 2004): 326–75.
Emilio Gentile also showed that the theme of experience is essential to the fascist conception of itself as a religion. See, for example, Gentile, “Fascism as Political Religion,”
234–35.
Mostafa Rejai, Political Ideologies: A Comparative Approach (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 1995),
63. See also, Yves Bizeul, Glaube und Politik (Wiesbaden: Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften,
2009), 248; Lowell Dittmer, “Political Culture and Political Symbolism: Toward a
Theoretical Synthesis,” World Politics 29, no. 4 (1977): 567.
Ernesto De Martino, “Commemorazione Adolfo Omodeo,” in Naturalismo e storicismo
nell’etnologia, ed. Stefano De Matteis (1946; repr., Lecce: Argo, 1997), 103. It is striking that
Croce used the term “malsano” to critique the re-emergence of “religious enthusiasm” in
his Aesthetics in 1902. Benedetto Croce, Estetica come scienza dell’espressione e linguistica
generale: teoria e storia (Bari: Laterza, 1902), 67.
Adolfo Omodeo, “Intorno al problema tedesco,” La Critica, 227–234, 38 (1940).
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 57–58.
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Thus, unlike Eliade, who accepted Otto’s identification of religion with sui
generis experience with little hesitation,52 the Neapolitan scholar accused
phenomenologists of religion of anachronism, of a temporal infraction of
the modern time regime. As one scholar noted, de Martino critiqued irrationalism because it “yearns for the return to a distant past, whether this be
considered as the shady annihilation of the numinous or as the paradise of
a non-repressed humanity.”53 In 1932, writing specifically about the revival
attempts of Christianity, he observed that “it is a thing that is recognized by
most people today” that Christianity is “an imposing complex of external rites
and a vulgar commerce of charismas.” However, he immediately relativized
this awareness of his contemporaries by criticizing “a certain apocalyptic literature” that “still nourishes the hope that Christianity can reform itself, leading
the Church back to the Gospel, without noticing that […] a belief in the Gospel
is not possible anymore today, for the simple fact that we have destroyed the
myth of the supramundane.” In this same passage, de Martino asserted his
belief that a return to an earlier form of time conception and religious worldview is not only impossible but undesirable. “A reform ‘within’ the system,” a
return to a faith in transcendence, “would feel insincere, cerebral, fictitious:
[It would be] the will to believe instead of simple and sincere faith.”54 In his
Essay on Civil Religion, he similarly writes that civil religion distinguishes itself
from earlier forms of spirituality because it is no longer premised on the idea
of repetition. “We do not at all feel like exceptional or paradigmatic men, such
that our grandchildren should imitate us. We have banned the concept of ‘imitation’ from our religion.”55
In order to understand de Martino’s civil religion, we need to appreciate
that the first half of the twentieth century gave rise to two different models
for conceiving palingenesis: On the one hand, a regressive-nostalgic current
that dominated thinkers such as Rudolf Otto and Mircea Eliade; on the other
hand, a progressive-dialectic current that was particularly popular amongst
modernist thinkers.56 De Martino, so much I anticipate already, forms part
of the latter group. While the regressive-nostalgic model has received ample
52
53
54
55
56
McCutcheon, Manufacturing Religion.
Cesare Cases, “Introduzione,” in Il mondo magico, by Ernesto De Martino (Torino: Bollati
Boringhieri, 1973), XLVI–XLVII.
De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” 1934 2010, 512.
Capocasale, “Gli appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per un ‘Saggio sulla
Religione civile,’” 38.
Martin A. Ruehl, “Aesthetic Fundamentalism in Weimar Poetry: Stefan George and His
Circle, 1918–1933,” in Weimar Thought: A Contested Legacy, ed. Peter Eli Gordon and
John P. McCormick (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2013), 244–45.
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attention amongst historians of our discipline, the modernist-dialectic model
is conspicuously absent in the scholarship on religion. This might be one of the
reasons why de Martino’s fascist past has received almost attention to date.57
Instead of nostalgia, it is palingenesis, as a dialectical process best described
as “a rebirth of something new,” that characterized de Martino’s early thinking
about political religion.58 On the one hand, since he was not willing to subscribe to a pessimist worldview and abandon hope for an optimistic vision for
his culture’s future, the birth and growth implied by “genesis” was indispensable for him. On the other hand, since the pre-modern conception of time as
mythical and the modern myth of progress can neither be revived nor their
loss not be acknowledged, the “again” implied by the “palin” is both a necessity and an impossibility. In other words, there are two types of naiveté that
were irrecoverable for de Martino: On the one hand, he could not return to
a pre-modern time conception that would allow him to relive specific narratives, religious rituals, or political programs that offered an unbroken lineage
between past, present, and future through their mythical and cyclical structure. On the other hand, he could neither undo the horrors of the WWI and its
catastrophic consequences for the economic, political, and cultural circumstances, nor blindly return to the vision of evolution and growth that by-andlarge dominated the thinkers of the preceding generations.
Even though scholars have frequently read the irrationalist trend in religious studies and fascism as a form of “politics of nostalgia,” it is important
that we come to terms with the fact that the nexus of irrationalism in religious
studies and fascist ideology is approximate, at its best, and plain wrong, at its
worst. Recent research on both Otto59 and on fascism,60 for instance, has documented that the term “irrationalism” needs to be used with great caution and
that in many ways both the discipline of religious studies and political fascism
57
58
59
60
Despite this communality, the scholarly debates surrounding their fascist past is remarkably different. While Eliade’s involvement with the Iron Guard, the extreme right,
nationalist, and anti-Semitic legionnaire movement, has caused major controversy
for decades—culminating in the “explosion of the Eliade scandal” during the 1990s—
scholarship has been completely oblivious to de Martino’s involvement with fascism until
very recently. Even now, as early articles have been republished and the archives have
revealed his obscure political past, one is surprised by the lack of outrage.
See the work of Asher Biemann for some stimulating reflections on Jewish Renaissance as
the paradoxical return to a “new self.” Asher Biemann, Inventing New Beginnings: On the
Idea of Renaissance in Modern Judaism (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2008).
Gooch, The Numinous and Modernity, 178.
A. James Gregor, Mussolini’s Intellectuals: Fascist Social and Political Thought (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 2005); Emilio Gentile, Le origini dell’ideologia fascista (1918–
1925) (Bari: Laterza, 1975), 426–28.
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were based on their own forms of reason. In its double paradox, in which both
future progress and revival of the past are desired but not simply achieved,
de Martino’s palingenesis reflects the dilemma of his age in a split horizon of
time. Awareness of the distinctive temporal dimension of the first half of the
twentieth century, however, has not primarily emerged out of the historiography of religious studies but rather of political science. The rehabilitation of
fascism as expression of modernity is the result of the industry of two exemplary thinkers: Emilio Gentile and Roger Griffin.61 These two authors interpret
fascism as a political-cultural movement that politically acts within a wider
context, known as “modernism.”
The Italian historian Gentile made a first major impact with the 1975 publication of his The Origins of Fascist Ideology,62 in which he not only argued for
the need to look at fascism as an ideologically productive movement, rather
than just as “irrationalism” and a historical negativity, but he also attempted
to bring fascism into contact with modernity and its “tragically contradictory”
nature.63 A few years later, he wrote: “The analysis of the relationship between
fascism and modernity is certainly one of the fundamental themes that historiography needs to deal with, not only to understand fascism, but also the very
nature of modernity of the twentieth century.”64 Since then, a series of other
scholars have insisted on studying fascism as a form of “political modernism,”
“fascist modernism,” “modernist fascism.”65
One of these thinkers is the British historian Roger Griffin, who, in his The
Nature of Fascism (1991), coined the expression “alternative modernism,” to
define fascist ideology.66 Like Gentile before him, Griffin left his own mark on
61
62
63
64
65
66
I can only think of one exception: Nacci, “La crisi della civiltà: fascismo e cultura
europea,” 46–48.
Gentile, Le origini dell’ideologia fascista (1918–1925).
Gentile, Qu’est-ce que le fascisme?, 452–53.
Gentile, 452–53. See also, Emilio Gentile, “From the Cultural Revolt of the Giolittian Era
to the Ideology of Fascism,” in Studies in Modern Italian History: From the Risorgimento to
the Republic, ed. Frank J. Coppa and A. William Salomone (New York: Peter Lang, 1986),
103–19.
Reinhold Grimm and Jost Hermand, Faschismus und Avantgarde (Königstein im Taunus:
Athenäum, 1980); Walter L. Adamson, “Fascism and Culture: Avant-Gardes and Secular
Religion in the Italian Case,” Journal of Contemporary History 24, no. 3 (1989): 411–35;
Walter L. Adamson, “Modernism and Fascism: The Politics of Culture in Italy, 1903–1922,”
The American Historical Review 95, no. 2 (1990): 359–90; Walter L. Adamson, “The Language
of Opposition in Early Twentieth-Century Italy: Rhetorical Continuities between Prewar
Florentine Avant-Gardism and Mussolini’s Fascism,” The Journal of Modern History 64, no.
1 (1992): 22–51; Andrew Hewitt, Fascist Modernism: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Avant-Garde
(Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1993).
Roger Griffin, The Nature of Fascism (London: Routledge, 1991), 47–48.
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scholarship by underlining that fascism attempted to bring about “a rebirth
of the nation that would revivify what was perceived to be stagnant and
degenerate.”67 Griffin defines fascism as “an intensely politicized form of the
modernist revolt against decadence”68 and argues that, with modernity “no
longer [perceived] through the trope of progress but of ‘decadence,’” fascists
articulated “countervailing projects to enact alternative modernities,”69 until
“cynicism is transformed into utopian hopes of imminent metamorphosis, of
Aufbruch, of palingenesis.”70 He emphasizes that palingenesis “is used within
the framework of my ideal type to connote ‘rebirth’ not in the sense of restoration of what has been, which is an archetypal conservative utopia, but of a
‘new birth’ that retains certain eternal principles (e.g., ‘eternal’ Roman, Aryan,
or Anglo-Saxon virtues) in a new, modern type of society.”71 Emilio Gentile,
in turn, reciprocated again, drawing on and expanding upon Griffin’s studies,
to define fascism as a modernist movement of political and religious rebirth
based on “the myth of national regeneration […] and metanoia.”72
Returning to de Martino, I have already noted that his conception of palingenesis is doubly paradoxical, as both the “again” and the “birth” are dialectical in their logic. The “palin,” as a paradoxical return to something that was
before while simultaneously being something new, surfaces throughout most
of his writings in this early period. In Essay on Civil Religion, for example, we
find a young thinker, who is both highly critical of the temporalization of history and at the same time considers it to be unavoidable. He looks to undo the
temporalization by returning to an older age while being fully aware of the
impossibility of a true return to something original. Reflecting on the meaning
of the word “return,” he contemplates, “return, what could it mean? A return to
the past has always something servile and brutal; in any case, something nonspiritual and human. […] Everything returns, and at the same time, everything
67
68
69
70
71
72
Payne, “Foreword,” xii. Cf. Griffin, The Nature of Fascism, 38–40.
Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 181. For an overview of this conception of fascism see
Geoff Eley’s chapter “Fascism as Modernism”: Geoff Eley, Nazism as Fascism: Violence,
Ideology, and the Ground of Consent in Germany 1930–1945, 2013, 210–11.
Griffin, Modernism and Fascism, 45.
Griffin, 59.
Roger Griffin, “The Palingenetic Core of Fascist Ideology,” in Che cos’è il fascismo?: Interpretazioni e prospettive di ricerca, ed. Alessandro Campi and Roger Eatwell (Roma: Ideazione, 2003), 97–122.
Emilio Gentile, “The Myth of National Regeneration in Italy: From Modernist Avant-Garde
to Fascism,” in Fascist Visions: Art and Ideology in France and Italy, ed. Matthew Affron
and Mark Antliff (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1997), 39. See also, Gentile, The
Struggle for Modernity, 1.
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is unrepeatable.”73 In “The Concept of Religion” (1933), similarly, de Martino
pointed to a double bind regarding the religious worldview that was lost in the
project of modernity. On the one hand, it is impossible to return to the religious age—it “dies,” it is “surpassed,” it is “replaced”—on the other hand, it cannot be forgotten—it is “preparation,” it is “suggestion of truth,” it is “disguise
and draft,” it “defends itself against dissolution.”74 In short, our modern world
is like a shadow that continues to haunt us; it is, as de Martino put it, both our
enemy and our daughter.75 In a later writing, de Martino explicitly discusses
this combination between nostalgic desire and forever-lost naiveté as follows:
Thus, in the souls there is fermenting not truly a “return to religion”—
which would require total oblivion of experiences and of events that we
carry, whether we like it or not, in our blood—but at least an unresolvable clash between terror of history, nostalgia of Christian symbolism,
and more or less awareness of the impossibility of forgetting the cultural
process that has fatally opened up to modern man the sense of history
and more even the integral humanism that is potentially linked to it.76
By contrast, in his political writings, de Martino explored the paradoxical
nature of “genesis,” which entails the birth of something new while simultaneously being a repetition of something that was there before. At first sight, the
birth seems straightforward and does not seem paradoxical at all. In “Current
Observations” (1934), he introduced the idea that there is an evolutionary
sequence of three religions that dominated the Western religious awareness:
Roman religion, Christianity, and civil religion. After summarizing “the two
great directions in which the religious conscience unfolded” as the “mundane”
religion of the Romans and the “supramundane” religion that is Christianity, de
Martino affirmed his belief “that in this moment a third religion is born—that
of modern nations, civil religion.”
Religious consciousness developed according to two great directions: It
invested in the things of this world, or in those of the supramundane. The
religions, which we could call worldly, consecrated the political and economic power of the community, they guaranteed their believers fruitful
73
74
75
76
Ernesto De Martino, “Saggio sulla religione civile” (Archival Notes, Napoli, 36 1933), 1.6.29,
1.6, Archivio Ernesto de Martino. Cited in Nigro, “La ‘crisi delle scienze religiose’. Ernesto
de Martino fra storicismo e irrazionalismo,” 7.
De Martino, “Il concetto di religione,” 52.
De Martino, 52–53.
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 51.
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harvests, physical health, and successful wars: Only in exceptional cases
did they embrace mystical and esoteric needs […]. The most illustrious
example is the Roman religion. The supramundane religions, on the
other hand, have planted in men a hope for a new order of things, completely different from the natural and social one, the hope in a Kingdom
that, even if it is already enacted, will never be a kingdom of trades, of
wars, or of worldly cures, but in essence one where women are neither
given nor taken. The most illustrious example is Christianity. At present,
I believe a third Religion has been born, the one of modern Nations, the
Civil Religion.77
To be unambiguously clear, this civil religion was nothing else than the Italian
Fascism of Benito Mussolini. While we find similar passages that suggest a
simple progressive supplanting of Christianity by fascism in his Essay on Civil
Religion, these archival notes also show that the genesis of fascism is subject to
a dialectic process of transcendence and revival.78 After describing the mundane religion of Roman paganism and transcendent Christianity in almost
identical words to the ones cited above, de Martino proceeded to discuss the
relationship between fascism and these earlier forms of religion in more detail:
At the present moment, it is possible to find a third direction in which the
religious consciousness of humanity can unfold. From the moment that
Christianity is reduced solely to exploit its power of inertia it is only a
shadow of itself. The myth of the supramundane is not relevant anymore,
in the supramundane nobody believes anymore, and this is necessarily
so. However, is it possible to return to call upon this consciousness in the
first sense [of the Roman religion], nonetheless conserving the conquests
realized in its second sense [as Christianity]? Can there be a Third Rome,
which would also be ideally the third, as a separate moment in regards
to the pagan and the Christian one? Indeed, it has already risen, it is
fascist Rome.79
The dialectic relationship between fascism as the new civil religion and
Christianity becomes apparent here. On the one hand, de Martino described
Christianity as “a shadow,” as “inertia,” as “irrelevant” and as “destined to
77
78
79
De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” 1934 2010, 513.
Fascism is described as “a providential State that makes God descend onto earth, has to
succeed dying Christianity.” Cited in Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 99.
De Martino, “Saggio sulla religione civile,” 1.6.29. De Martino, 1.6.29.
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failure.”80 On the other hand, it is apparent that Christianity is the foundation on which he built his new religion. In another instance, he clarified that
civil religion would be inconceivable without the “vital part” of the Christian
message, which de Martino located in particular in the messages of Jesus and
Luther.81 Fascism is neither “genesis,” the creation of something new, nor the
simple “palin,” the return of something old—it is both. In this sense, de Martino
anticipated the thinking of certain contemporary historians of ideas, who have
argued that it was a double-relationship to Christianity, which is both renewed
and transcended, that allowed for the rise of political religions in the twentieth
century.82 In fact, it is important to note that the dialectical conception of the
temporal horizon of fascism is part of a larger religious-political system, which
is marked by other dimensions that also reproduce the logic of dialectics.
Just as the entire history of Christianity is a drama in between millenarianism and gnosis, between the society of the faithful in expectation
of the Kingdom and the Church as the guardian of the spirit of truth,
between sacrament that is a promise and sacrament that is the actual
possession of divinity, civil religion is a drama in between action and doctrine, between movement and party, between faith that argues for things
not seen and faith that is the substance of things hoped for.83 […] Civil
religion will truly be a vital impulse that grows more and more, if it is able
to conserve this drama between movement and party, between always
feeling the nostalgia of its barbarities—of the origins—where its lyrical plenitude does not carry the mark of weariness for the triumph over
blind action and the jealous wisdom of life, where forever—or as long as
possible—it can call itself a continuous Revolution and continuous normalization. The church rose because it was necessary to firmly organize
the community of believers […] The party rises to regulate an energy that
aims at power.
80
81
82
83
De Martino, “Saggio sulla religione civile,” 1.6.29.
De Martino, 1.06.27.
See, for instance, Lilla, The Stillborn God, 299–304.
“Faith that argues for things not seen and faith that is the substance of things hoped
for” (fede che argomenta le cose non parventi e fede che è sostanza di quelle sperate): It
appears that de Martino draws here from the Hebrew bible where we read: “Faith is the
substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen” (Hebrews 11:1). It is also
possible that de Martino drew on Dante Alighieri’s The Divine Comedy, where he cited this
very verse (Paradiso XXIV, 64).
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Questioning the Rupture of Modernity from a Dialectical
Perspective: The Self-Secularization of Religion and the
Self-Mythicization of Politics
For de Martino, civil religion is a product of modernity because it is deeply
linked to a modernist conception of history. “It is true that our religion,” he
writes in his notes, “does not have an eschatology […] but it has a soteriology,
and it is in this sense that it moves considerably close super-natural types of
religions.” Not only that, he also notes that “inasmuch as it preaches a civil
salvation, historically universal, but not super-historically defined, it reattaches itself to the best tradition of modern thought, [namely] to its historicist
current.”84 My choice to read de Martino’s civil religion in a dialectic rather
than a regressive-nostalgic key is further supported by his interpretation of
modernity and its processes of secularization and scientification. In fact, if
the regressive-nostalgic thinkers regard the modernization process as a onedirectional project leading to a dichotomous and teleological description
of the modern world as a split between “liberalism” and “religion,” “science”
and “magic,” “modernity” and “tradition,” “history” and “myth,” “progress” and
“regression,” and so forth, de Martino offered a thoroughly dialectic conception of modernization.
In a letter to Macchioro in 1935, de Martino described the chief characteristic of his fascist age as an ambiguous process: “In this moment, I am in the
process of reliving the great antitheses of our civilization: Universalism and
intransigence, historicism and faith, religion and politics, transcendence and
immanence. I am trying to reconcile these terms and to serve God the best
possible.”85 Upon final analysis, for de Martino, there is no antagonism and
dualism in modernity and there is no need for an enemy. In fact, both politics and science contain their supposed antipode within themselves. Since the
following two chapters are dedicated to a closer discussion of science and its
dialectic relationship to religion and magic respectively, I focus here only on
religion and politics: In short, de Martino believed that religion secularizes
itself and politics makes itself religious.
As for the self-secularization of religion, the young Ernesto located both the
specific collapse and the more general historicization of religion within the
Christian worldview itself. Indeed, he argued that Christianity was conceived
84
85
Eugenio Maria Capocasale, “Gli appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per
un ‘Saggio sulla Religione civile’” (Napoli, Istituto Universitario Orientale di Napoli,
Università degli Studi “Federico II” di Napoli, 1997), 36.
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 134.
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out of a congenital tension between worldliness and other-worldliness and
that the transcendence of this inherent conflict was axiomatically stirring in
its own DNA. Based upon his later writings,86 scholars have observed that de
Martino attributed “a singular function of rupture to Christianity,”87 as the “selfovercoming of religion”88 as the “exit of religion.”89 For de Martino, Christianity
“has opened up a road to an entirely human alternative” to conceiving history,
“returning to man, and only to man, the responsibility of becoming.”90 In one
of these later writings, first published in 1959, de Martino, proposed:
It is precisely Christianity that has inserted into Western civilization a
humanistic germ, which, growing and bearing fruit, has ended up ripping
its protective shell, causing that conflict between Christian symbolism
and humanism that can only be resolved with the birth of a new symbolism, compatible with the achieved humanistic consciousness and with
the ever more intimately lived “sense of history.”91
Anticipating these mature reflections, which were paralleled by some of the
twentieth century’s greatest minds,92 there is a specific moment in Essay on
Civil Religion (1933–1936) in which the young Ernesto articulated his insight
that Christianity is responsible for its own loss of relevance in modernity:
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
Ernesto De Martino, “Furore in Svezia,” in Furore, simbolo, valore (1959; repr., Milano:
Feltrinelli, 2002), 167–89; De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna”; Ernesto
De Martino, “Dalla metastoria alla storia,” in La fine del mondo: contributo all’analisi delle
apocalissi culturali, ed. Clara Gallini (Torino: Einaudi, 1977), 351–58.
Giordana Charuty, Daniel Fabre, and Marcello Massenzio, “Un livre fantôme à reconstruire en le traduisant,” La ricerca folklorica Ernesto de Martino: Etnografia e Storia, no.
67–68 (April 2013): 158.
Marcello Mustè, La filosofia dell’idealismo italiano (Roma: Carocci, 2008), 197–98. For similar expressions see his preface to an excellent book by Sergio Berardini: Marcello Mustè,
“Prefazione,” in Presenza e negazione: Ernesto de Martino tra filosofia, storia e religione, by
Sergio Fabio Berardini (Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 2015), 8–9.
Marcello Massenzio, “L’alterità culturale in Ernesto De Martino: una nozione complessa,”
in De Martino: Occidente e alterità, ed. Marcello Massenzio and Andrea Alessandri, Annali
del Dipartimento di Storia (Roma: Università degli studi di Roma “Tor Vergata,” 2005), 36.
Placido Cherchi, Il peso dell’ombra: L’etnocentrismo critico di Ernesto de Martino e il problema dell’autocoscienza culturale (Napoli: Liguori, 1996), 98–99.
De Martino, “Furore in Svezia,” 169.
Similar arguments have also been made by Karl Löwith, Jakob Taubes, Jörn Rüsen, and
Peter Koslowski. Rüsen, Zerbrechende Zeit; Löwith, Meaning in History: The Theological
Implications of the Philosophy of History; Taubes, Abendländische Eschatologie; Peter
Koslowski, “Absolute Historicity, Theory of the Becoming Absolute, and the Affect for the
Particular in German Idealism and Historism: Introduction,” in The Discovery of Historicity
in German Idealism and Historism, ed. Peter Koslowski (Berlin: Springer, 2005), 2.
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“From the historical consideration of the greatness of Christianity we move to
the verification of its present religious inadequacy. It is precisely from out of
this religion’s historical justification that we obtain the essential and definite
character of its contemporary decline.”93
As for the mythical component of liberalist politics, de Martino, anticipating valuable contemporary research on the subject,94 noted that the progress
of liberalism goes hand in hand with a backward-looking strategy intended to
legitimize its political agenda. As a result of the aforementioned modernization processes, liberalism was forced to locate its practice of prognosis, both
the retrospective search for evidence and the prospective creation of political
vision, on the linear historical timeline and within a this-worldly realm. The
“signori dello spirito,” the liberal political thinkers, “reserve all of their acute
and heart-felt convictions” exclusively for “the great movements of History,”95
to reinforce the West’s conception of its own history as the “history of liberty.”96
However, as Koselleck has made known, this search for evidence of liberty in
Western history, proved to be a daunting task, as liberalism—like many other
revolutionary political movements of the Neuzeit97—contains “either a very
limited or no horizon of experience at all.”98 In short, the dilemma of political
liberalism was to legitimize historically a radically new idea, namely “liberty.”
As it is subject to the temporal-religious-political transformations that mark
modernity, it replaces myth with history, faith with reason, religious prophecy
with rational prognosis. “Liberalism,” he wrote, “has presumed to stand in the
place of God [in order to fulfil] its pretension to control the national political
life.”99 “But,” in the posthumously published notes for an article entitled “Law
and Faith in Paul,” he observes that “all of our marvelous liberal theories” have
failed to free us, as “we are servants [and] liberty is a concept and not yet myth
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
De Martino, “Saggio sulla religione civile,” 1.6.29.
As for liberalism’s political agenda, the scholarship of David Harvey and Zygmunt
Bauman on modern politics has clearly shown that its emphasis lies squarely on universality, similarity, and equality. Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity, 12. As for the
need for finding evidence in its own past, we can turn to the work of Mark Goldie and
Alexander Ewing. Bauman, Modernity and Ambivalence, 105; Goldie, “The Civil Religion
of James Harrington,” 198.
De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” 1934 2010, 512.
De Martino, “Lettera a ‘L’Universale,’” 509.
Besides liberalism, Koselleck specifically mentions republicanism, democracy, socialism,
and communism.
Koselleck, Vergangene Zukunft, 373.
De Martino, “Critica e fede,” 1934 2010, 516.
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or ideal.”100 In “Current Observations,” De Martino similarly maintained that
“liberalism, in its pretension to control the national political life, represents
itself from a historical point of view, as if the contrasts between the [different]
parties were already available to a future historical consideration, assigning
its part to every one of them.”101 Despite its convoluted architecture, the vital
elixir of this sentence pours out of the same spring as the previous one: The
political use of history in its retrospective orientation serves prospective goals.
Again, contorting his theorization into a baffling twist only rarely found
in contemporary intelligentsia102—paradoxically linking it to his suggestion
that Christianity is inevitably leading and destined to bring about its own
secularization—de Martino claimed that modern, secular politics is principled on the generation of myths. In fact, illuminating liberalism’s historical attempts at self-legitimization, he noted that they are ultimately akin to,
but less effective than, religious myths. On the one hand, he likened liberalism’s writing of its own history of liberty to two factors: First, “certain gnostic
heretical myths where the youngest eon tries to retrace the hierarchic ladder
of power to reach the supreme level,” before being “punished for his arrogance
by being plummeted outside of the pleroma;” second, to the “attitude of primitives, which, especially in these days of crisis,” is dominated by the “terror of
an irrelevant or even threatened world.”103 On the other hand, he indicated the
inherent inadequacy of this strategy of historical myth-creation as the conscious attempt to generate a myth that one has “to believe in because its function is in some way essential for [one’s] actions,” is never enough: “The will to
believe has not created even one believer.”104
In this chapter, I observed that the palingenetic thread of de Martino’s
civil religion needed to be sturdy, as the wound of modernity has penetrated
beyond the temporal stratum to cleave deeper layers of the cultural sheathing, with modern man feeling severed from God, broken loose from the harbor
of community, and uprooted from the symmetry of nature. As embroidery of
these layers in the symbolic tapestry of the Third Rome, they carefully suture
100
101
102
103
104
De Martino, “Appunti sul Cristianesimo: ‘Cristianesimo Giudaismo Misteri,’ ‘Legge e fede
in Paolo,’ e ‘L’esperienza eucaristica,’” 257.
De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” 1934 2010, 512.
The political scientist Mark Lilla, who, due to his excellent work on Giambattista Vico,
is himself no stranger to Italian intellectual history, has made strikingly similar observations in his most recent book on political theology. Lilla, The Stillborn God, 6. The work on
Vico that I referred to is, of course, Mark Lilla, G. B. Vico: The Making of an Anti-Modern
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1994).
De Martino, “Lettera a ‘L’Universale,’” 510.
De Martino, “Considerazioni attuali,” 1934 2010, 512.
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modernity’s lesions between God and man, between men themselves, and
between man and nature into the very fiber of fascism. De Martino further
knew that the rhetorical dialectic of palingenesis was paralleled in Rome’s
architectonic transformation, which was also constructed according to a
paradoxical celebration of both innovation and tradition. This is nowhere
as apparent as in the vital center of the Ancient Roman geography, the Via
dell’Impero, a massive road in the center of Rome that Mussolini commissioned to connect the Colosseo and Piazza Venezia. De Martino, unlike some
of his contemporaries—such as Rudolf Otto, who described religious space as
“emptiness and expansive space”105—put great emphasis on architecture as a
realm for structuring political and cultural powers.
I feel the Via dell’Impero like an architectonic expression, both material
and spiritual, of the cosmic cycle. Everything returns, and at the same
time, everything is unrepeatable. Does the Coliseum return? No. There is
something that returns from the ancient spirit in the world in which I feel
today the Altare della Patria: but, in the meantime, in my state of mind
of today there is something more and better than the experience of the
Ancients. You heard right, something more and better, not just different.
The stars, which trace their orbits in the sky do not improve: Time is indifferent to them. But the temples constructed by humans, those improve.
[…] The orbit of the stars does not last: The Via dell’Impero lasts.106
The trip along the Via dell’Impero, accompanied by the flowing blood of
unknown soldiers and the marching figure of the Duce, is a journey in time.
But it is not a journey along the geographically straight line that starts at the
ancient Colosseo and ends at the fascist state’s Piazza Venezia, but zigzagging
through churches of early Christianity, ruins of ancient Rome, and monumental palaces of unified Italy. For de Martino and his companions, fascism is the
105
106
Otto, Das Heilige, 84. Of course, Rudolf Otto’s Das Heilige contains several pages that
discuss the way the arts express the numinous. Otto speaks in particular of architecture
and music. On the one hand, he acknowledges, “[There is] no doubt that the arts have
means to bring forward a specific impression without reflection.” On the other hand, he
believes that their most effective way to express the numinous not through what is actually materially present, but rather through what is absent. He states, “[The arts know only
two] direct means […] for expressing the numinous […], namely “darkness and silence.”
Otto, 82–84.
De Martino, “Saggio sulla religione civile,” 1.6.29. For a discussion of the relationship
between the concept of civil religion and the altare della patria, see Valerio Salvatore
Severino, “Il Contraltare Della Patria. Cristianesimo e Laicità Nel Monumento Alla Terza
Roma (1870–1935),” Storia, Antropologia e Scienze Del Linguaggio 26, no. 1–3 (2011): 407–66.
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Third Rome, not because it comes after Christianity and the Roman Empire,
but because it is a Rome that moves diagonally in time, weaving and stitching
the laceration of temporality that was inflicted by the project of modernity.
Palingenesis is both a return into the past and a leap into the future. But, as
this chapter set out, this palingenetic move back to a past that is long gone to
reach a future that exists only in the imagination is the only option left in the
time between the world wars. As the following chapter will demonstrate, the
Western world failed to find the right balance between innovation and conservation, leading our civilization into a much more profound catastrophe during
WWII, which de Martino described as a “crisis of the presence.”
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chapter 3
The Crisis of the Presence (1936–1944):
The Antifascist Sacralization of Politics and the
Rise of Magical Thinking during WWII
1
The Antifascist Turn in the Laterza Circle and the Continued
Sacralization of Politics
De Martino’s years as an emergent scholar of religion culminated in what is
oftentimes considered his best book, his magnum opus, a remarkably eclectic and interdisciplinary study entitled The World of Magic (1948). Scholarship
has rightly remarked that Macchioro, whose work was characterized by his
“surprising ability to live and think on a number of logical régimes,”1 was the
decisive impetus for de Martino’s broad thinking about magic. De Martino was
particularly attracted to his teacher’s work because of the latter’s most famous
book, namely Zagreus. Initially written in 1920 and republished in 1930 in a
much-expanded version, Zagreus was not only a treatise on Greek mystery
religion but also an attempt to offer a new method for its study. Specifically,
in his hermeneutic effort to interpret the images discovered at Pompei as a
liturgy of a ritual practice mimetically repeating the death and resurrection of
the Dionysus in his Zagreus, Macchioro relied primarily on psychopathology
and parapsychological findings.2 As to be expected, this curious blending of
archeological materials from Ancient Greece and contemporary psychological materials, led to some surprising conclusions about the nature of orphic
initiation: Macchioro interpreted the neophyte’s “identification with God” as
a process of actively splitting the self in order to achieve a “substitution of
personality;”3 he compared key elements of the ritual performed by the new
initiates, such as the perceptual fixation on points of light or on mirror, the
repetitive sounds drums, or the use of perfumes, to techniques of hypnosis;4
and he weighed Proclus’ comments on the “hallucinatory facts” experienced by
the initiates in light of Charles Richet’s Treatise on Metapsychics (1922).5
1
2
3
4
5
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 210.
Vittorio Macchioro, Zagreus: studi intorno all’orfismo (Firenze: Vallecchi, 1930), 169–285.
Macchioro, 233–37.
Macchioro, 233–37.
Macchioro, new edition: 183. Charles Robert Richet, Traité de Métapsychique (Paris: Félix
Alcan, 1922).
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_005
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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De Martino received the entire filing cabinet of his father-in-law’s parapsychological research as a sort of “final consecration,”6 following his marriage to Anna on December 26, 1935. What has been called “the symbol for an
entire life’s work” for Vittorio,7 made a lasting contribution to virtually all of
his disciple’s major writings moving forward. This being said, in many ways,
de Martino’s new venture was also a step away from the prophetic guide of
his student years. He not only shifted his thematic focus from civil religion to
magic, but he also gradually widened the ethnographic realm of his inquiry
to move beyond Christianity and ancient Greco-Roman religion, that is to say
the Western civilization’s cultural heritage. Instead, he started to embrace socalled “primitive” societies, which he chose to call “civilizations that are most
distant from ours.”8 Relying on the bibliographic assistance of two of Italy’s
great anthropologists, Raffaele Pettazzoni and Renato Boccassino (1904–1976),
he spent the years between 1938 and 1942 accumulating an impressive collection of “magical facts” from a wide array of diverse cultures and contexts.
Commenting on this period of de Martino’s life, scholars have spoken of a
“gradual discovery of a new world” and a “fieldwork by correspondence,” not
unlike the early armchair anthropologists.9 De Martino, indeed, dove into
many different worlds. Through the German ethnographer, Martin Gusinde,
he visited the Selk’nam, yâmanas and kawéskar Indians of Tierra del Fuoco;
with the Danish researcher Knut Rasmussen by his side, he imagined himself amongst the Inuit of Greenland; with the help of the missionizing Father
Trilles, he walked the woods amongst the pygmies of the Equatorial Forest;
with Paul Schebesta’s study, he journeyed to the Ituri forests; and, finally,
Sergei M. Shirokogoroff offered him a glimpse what it was like to live with the
shamans of the Tungus.
Parallel to his disciple’s expansion of horizons, Macchioro’s position gradually degraded in the academic landscape of the Italian peninsula during the
second half of the 1930s. When de Martino first contacted the dottore, he was
an eminent figure in religious studies and in archeology, whose extravagant
ideas, creative methodology, and innumerable engagements in foreign lands
made him a propitious interlocutor for a young scholar in the “panorama of
the small Italy of fascism.”10 By the late 1930s, Macchioro was a different man
in a rapidly transforming nation. The implementation of the racial laws in 1938
6
7
8
9
10
Andri, Il giovane Ernesto De Martino, 159.
Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de Martino,” 29–30.
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 283.
Gino Satta, “Le fonti etnografiche del ‘Mondo magico,’” in Ernesto De Martino e la formazione del suo pensiero. Note di metodo, ed. Clara Gallini (Napoli: Liguori, 2005), 291; Charuty,
Ernesto de Martino, 240.
Di Donato, “Introduzione,” 22.
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represented a life-changing event, not unlike the years he spent during WWI
twenty years earlier, when fighting alongside his fellow Italians. The new legislation not only forced Macchioro to retire from his archeological activities
and to give up any hope of finally securing a professorship, but also led to a
profound transformation of his personal and religious identity: Banned from
academia, he converted to Catholicism, started writing novels, and took on the
pseudonym of Benedetto Gioia.
His pen-name, of course, is a direct reference to what would become
the most important intellectual point of reference for the remainder of de
Martino’s life, namely the idealist philosopher, Benedetto Croce (1866–1952).
Of course, even the last name selected by Macchioro represents a calculated
move as he used the name Gioia, which signifies “joy,” to replaced Croce, which
not only means “cross,” but also brings with it a series of negative connotations,
such as pain, burden, or curse.11 After his disciple is introduced to Croce in late
1937, at his residence in Villa Laterza in Bari,12 Macchioro tried everything to
keep de Martino under his intellectual domain. His various strategies ranged
anywhere from simply imploring him to “throw away this Crocean nonsense
(baggianata),”13 to introducing him to his “unique Romanian disciple” Mircea
Eliade,14 to publishing his novels under the name “Benedetto Gioa,” to finally
writing him a letter about a meeting with Croce himself during which the latter showed decisive openness to some of Macchioro’s increasingly occult interests in cartomancy, dream divination, and so forth.15 The rupture, however, was
inevitable and the master’s heated letter in the closing days of 1939—one year
11
12
13
14
15
Consider, for instance, the expression croce e delizia (“cross and delight”), which is generally used when something is a mixed blessing, both a blessing and a curse, or something
that involves both pleasure and pain. I thank the anonymous reviewer for this reminder
and example.
Girolamo Imbruglia, “Tra Croce e Cassirer,” in La contraddizione felice? Ernesto de Martino
e gli altri, ed. Riccardo Di Donato (Pisa: Edizioni ETS, 1990), 97–98; Valerio Salvatore
Severino, “Ernesto de Martino nel circolo crociano di villa Laterza: 1937–1942. Contributo
a una contestualizzazione politica de il mondo magico,” La Cultura 40, no. 1 (2002):
89–106.
Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de Martino,” 35.
Di Donato, 32–33; Silvia Mancini, “Postface,” in Le monde magique, by Ernesto De Martino
(Paris: Les empêcheurs de penser en rond, 2003), 404–6; Gennaro Sasso, Ernesto de
Martino fra religione e filosofia (Napoli: Bibliopolis, 2001), 88; Pietro Angelini, “Il rapporto
tra Ernesto de Martino e Mircea Eliade,” in Ernesto de Martino nella cultura europea, ed.
Clara Gallini and Marcello Massenzio (Napoli: Liguori, 1997), 212.
This letter written on May 30 1939, half a year before their last and final correspondence,
has been discussed extensively in recent years. Cf. Di Donato, “Preistoria di Ernesto de
Martino,” 35–38; Sasso, Ernesto de Martino fra religione e filosofia, 30–34; Charuty, Ernesto
de Martino, 124; Andri, Il giovane Ernesto De Martino, 233–34.
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after the birth of his second grand-daughter Vera—offers the last evidence of
their intense relationship.
Macchioro’s adversary was indeed formidable. During much of the totalitarian regime of fascism, at least from 1924 until the end of the war in 1945, Croce
held a unique position amongst Italian intellectuals as he was the only antifascist voice tolerated by Mussolini. After entering the so-called Villa Laterza
circle, which formed in Bari around Croce, de Martino started to openly reject
the fascist regime in the late 1930s.16 Married to a Jewish woman and actively
anti-fascist, he came to be marginalized by the fascist authorities and started
to express increasingly radicalized views. In November 1942, he became a
founding member of the Liberal-Socialist Party (Partito liberalsocialista) and
that same year his name appeared on a blacklist of persons that are potentially
damaging to the fascist regime. After being banned from teaching and losing
his job, he went into hiding, spending the next two years in clandestineness in
Cotignola, in the countryside around Ravenna, in the North of Italy.17 Yet, even
though he became active in an antifascist circle of liberals associated with
Benedetto Croce and the Laterza Publishing House in the year after his move
to Bari in 1935, de Martino’s thoughts and ideas remained steeped in religious
sentiment and mystical rhetoric.
In 1936, de Martino sends Macchioro a “declaration of his faith in history,”
which has rightly been described as “a sacralization of history.”18 Then, in 1941,
de Martino crafted a manifesto of liberal-socialist faith, which formed the basis
of a solemn oath sworn by the members of the Barese circle.19 The final lines
of the manifesto read as follows: “Thus, I swear, in the presence of the past
generations that reached up to me, in the presence of the dead, the sacrificed,
the aching, for love of liberty, in the presence of the future generations that
16
17
18
19
Some of the more prominent members of this group were Tommaso Fiore, Carlo
Muscetta, Fabrizio Canfora, Michele Cifarelli, Michele Abbate, Domenico Loizzi, and
Nicola Sansone. For more details on this period of his life, see Severino, “Ernesto de
Martino nel circolo crociano di villa Laterza”; Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 153ff.
This period has remained a black hole in scholarship on de Martino, who himself rarely
spoke about his participation in the Resistance. For a promising new study, which
appeared only shortly before the completion of my manuscript, see Riccardo Ciavolella,
L’etnologo e il popolo di questo mondo: Ernesto De Martino e la Resistenza in Romagna
(1943–1945) (Milano: Meltemi, 2018). For a more general overview of the various stages
of scholarship on this perioid, see Pietro Angelini, “L’anno Zero Di de Martino,” Nostos 4
(2019): 9–49.
Conte, “Decadenza dell’Occidente,” 498.
Domenico Loizzi, “Bari antifascista,” in Studi storici in onore di Gabriele Pepe, ed. Gabriele
Pepe and Giosuè Musca (Bari: Dedalo, 1969), 819–27; Severino, “Ernesto de Martino nel
circolo crociano di villa Laterza.”
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already start within me, here and today, [to render] their lives more human and
more worthy.”20
De Martino’s anti-fascism was a religious undertaking that aimed at healing
the civilizational crisis affecting his world with the ultimate goal of a complete
utopian palingenesis. More specifically, “The Oath,” redacted as anti-fascist
manifesto, retained a series of distinctive traits of his earlier thinking: The definition of the cultural context as one of crisis and catastrophe,21 the mystical
rhetoric of a universal Spirit and the individual responsibility for the good of
unification and totality,22 the continuous lineage of Europe’s two thousandyear history and his own responsibility for the future generations,23 the emphasis on fervor and activism rather than philosophical inactivity,24 the call for an
evangelization of his political convictions,25 the apocalyptic and palingenetic
ideas of rebirth, illumination, and revival,26 the celebration of soldier-hood
and the call for constant battle,27 and the sacrificial rhetoric that culminates in
presenting himself as Christ carrying the pain for humanity.28 In short, despite
his political conversion, de Martino remained engaged in the missionizing
project of his civil religion. Charuty pertinently described de Martino’s project
as a “paradoxical form of battle for secularity (laïcité), which presents itself as
a religious struggle,” and Mancini rightly commented that “the idea of civil religion and of civil symbolism never definitely disappears from the Demartinian
reflection, not even after he takes his distance from the youthful fascism and
his progressive political engagement on the left.”29
Although it might sound surprising to find de Martino’s underlying attitude unchanged despite his turn from fascism to liberalism and later socialism, the evident constancy of crisis and the need for recovery through radical
action is anything but atypical of his age. Indeed, if the political aberrations
of the twentieth century are seen through the lens of crisis, as “a disease of
our own world,” as Louis Dumont says, rather than the invention of specific
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
Ernesto De Martino, “Il giuramento,” in Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, ed. Stefano
De Matteis (1941; repr., Lecce: Argo, 1997), 261.
De Martino, 260.
De Martino, 259.
De Martino, 259.
De Martino, 259.
De Martino, 260.
De Martino, 261.
De Martino, 260.
De Martino, 259.
Silvia Mancini, “Fra pensiero simbolico, religione civile e metapsichica: la storia delle
religioni nel primo Novecento italiano,” in Storia d’Italia, Annali 25: Esoterismo, ed. Gian
Mario Cazzaniga (Torino: Einaudi, 2010), 644.
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people and nations,30 then the “cultural despair” was bound to produce similar responses.31 In the wake of Spengler’s pessimistic reading of civilizational
crisis, Europe was marked by a “fever of experiment in all political camps.”32
As a consequence, scholarship has gradually moved away from seeing the rise
of fascism as an isolated event, investigating it instead as part of a larger rise
of “totalitarianism.”33 This shift of perspective in the wake of the “totalitarianism debate,” which allowed critics to unite fascism and Stalinism under one
umbrella term, enables us to make sense of the curious fact that de Martino’s
underlying thinking remained the same despite his shift in political selfidentification. Indeed, just as de Martino moved relatively fluidly between his
early years as a fascist, towards Croce’s liberalism, and then towards socialism,
scholarship has clearly demonstrated that these political orientations were
not independently existing entities, but rather systems that were embedded
in a larger historical context of crisis and connected to each other in complex
mutual relationships.
It has further been argued that liberal and socialist worldviews accommodated the rise of fascism34 and that the October Revolution and rise of socialism in Russia inflamed a reaction of the political right in the rest of Europe,
thus contributing greatly to the rise of fascism.35 Even more, scholarship on
totalitarianism has pointed to the fact that both fascism and Bolshevik socialism were equally engaged in a sacralization of politics.36 This also holds true
for de Martino. In an article from 1944, he introduced a new religion, calling
it the “Religion of Liberty,” a purely immanent and this-worldly form of religion that is supposed to replace Christianity. He criticized the “young” that call
out for the “moralization of political life.” Their “unbridled activism without
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
Dumont, Essays on Individualism, 151–52.
Anne Harrington, Reenchanted Science: Holism in German Culture from Wilhelm II to Hitler
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1996), xxi–xxii.
H. Stuart Hughes, Consciousness and Society: The Reorientation of European Social
Thought, 1890–1930 (Brighton: Harvester Press, 1979), 372.
Carl J. Friedrich, Michael Curtis, and Benjamin R. Barber, Totalitarianism in Perspectives:
Three Views (London: Pall Mall Press, 1969); Henry Ashby Turner, Reappraisals of Fascism
(New York: New Viewpoints, 1975); Juan José Linz, Totalitarian and Authoritarian Regimes
(Boulder: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2000).
Horst Junginger, Von der philologischen zur völkischen Religionswissenschaft: das Fach
Religionswissenschaft an der Universität Tübingen von der Mitte des 19. Jahrhunderts bis
zum Ende des Dritten Reiches (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1999), 306–7.
Ernst Nolte, Der Faschismus in seiner Epoche: die Action française, der italienische
Faschismus, der Nationalsozialismus (München: R. Piper & Co., 1963); Ernst Nolte, Der
Europäische Bürgerkrieg 1917–1945: Nationalsozialismus und Bolschewismus (Frankfurt am
Main: Ullstein, 1987); Bernecker, Europa zwischen den Weltkriegen, 22–23.
Eric Voegelin, Die politischen Religionen (Stockholm: Bermann-Fischer Verlag, 1939);
Bernecker, Europa zwischen den Weltkriegen, 31–32.
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scruple,” he continued, “will lead to the dissolution with politics.” Instead, he
suggests that as long as Christianity, with its aspiration for moral guidance on
principles beyond this life, is our civilization’s primary religion, politics will
continue to be “destined to break down to a simple conflict of power.”37 With
these words, de Martino called his readers to return to the “religion of liberty”
as their guiding principle, which would render political activity more morally
conscientious.38 In all of his writings during these years, de Martino suggested
that his religion of liberty, the “social gospel,”39 has to combat traditional forms
of religion through disciplined order, action, and war;40 that this war is based
on collectivity and solidarity amongst the people;41 and that Italians should
take animus from the Russian example, which shows that even a dictatorship
can lead to “real progress of liberty.”42 “Thus, when speaking of the religion of
liberty,” he wrote in the final years of the world conflict, “it is important to first
and foremost be aware of the fact that we are concerned with a positive religion, that is a particular credo, which opposes all others and which combats all
of them in a holy war, severe, daily, uncompromising, merciless.”43
Although de Martino might have changed the label of his religious-political
projects, the tendency to sacralize politics by elevating it to the status of a
palingenetic energy expressed in struggle and community, which can save a
civilization in crisis, remained a constant well into the 1940s. To underline how
constant the fascination with the religious potential of political systems was in
his thought, one only needs to look at the articles collected in Fury, Symbol, and
Value, published in 1961. Here, de Martino cited contemporary Russian debates
on socialist symbols, myths, and rituals, which—abundantly decorated with
references to sacrifice, martyrdom, and struggle—demonstrate the full potential of socialism as a modern form of religion.44 He admitted that the “religion of liberty” has failed, becoming “exhausted rather than growing,” as it
“got caught in ever more resounding contradictions,” which were rooted in
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
Ernesto De Martino, “Politica, morale e religione,” La voce dei giovani 1, no. 2 (July 1944):
1–2. See also, Cesare Milaneschi, “Ernesto de Martino e il Cristianesimo,” Studi e materiali
di storia delle religioni 51, no. 9 (1985): 249–50.
De Martino, “Politica, morale e religione.”.
Ernesto De Martino, “Conoscerci,” La voce dei giovani 1, no. 3 (August 1944): 2.
De Martino; Ernesto De Martino, “Noi e i cattolici,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 16 (July 1, 1944):
1–2. Ernesto De Martino, “Collettivismo,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 14 (April 20, 1944); De
Martino, “Conoscerci.”
De Martino, “Collettivismo”; De Martino, “Conoscerci.”
Ernesto De Martino, “Della repubblica,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 16 (July 1, 1944): 2; Ernesto
De Martino, “Capitale e capitalismo,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 16 (July 1, 1944): 2; De
Martino, “Conoscerci.”
Ernesto De Martino, “Noi e la religione,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 14/15 (April 20, 1944).
De Martino, “Furore in Svezia,” 186.
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“limitations of classes,” yet still professed that socialism offers currently the closest version to a “new unifying symbol.”45 This “civil symbolism is in complete
accordance with socialist humanism, capable of entirely filling the emptiness
left by traditional forms of religion,” and bases its legitimacy on the appeal “to
the founding event of the October Revolution […] as the passage from socialism to communism, as the liberation of colonial and semi-colonial people, as
the socialist unification of our planet, and as the conquest of cosmic space.”46
2
The Crisis of the Presence: Extreme States of Consciousness in
Primitive Societies and the Shamanizing of Hitler in Europe
Despite his continuous infatuation with political forms of religion—Croce
known for his rigorous philosophical perspective—quickly became a great
inspiration for the young Ernesto. Unlike his fascist past—which he never
officially addressed—de Martino would years later nostalgically remember
the years he came under Croce’s tutelage, noting that “those were the years
during which a small part of the Italian youth sought refuge in the austere
and serene rooms of the Filomarino Palace to spell out anew the elementary
human discourse, which was not possible elsewhere, sometimes not even in
one’s own family.”47 Intellectually speaking, the first writing by de Martino
that was formulated under the sway of Croce’s historicist philosophy was
Naturalism and Historicism in Anthropology, published in 1941 but written
between 1937 and 1939.48 The book, dedicated to his university teacher Adolfo
Omodeo, was published by the Laterza, a publishing house, whose history is
closely tied to the antifascist and idealist thinking of Benedetto Croce. As Sasso
noted, “almost everyone that has spoken” of de Martino’s first book, noted that
45
46
47
48
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 77–78; De Martino, “Furore in
Svezia,” 187.
De Martino, “Furore in Svezia,” 188.
Ernesto De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” in Furore simbolo valore (1962;
repr., Milano: Feltrinelli, 2002), 86. Constructed in the fifteenth century, the Filomarino
Palace was the residence of Benedetto Croce until he died in 1952.
The book, which de Martino wrote in Bari, starting in 1937, was printed in 1940 and finally
made available in libraries in 1941. After more than fifty years, it has finally been republished by Stefano de Matteis in 1997. I will cite from this edition. De Martino, Naturalismo
e storicismo nell’etnologia. The book has not yet been translated into English. The best
English analysis of this text is to be found in a writing by an expert on Fascism from
UC Berkeley, who I repeatedly cite in the second chapter of this dissertation: Simonetta
Falasca-Zamponi, “Of Tears and Tarantulas: Folk Religiosity, de Martino’s Ethnology, and
the Italian South,” California Italian Studies 5, no. 1 (January 1, 2014): 43–45.
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it “presents the character of the Crocean orthodoxy,”49 and the author himself would later describe it as a “book written and conceived in the furrow of
the most orthodox Crocean historicist tradition.”50 The book was a great success amongst the Italian intelligentsia, provoking a flood of positive reviews
and reactions.51
In Naturalism and Historicism, de Martino used the stimulus of Croce’s
historicism to critique anthropological currents of thought that he defined
as “naturalist:” The pre-logism of Lévy-Bruhl, the sociology of Durkheim, and
the historical-cultural school of father Schmidt. In other words, de Martino
dismembered the generalizing anthropological schools brought to Italy
from abroad with the sharpest scalpel available to the Italian mind, namely
historicist thinking: “Anthropology is the story of civilizations that are most
distant from our Western one. As such it is by no means an autonomous science with its own methodologies, but constitutes the empirical—and hence
approximate—edge of a sphere of possible historical research.”52 Despite its
immediate success, Naturalism and Historicism in Anthropology was soon to
be forgotten by Italian academia.53 Today’s scholars even argue that it is “little
more than a derivative scholastic product,”54 or just plain “unreadable.”55 In
retrospect, the book’s fortune was also impacted by the unfavorable political
climate in which its author found himself as the Second World War ramped up.
However, de Martino did not let this hostile environment deter him from
his mission. He continued to work tenaciously on his intellectual endeavors, which would finally culminate in his second book, The World of Magic.
Although published only in 1948, it was mostly written on his portable Olivetti
typewriter during his time in Bari and his years in hiding in the Ravennate. The
dedication reads: “To my Anna, who has saved the manuscript of this work
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
Sasso, Ernesto de Martino fra religione e filosofia, 1. Cases, “Introduzione”; Giuseppe
Galasso, Croce, Gramsci e altri storici (Milano: Il saggiatore, 1968).
Ernesto De Martino, “Intorno a una storia del mondo popolare subalterno,” Società 5
(1949): 411–35. I’m citing from a republished edition in 1977: Ernesto De Martino, “Intorno
a una storia del mondo popolare subalterno,” in Antropologia culturale e questione meridionale: Ernesto de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955,
ed. Carla Pasquinelli (La Nuova Italia, 1977), 71.
We have almost immediate reviews by Omodeo, Antoni, Cantoni, and Pettazzoni and
later ones by Cesare Pavese e di Giuseppe Cocchiara. Furthermore, it is clear that Croce,
after receiving a personal copy from de Martino himself, has read the book as well.
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 225.
Although the book has been reedited by Stefano de Matteis and the publisher Argo, it still
remains his least respected work. De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia.
Cases, “Introduzione,” ix.
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 221.
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out of the ruins of Cotignola.” The World of Magic, which, as one annotator
observed so eloquently, looks like “a ‘perfidious collage’: fruit of six years of
assiduous reflection and reconsiderations, but also of escapes, relocations, and
rescues,” receives its final structure in the months after the war.56 Despite de
Martino’s effort to integrate his long journey into a coherent whole, the book
appears nevertheless fraught with internal tensions.
On the one hand, as I have shown elsewhere, Ernesto’s earlier investigations
into magic were dedicated to the obsessive collection and categorization of
ethnographic and parapsychological facts and states of consciousness, independently of their cultural-historical context.57 On the other hand, his later
thinking displayed the opposite procedure, namely the historicization of this
data. The second chapter of The World of Magic is central, not only for its position within the book, but also for its intellectual merits. In arguing that magic
plays a central role in the solid establishment of humanity’s uncertain, fragile,
threatened presence as an individuated self, his thinking moved into its “theoretically highest” realms.58 Looking back a decade later, de Martino himself
perceived a rupture with his previous ideas, noting that it is only in the second
chapter of his composition that he implements a historicization of primitive
magic by offering a “sketch of a general theory of magic as a well-defined historical world.”59
Putting the person into the center of his historical-cultural study of magic,
de Martino argued that the true power of magic lies not in the production of
specific phenomena and states of consciousness but in the drama of the “risk
and redemption of the presence.”60 There is no doubt that the theory of “the
crisis of the presence” (la crisi della presenza) is one of Ernesto de Martino’s
most important contributions to the study of religion. Studying primitive societies, he argued that they rely on magic in order to defend themselves against
the crisis of the presence—a loosely defined state in which individuals and
communities lose their identity and their ability to act and respond to their
surroundings. Apart from a few scattered insinuations—where he described it
56
57
58
59
60
Pietro Angelini, Ernesto de Martino (Roma: Carocci, 2008), 42.
Flavio A. Geisshuesler, “A Parapsychologist, an Anthropologist, and a Vitalist Walk
into a Laboratory: Ernesto de Martino, Mircea Eliade, and a Forgotten Chapter in the
Disciplinary History of Religious Studies,” Religions 10, no. 304 (2019): 1–22.
Placido Cherchi and Maria Cherchi, Ernesto de Martino: dalla crisi della presenza alla
comunità umana (Napoli: Liguori, 1987), 29.
Ernesto De Martino, “Crisi della presenza e reintegrazione religiosa,” Aut aut 31 (1956): 17.
Ernesto De Martino, Il mondo magico: prolegomeni a una storia del magismo (1948; repr.,
Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2012), 110.
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as the “soul” (anima),61 as “being-there” (esserci),62 and as “the feeling of individual unity”63—de Martino avoided substantial definitions of the concept of
“presence” (presenza). Instead, almost all of the references to presence in The
World of Magic are either related to the risk of being lost or to the potential of
its redemption. The idea that the presence receives its significance in between
crisis and redemption, indeed, would remain stable throughout the rest of his
life. In posthumously published notes, we read of the crisis of the presence as
both a “radical losing oneself,” a “radical risk of alienation,” a “total annihilation
of man,” and an “institutional program of interruption (arresto), of configuration, and of recovery of the self-alienating (alienarsi) as mere crisis.”64
Unlike in modern societies, magic is a necessary phenomenon in extraEuropean cultural realities because the sense of self is fragile, unstable, and
exposed to the constant risk of being lost. Looking at specific states of consciousness described in primitive societies, such as latah, olon, or amok, he
remarked that they are the “polariz[ation] of the presence in a certain content” or the “collapse of the distinction between the presence and the world.”
Ultimately, so de Martino concluded, their true significance lies in the fact that
in primitive societies the presence is in a constant state of crisis, marked by
“fragility,” “loss,” and “abdication.”65 The self in magical societies, so he would
deepen his reflections in the following years, is an expression of “real human
precariousness in the world,”66 it is “a presence that is not decided and guaranteed, but rather fragile and unstable, and thus continually exposed to the risk
of not preserving itself in light of becoming.”67
The presence, however, would have hardly been de Martino’s concept if it
did not involve some sort of reflection on his own civilization that reached
well beyond his studies of other cultures. Drawing on his earlier studies of the
rupture of modernity, such as his interpretation of secularization and scientification, de Martino knew well that Western society differs from that of nonEuropean peoples because it conceives at least of the possibility of a stable self.
Our modern “Western experience” of the self as a stable and autonomous entity,
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
De Martino, 75, 76, 77, 79.
De Martino, 75, 79, 129, 160.
De Martino, 207.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 451.
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 72–73.
Ernesto De Martino, “Etnologia e cultura nazionale negli ultimi dieci anni,” Società 9,
no. 3 (September 1953): 315, 322.
Ernesto De Martino, “Angoscia territoriale e riscatto culturale nel mito Achilpa delle origini. Contributo allo studio della mitologia degli Aranda,” in Il mondo magico: prolegomeni
a una storia del magismo (1948; repr., Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2012), 227.
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de Martino explained, is a “relatively recent” achievement that separates us historically from other cultures.68 De Martino pointed to Greek philosophy,69 to
Christianity,70 and to Kant,71 to explain why our presence, unlike the presence
in primitive societies, is marked by givenness and stability. On the other hand,
de Martino was fully aware that since “the being-there of the person emerges
as a mediated result … as a cultural good—created through struggles, dangers,
defeats, compromises, victories”72—the presence is a work in progress that
needs to be sustained because it is always susceptible to be lost again. In a long
footnote in the very heart of his book, de Martino cautions his readers:
It is necessary to briefly warn that there are, even in our civilization,
“marginal situations” […] in which these forms [of the crisis of the presence] can keep themselves vital, or rather produce themselves anew […]:
It suffices to think about the magical traditions still alive among our peasant populations, about the magic of the spiritist circles, and about [the
magic] that is related to specific psychopathic states, such as psychasthenia, schizophrenia, and paranoia. In all of these cases we have to do
with a persisting and reproducing, in more or less authentic forms, of the
modes of the magic reality and of the correlative existential drama […].
Moreover, also the educated and “normal” man can, in his daily life, be
more or less fleetingly touched by these archaic realities. The fact that
this reproduction of the magic reality is possible even for the Western,
educated man, indicates how the established and guaranteed presence is
a historical good, and, as such, is […] revocable.73
In light of such comments, de Martino’s reflections on the crisis of the presence
have rightfully been tied to the specific socio-political context that surrounded
him. Already in 1979, Carlo Ginzburg placed The World of Magic next to Dialectic
of the Enlightenment (1947) by Theodor Adorno and Max Horkheimer and Fear
of Freedom (1946) by Carlo Levi, grouping them together under the category of
“the books of the year zero.”74 The year 1944, so scholarship has since argued,
was the apex of the Second World War and Nazi-fascist rule, leading to a
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 76.
De Martino, 156.
De Martino, 157.
De Martino, 159.
De Martino, 161.
De Martino, 129.
Carlo Ginzburg, “‘La fine del mondo’ di Ernesto de Martino,” Studi storici 40, no. 1 (1979):
239. Carlo Levi, Paura della libertà (Torino: Einaudi, 1946); Max Horkheimer and Theodor
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collective crisis of catastrophic proportions that threatened the very existence
of Europe as a continent.75 Years later, in “Myth, Religious Studies, and Modern
Civilization,” de Martino expressed this threat to the existence of his culture
by drawing on the ideas of two other central figures in the twentieth-century
study of religion, namely Sigmund Freud and Carl Gustav Jung.
Our fathers had taught us that Europe had decidedly embarked upon the
royal road of progress and reason. At this point nothing could put the
cultural achievements, accumulated during almost two thousand years
of European history, into danger. But now, the “dark side of the soul”
regained dominion and seemed to reunite with the “primitive world,”
which was not yet sufficiently exorcised. Traveling on the road of neurotic regressions of his Viennese clientele, Dr. Freud believed to discover
some concurrency between these regressions and the cultural institutes
of anthropological civilizations. Likewise, Jung believed to be able to
edify his theory of archetypes of the collective unconscious on the bases
of other concurrencies between symbols of the dream life, the phantasies
of the psychotic [patients], and the figures of the myth. Regardless of the
judgment cast upon these psychoanalytic theories, they documented at
least that much: the solemn exorcism of traditional reason had not been
entirely successful and the ciphered depths of the soul reappeared hand
in hand with the ciphered cultures of our planet to pose a problem for
modern civilization.76
His boldest book must be analyzed in the socio-political context that surrounded him. In an earlier version of this article published in 1953, de Martino
explicitly prefaced this passage by a reference to WWII, noting that “these were
the years during which Hitler shamanized in Germany and in Europe.”77 During
this time, the Neapolitan historian of religion, living in hiding, experienced his
very personal crisis of hunger, cold, and death. Taking refuge in the house of
Rosita Parrà, the wife of Vittorio Macchioro, it was in Cotignola that he joined
in the activity of one of the many small clandestine groups of the Italian resistance movement (Resistenza), living an underground existence made up of
75
76
77
W Adorno, Dialektik der Aufklärung: philosophische Fragmente (Amsterdam: Querido,
1947).
Ernesto Galli della Loggia, “Apocalissi culturali e cultura nazionale,” in Dell’apocalisse.
Antropologia e psicopatologia in Ernesto de Martino, ed. Bruna Baldacconi and Pierangela
Di Lucchio (Napoli: Guida, 2005), 32.
De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” 86.
De Martino, “Etnologia e cultura nazionale negli ultimi dieci anni,” 314.
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anti-fascist propaganda and militancy. Politically, he was particularly involved
to the Italian Labor Party (Partito italiano del lavoro, PIL) and he wrote fervently
in favor of a new religion of liberty (religione della libertà) in journals such as
La Voce del popolo and La Voce dei giovani.78 From the time of Mussolini’s arrest
and the fall of fascism on July 24, 1943, until the end of the war, the region
along the river Senio became one of the most violently contested areas in all of
Italy and de Martino found himself under constant threats of the raids of the
German SS and the Gestapo, as well as the squads of the newborn Italian Social
Republic (Repubblica Sociale Italiana).79 In fact, after Mussolini’s proclamation
of this second Italian state—which is more commonly known as the “Republic
of Salò” (Repubblica di Salò)—on September 18 1943, Italy’s war became a civil
war in which Italians would fight amongst themselves.
3
The Dark Side of the Soul Resurfaces in Religious Studies:
The Split between the Insider-Phenomenological and the
Outsider-Explanatory Approaches
After the war ended, continuing to pendulate in between crisis and redemption, de Martino returned to Bari to complete his research and finish his book.80
Since its publication, it has been read in Italy and abroad—translated in no
less than seven languages81—and is by many considered his “most innovative
and current work.”82 It has rightly been called his “masterpiece” (capolavoro).83
But why was this period such a critical moment in the history of the twentieth
78
79
80
81
82
83
Ernesto De Martino, “Intorno alle ‘Dottrine sociali delle chiese e dei gruppi cristiani,’”
La Nuova Italia XVI, no. 5–6 (June 1943): 51–53; De Martino, “Collettivismo”; De Martino,
“Noi e la religione”; De Martino, “Capitale e capitalismo”; De Martino, “Della repubblica”;
De Martino, “Noi e i cattolici”; De Martino, “Conoscerci”; Ernesto De Martino, “Danaro e
banche,” La voce del popolo 1, no. 17 (August 1944).
Cesare Bermani collects a series of testimonies that give the reader a vivid sense of the
dangers that de Martino was in during those months of his life. Bermani, “Tra furore e
valore: Ernesto de Martino.”
De Martino met Pavese in the spring of 1943 in Rome, where the editor Einaudi recently
opened an office in Via Monteverdi. See also, Pietro Angelini, “Prefazione,” in Dal laboratorio del mondo magico. Carteggi 1940–1943, ed. Pietro Angelini (Lecce: Argo, 2007), 9.
The book has been translated into English, French, Spanish, Czech, Hungarian, Polish.
According to Ginzburg, it has also been translated into Japanese, but I could not verify
that yet.
Adriano Santiemma, “La religione tra phainómenon e genómenon, tra natura e cultura,”
in Le religioni e la storia: a proposito di un metodo, ed. Gilberto Mazzoleni and Adriano
Santiemma (Roma: Bulzoni, 2005), 59.
Mustè, La filosofia dell’idealismo italiano, 193.
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century for de Martino? What was the difference between 1918 and 1944? If
de Martino was long convinced that his own continent suffered from a massive civilizational crisis, the crisis of the presence nourished these reflections
with new energy—ultimately leading him to identify the realm of science as
the place where our presence was most threatened. In other words, if WWI
represented the collapse of the progressivist world-view, throwing the Western
world into a civilizational crisis, it was in the following decades that the crisis
reached its fullest extent by embedding itself within scientific thinking itself.
The scientific reactions to the crisis of the self, were indeed oftentimes
radical in nature. If the most extreme example of this loss of certitudes into
reality might be Oswald Spengler’s claim that even mathematical numbers
are ultimately relative,84 Edmund Husserl’s The Crisis of the European Sciences
represents a good illustration for the crisis of the self. In this piece, written in
the last years of his life between 1934 and 1937, the German phenomenologist
argued that the crisis of positivist science ultimately led to a crisis of meaning
of humanity and its cultural life. His response, as we all know, was the establishment of a transcendental phenomenology that would salvage not only the
status of reason, but also of the subject.
De Martino, who was convinced that the discipline of religious studies was particularly sensitive to the divisive forces at work within the crisisconsciousness of the modern West, believed that the crisis not only afflicted
the realm of science but actually infiltrated it from the inside. One of the key
categories through which the crisis of the self was internalized in the scientific
study of religion was “magic.” While it is well known that already Tylor, Frazer,
and Malinowski saw magic as the origin of science,85 de Martino was less interested in substantive definitions of the concept, but rather its relational importance as a form of radical alterity.86 Wouter Hanegraaff has recently argued
that modernity was not only defined by the split between “religion” and the
realm of “the secular,” but also a “third domain, referred to by such terms as
‘magic’ or ‘superstition.’”87
84
85
86
87
Reinhard Laube, Karl Mannheim und die Krise des Historismus: Historismus als wissenssoziologischer Perspektivismus (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2004), 41; Cathryn
Carson, “Method, Moment, and Crisis in Weimar Science,” in Weimar Thought: A Contested
Legacy, ed. Peter Eli Gordon and John P. McCormick (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 2013), 193; Bambach, “Weimar Philosophy and the Crisis of Historical Thinking,” 138.
Randall Styers, Making Magic: Religion, Magic, and Science in the Modern World (New
York: Oxford University Press, 2004), 125–26, 139–40.
Jonathan Z. Smith, Relating Religion: Essays in the Study of Religion (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 2004), 216–19; Styers, Making Magic, 145–46.
Hanegraaff, “Reconstructing ‘Religion’ from the Bottom Up,” 577.
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Because this fact goes unrecognized, what usually happens is that the
third term is tacitly removed from the equation instead of being included
under the umbrella of “religion.” The deep irony is that by thus treating
the third term as largely irrelevant to the concept of “religion,” thereby
rendering it invisible, even contemporary deconstructionists end up perpetuating the very same Christian-Protestant ideologies whose legacy
they are trying so hard to deconstruct! If the triadic perspective continues to make intuitive sense to us even today, this is because our intellectual culture has inherited the profound disdain for “pagan/ idolatrous/
magical/superstitious” beliefs and practices that has always been typical
of orthodox (and most particularly Protestant) Christians. Secular thinkers who embrace the values of rationality and science have unwittingly
adopted the same normativities from their Protestant forebears. In short,
[…], both Christianity and secular modernity define their very identity
against this “Other.”88
De Martino would have fully agreed with the expert of Western esotericism.
While his theory of de-historification was concerned with the logic of magic, he
maintained, throughout his career, active research projects into how historians
of religion have dealt with magic. “Western civilization,” so he most famously
wrote in Magic and Civilization, “has come to shape itself as modern civilization through an assiduous anti-magical polemic (polemica antimagica).”89 One
consequence of the “Hellenic-Christian anthropology and the anti-magical
polemic innate in our civilization,” he remarked in The World of Magic, is that
“being-there appears to us now as […] given to man by nature, [as something]
that he did not do, and therefore as the unknowable, the irrational, the mysterious par excellence.”90 In other words, de Martino was concerned that the
existence of the discipline of religious studies is itself indebted to our culture’s
attitude towards magic as something radically other. Similar to contemporary
researchers of identity politics, such as Gerd Baumann, de Martino realized
that alterity is structured along the lines of a binary oppositions (“good” vs.
“bad”), which is itself subject to reversal as rejection can turn into fascination,
and vice versa. Specifically, de Martino also grew more aware of the fact that
88
89
90
Hanegraaff, 595–96. As an anonymous reviewer rightly noted, the distinction between
religion and magic is not simply a modern phenomenon, as this distinction can be traced
all the way back to the Ancient Greeks and Romans.
Ernesto De Martino, Magia e civiltà (Milano: Garzanti, 1962), 5–6. The notion of the
polemic is omnipresent in the book. In the roughly three dozen pages written in his own
pen, de Martino uses the term “anti-magical” no less than twenty-four times.
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 161.
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the polemic surrounding magic gave rise to two radically opposed and mutually exclusive perspectives that ultimately account for the split within the discipline of religious studies and anthropology itself, namely what I called the
insider-phenomenological and the outsider-explanatory approaches.
It is a unique fact that our age knows not only a copious literature related
to the revaluation of the sacred as a category, but also an equally massive
literature, in which the decline of religious life in the modern world is
being discussed: One could say that the sacred has never before been so
eruditely defended as a fundamental value of human existence as in our
period, while at the same time, the realization of the eclipse, the agony, or
even the death of the sacred has never before been as intense as today.91
The former of these is already well known to the reader as it was the primary
focus of the preceding chapter. Indeed, isn’t Eliade’s politics of nostalgia a
search for that which is magically “other”? In Magic and Civilization, de Martino
explained that in certain currents, “magic thought appeared in just as authentic a manner as rational thought.” “This perspective,” so de Martino warned,
is also problematic precisely because “the Western opposition between magic
and reason has come to lose its meaning, the aut-aut resolved itself in the
indifference of an et-et that left open the possibility to return to irrationalistic
ideals of life and traditions.” Eliade’s nostalgic tendency, which was based on
something akin to remembering the way things were before the magical worldview was abandoned by Western society, involves “the lack of loyalty to this
history of our own civilization.”92
By contrast, the perspective of the outsider-explanatory approach vilified
and rejected the alterity of magic. De Martino called this the “anti-magical
polemic of scientific thought” and recognized it primarily in the writings of
Frazer, Durkheim, Malinowski, Freud, and Lévi-Strauss.93 In these works,
the Italian thinker found traces of the process of othering that has created
modern Western identity. While he concluded his book by noting that all of
them remained “unknowingly prisoners of some immediate themes of the
anti-magical polemic of Western civilization,”94 de Martino was particularly
drawn to the work of Claude Lévi-Strauss because his radical opposition to
the insider-phenomenological approach perfectly illustrated the internalized
91
92
93
94
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 76.
De Martino, Magia e civiltà, 213–14.
De Martino, 79.
De Martino, 213.
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crisis within the discipline of religious studies. It is well known that the French
structuralist was radically opposed to any form of nostalgia, primitivism, phenomenology, or existentialism—in short, all the currents that collude in the
insider-phenomenological approach to religion. As Ivan Strenski has argued,
Lévi-Strauss’s “mythology” remains emotionally or even imaginatively
inaccessible to any exotic primitivist industry: structures are impersonal
and abstract, not “warm,” not rich with images. Despite Lévi-Strauss‘s
personal prestige on the public intellectual scene in France as a kind
of modern philosophe, structural mythology itself has never become a
durable cultural fad in the way that theories of Joseph Campbell, Mircea
Eliade and Carl Jung, as set out in their far more popular works, have.95
Lévi-Strauss himself did not hold back with critique of the phenomenological
current in religious studies, attacking specifically its tendency to set apart the
sacred as a special realm of meaning. He is trenchant in his analysis of thinkers
who “believe too readily that they have succeeded in grasping, beyond their
own preconceptions, the ideas of the indigenous people [as] their descriptions are too often reduced to a phenomenology.”96 In the fourth volume of his
Mythologiques, entitled The Naked Man (1971), we find a similarly “deflationary” position typical of the outsider-explanatory approach. Here, the French
anthropologist argued that much of contemporary scholarship is “imbued […]
with mysticism,” in search of a “mythology to be full of hidden meaning.”97 He
suggests that while he considers the “religious field as a stupendous storehouse
of images that is far from having been exhausted by objective research,” he
nonetheless insists that “these images are like any others.”98
As mentioned, scholarship has not neglected to notice this anti-essentialist
approach in commenting on Lévi-Strauss’ work. Strenski, for instance, has
observed that the French structuralist is frequently critical of Eliade, specifically because of his “reputation for seeing myths as expressions of religious nostalgia for the primordial beginnings, as declarations of a primitive
ontology.”99 In the continuation of the above-cited passage, Lévi-Strauss took
95
96
97
98
99
Strenski, Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century History, 163.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Comparative Religions of Nonliterate Peoples,” in Structural
Anthropology Volume II (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983), 67.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, The Naked Man: Introduction to a Science of Mythology IV (New York:
Harper & Row, 1981), 645–46.
Lévi-Strauss, 639.
Strenski, Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century History, 157.
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a direct stance against the frequently nostalgic orientation of the insiderphenomenological approach:
The fallacious complaint that the myths have been impoverished hides a
latent mysticism, nourished in the vain hope of the revelation of a meaning behind the meaning to justify or excuse all kinds of confused and
nostalgic longings, which are afraid to express themselves openly. We
have to resign ourselves to the fact that the myths tell us nothing instructive about the order of the world, the nature of reality or the origin and
destiny of mankind. We cannot expect them to flatter any metaphysical
thirst, or to breathe new life into exhausted ideologies.100
It has been repeatedly stated that French structuralism formed its program
based on following a “scientific approach.”101 Lévi-Strauss, expert of the indigenous peoples of South and North America, is no exception as his goal can
be summed up as the development of a “full-scale science of culture.”102 As
Paul-François Tremlett, in one of the rare monographs dedicated to LéviStrauss as a scholar of religion, commented, the French thinker “consistently
privileged science and made use of science as a special discourse to give
his own work authority, and as a means of legitimating an alliance of social
anthropology with structural linguistics.”103
Reader of the classic structuralist writings of Lévi-Strauss, particularly
Elementary Forms (1949), Structural Anthropology (1958), and Savage Thought
(1962),104 de Martino was also fascinated by how structuralist linguistics can
teach us about unconscious mechanisms at work in culture.105 As François
Dosse, in his careful study of structuralism’s rise and decline in France, has
unveiled, structuralism dominated the French intellectual life, representing
100
101
102
103
104
105
Lévi-Strauss, The Naked Man, 639.
Agnes Heller, “Death of the Subject?,” in Constructions of the Self, ed. George Levine (New
Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1992), 270; François Dosse, History of Structuralism.
Vol. 1: The Rising Sign, 1945–1966 (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997), 159,
191, 382–383, 387, 390–391; François Dosse, History of Structuralism. Vol. 2: The Sign Sets,
1967–Present. (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997), 47, 450.
Roberts, Nothing but History, 42.
Paul-François Tremlett, Lévi-Strauss on Religion: The Structuring Mind (Sheffield: Equinox
Publishing, 2008), 22. Strenski describes his approach as a “thoroughgoing naturalism.”
Strenski, Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century History, 131.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 266–68, 403–13, 623–27, 688–89. See also, Ernesto De
Martino, “Etnologia e civiltà moderna,” Cultura e Scuola 2 (September 1964): 14.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 405.
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“the koine of an entire intellectual generation.”106 While structuralism has
found a broad range of intellectual expressions—the Marxist theory of Louis
Althusser, the literary studies of Roland Barthes, the philosophy of Michel
Foucault, the psychoanalysis of Jacques Lacan, the comparative philology
of Georges Dumézil, or the literary theory of Pierre Macherey—de Martino
encountered and appreciated the structuralist project primarily because of the
monumental work of the anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss.107 His attitude
towards the structuralist science of Lévi-Strauss is favorable. He believed that
the history of religions as he practices it should be “enriched by the instances
ripened in the course of the development of sciences such as sociology, psychiatry, cultural psychiatry, folklore, traditional anthropology, anthropology,
and linguistics.”108 De Martino recognized that the approach proposed by
Lévi-Strauss is premised on a “reduction”—particularly he speaks of a “reduction to the common and to the unconscious” of myths—and described the
operation as an “opportunity” that has “value.”109
4
The Savior of the European Sciences: The Redemption of the
Presence and the Unifying Power of Magic
It is here that de Martino’s work reveals its redemptive side. Indeed, just as
Lévi-Strauss’ structuralism allows the scholars of religion to penetrate what
lies behind the veil of consciousness in order to bring to light the underlying
structure and meaning of the unconscious, The World of Magic was a means
to gain a deeper understanding of the crisis afflicting Western civilization. In
both cases, this unveiling of latently active unconscious dynamics creates the
value of understanding and self-awareness, which are the foundations for any
attempt to transcend the crisis of the presence.
Placido Cherchi, a student of de Martino during the last years of his life at
the University of Cagliari, argued that the years of the war were not only those
of the apocalypse but also “the starting point of a historical re-founding.”110
In his insightful book, the anthropologist argues that the experience of the
106
107
108
109
110
Dosse, History of Structuralism. Vol. 1: The Rising Sign, 1945–1966, xxiv.
John Storey, Cultural Theory and Popular Culture: An Introduction (London: Routledge,
2012), 239.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 406–7.
De Martino, 413.
Placido Cherchi, Il signore del limite. Tre variazioni critiche su Ernesto de Martino (Napoli:
Liguori, 1994), 34.
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war should be seen as a “ritual of puberty, a terrible initiatic event,”111 as de
Martino’s own “rite of passage.”112 Although generations of Italian intellectuals,
from Croce to Arnaldo Momigliano, were right in acknowledging the “irreparably destroyed” political, economic, and moral foundations that “Italian generations had constructed for a century” and the “never fully to be overcome […]
changes of cultural interests and orientations,”113 de Martino continued to cultivate a decisively palingenetic vision of history. Although his writings made
it obvious that the distant world of primitives was in reality threateningly
close—or even within himself and his own culture—de Martino remained
optimistic and regarded crisis as the basis for rebirth of Italy. Most recently,
Ulrich Van Loyen has pointed to this salvific component of de Martino’s book
on magic. I wholeheartedly agree with my German colleague’s comment that
one of the most important dimensions of de Martino’s magnum opus “lies in
its intention […] to save Europe.”114 In some passages of his unpublished autobiography, de Martino intentionally put on the cloak of the cultural savior, only
to reveal that it is sowed into his very skin in the form of an “atypicalness” that
predestined him for his calling:
Without relieving myself of even the smallest bit of responsibility, it is
to be observed that in the great periods of crisis and renovation of civilization; when old connections are dismantled, and new ones disclose
themselves, yet without being able to say that a new order has yet arisen,
one records a spike in atypical men that violate all the norms. I believe to
be one of these men.115
Although de Martino was, without a doubt, a crisis-thinker, his work was never
giving into pessimism, but instead regarded crisis as a productive motor for
cultural innovation. Already in Naturalism and Historicism, de Martino called
upon the “historian” in order to rebuild a new world out of the rubble of crisis:
“Concerning the historian’s role in the drama and the task (compito) that is his,
111
112
113
114
115
Cherchi, 25.
Cherchi, 33.
Benedetto Croce, Quando l’Italia era tagliata in due; estratto di un diario, luglio 1943–
giugno 1944 (Bari: Laterza, 1948), 44; Arnaldo Momigliano, “Per una storia delle religioni
nell’Italia contemporanea: Antonio Banfi e Ernesto de Martino tra persona e apocalissi,”
in La Contraddizione felice?: Ernesto De Martino e gli altri, ed. Riccardo Di Donato (Pisa:
Edizioni ETS, 1990), 13.
Ulrich Van Loyen, “Die Abenteuer der Geister: Ernesto de Martino und die Anthropologien
des besessenen Südens,” in Der besessene Süden: Ernesto de Martino und das andere
Europa, ed. Ulrich Van Loyen (Wien: Sonderzahl, 2016), 12.
De Martino, Vita di Gennaro Esposito, Napoletano, 25–27; Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 58.
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he responds to the call of the times (appello dei tempi) by offering his contribution, which is a greater power of individuation, a preparation for a greater
power for action.”116 In the case of the world of magic, which he encountered
through his readings in ethnography, de Martino argued that some cultures
were able to offer an appropriate response to the crisis. In short, he believed
that magic operated by means of a dramatic process, which he called “dehistorification,” which gradually led from the crisis to the “redemption of the
presence” (il riscatto della presenza).
Further, the theory of de-historification not only addressed extra-European
societies and the role that magic played therein, but also served as a conceptual
tool to reevaluate the split scientific tradition of Western research on magic.
First and foremost, de Martino used magic as a unifying idea for the discipline
of religious studies. If he wrote earlier that “our civilization is in crisis,” because
it is “divided in separate entities (“compartimenti-stagni”) and lacks […] unity
of thought,”117 he called magic the “unifying problem” that “could make apparent the artificial nature of the separation,” and “break the boundaries of the
empirical partitions of knowledge.”118
The unity of our culture is essentially entrusted to unifying problems,
which are, by means of their nature, apt to break the limits of the academic partitions of knowledge, which specialists sometimes mistakenly
hold for determinations of things that exist in re. Thanks to their “connecting” function, they are apt to defeat the enduring influence of positivistic
particularization and chipping. Now, the problem of the history of magic
constitutes precisely one of these unifying problems. The historian, the
philosopher, or the man of culture, who has nourished himself from the
sources of modern humanism, finds the most favorable conditions for
coming together with the psychological enthusiast, the psychiatrist, and
generally any naturalistic thinker, on this ground. Here, he finds the conditions to pick up the “human” discourse, which seems to be interrupted
since the period of romanticism, together with his colleagues.119
This unifying thrust of de-historification for the discipline of religious studies is best illustrated by means of a discussion of how de Martino engages in
the works of two ideal types of the split discipline, namely Mircea Eliade and
Claude Lévi-Strauss.
116
117
118
119
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 57.
De Martino, 56.
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 186.
De Martino, 5.
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De-historification (1944–1948): Shamanic Magic
and the Dialectic Movement between Mircea Eliade
and Claude Lévi-Strauss
1
The Integration of Eliade and Lévi-Strauss: Sacred Poles and Songs
of Labor as Forms of De-historification
After Vittorio Macchioro recommended Eliade’s Yoga: An Essay on the Origins
of Indian Mysticism (1936) to his new son-in-law shortly after its publication,
de Martino’s legacy leaves no traces of the Romanian giant for a decade.1 Even
though Eliade’s lengthy article entitled “The Problem of Shamanism” (1946) is
absent in de Martino’s The World of Magic,2 it is around this same time that
he recommenced to engage the work of his famous Romanian counterpart.
Responding to the recently published Techniques of Yoga (1948), de Martino
showed himself visibly impressed with it, particularly with its sensibility for the
religious conception of time and history.3 His review, published in Pettazzoni’s
prestigious journal Studies and Materials of History of Religions,4 was generous
with praise.
This work by Mircea Eliade responds very well to the general requirement for the Western culture to broaden its own humanism and to renew
its own problems by means of the comprehension of forms of spirituality
that are ideally distant from ours. According to the author, the paradox
of Yoga (reintegration in all the forms of the indistinct, in the primordial unity) can be understood in light of the archaic aspiration to abolish history, to restore the auroral state, periodically and ritually renewing
the “archetype time,” the time of the origins. […] Without a doubt, this
interpretation of yoga and of its techniques is extremely suggestive
and incisive.5
1 Mircea Eliade, Yoga: Essai sur les origines de la mystique indienne (Paris: Geuthner, 1936).
2 Mircea Eliade, “Le problème du chamanisme,” Revue de l’histoire des religions 131, no. 1 (1946):
5–52.
3 Mircea Eliade, Techniques du yoga (Paris: Gallimard, 1948).
4 Ernesto De Martino, “Recensione a M. Eliade, ‘Techniques du yoga,’” Studi e materiali di storia
delle religioni 21 (1948): 130–32.
5 De Martino, 130.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_006
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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Even more, he also added it, fresh off the press, to the books to be published in the Purple Series.6 Charging his wife—from whom he just recently
separated—with the task of translating the book from French into Italian, de
Martino himself redacted the preface to the translation. De Martino’s various
efforts to promote his colleague’s work were not only instrumental in the reception of Eliade amongst a general Italian public,7 but also points to a shared fascination with the theory of religion as a “flight from history.” This, indeed, was
the most significant novelty of Eliade’s new book and would turn into a cornerstone for the rest of Eliade’s work and de Martino’s analysis thereof.8 Unlike
his all too often ignored interests in parapsychology,9 scholarship has rightly
noted to what extent de Martino’s most significant theoretical contribution to
his field of study is indebted to Mircea Eliade’s writings on time and history.10
6
7
8
9
10
Mircea Eliade, Tecniche dello yoga (Torino: Einaudi, 1952).
Pietro Angelini, “Eliade, de Martino e il problema dei poteri magici,” in Mircea Eliade:
le forme della tradizione e del sacro, ed. Giovanni Casadio and Pietro Mander (Roma:
Edizioni Mediterranee, 2012), 11–38.
Raffaele Pettazzoni, “The Truth of Myth,” in Essays on the History of Religions (Leiden:
Brill, 1954), 11–23; Sharpe, Comparative Religion, 215; Douglas Allen, “Ist Eliade antihistorisch?,” in Die Mitte der Welt: Aufsätze zu Mircea Eliade, ed. Hans Peter Duerr (Frankfurt
am Main: Suhrkamp, 1984), 106–27; Strenski, Four Theories of Myth in Twentieth-Century
History; Jonathan Z. Smith, Map Is Not Territory: Studies in the History of Religions
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1993); Phillippe Borgeaud, “Mythe et Histoire
Chez Mircea Eliade. Réflexions d’un Écolier En Histoire Des Religions,” Institut National
Genevois, Annales 1993, 1994, 33–48; Natale Spineto, “Introduction,” in L’histoire des
religions a-t-elle un sens? Correspondance 1926–1959 (Paris: Le Cerf, 1994); Christian
Wachtmann, Der Religionsbegriff bei Mircea Eliade (Frankfurt am Main: Peter Lang, 1996);
Natale Spineto, “Raffaele Pettazzoni e la verità del mito,” Rivista di storia della storiografia
moderna 17 (1997): 59–65; Philip Vanhaelemeersch, “Eliade, ‘History’ and ‘Historicism,’” in
The International Eliade, ed. Bryan S. Rennie (Albany: State University of New York Press,
2007), 155–61.
Geisshuesler, Flavio, “A Parapsychologist, an Anthropologist, and a Vitalist Walk into a
Laboratory: Ernesto de Martino, Mircea Eliade, and a Forgotten Chapter in the Disciplinary
History of Religious Studies.”
Ugo Bianchi, History of Religions (Leiden: Brill, 1975), 197–98; Giuseppe Giarrizzo, “Note
su Ernesto de Martino,” Archivio italiano di storia della cultura VIII (1995): 162; Angelini, “Il
rapporto tra Ernesto de Martino e Mircea Eliade,” 216–19; Angelini, “Eliade, de Martino e
il problema dei poteri magici”; Giovanni Casadio, Lo sciamanesimo. Prima e dopo Mircea
Eliade (Roma: Il Calamo, 2014); Cecilia Gatto Trocchi, “L’occultismo in Occidente secondo
Eliade: fascinazioni e inquinamenti,” in Confronto con Mircea Eliade: archetipi mitici e
identità storica, ed. Luciano Arcella, Paola Pisi, and Roberto Scagno (Milano: Jaca Book,
1998), 319–36; Sergio Botta, “La via storicista allo sciamanesimo: prospettive archeologiche e storia delle religioni,” in Sciamani e sciamanesimi, ed. Alessandro Saggioro and
Leonardo Ambasciano (Roma: Carocci, 2010), 59–86; Christine Bergé, “Lectures de De
Martino en France aujourd’hui,” ETHN Ethnologie française XXXVII, no. 2 (2001): 537–47.
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De-Historification ( 1944–1948 )
69
Before exploring the interactions between de Martino and his Romanian colleague, however, it is important to note that the magnetic enthrallment with
temporality and its role in religion was already a core characteristic of the
young Ernesto. In notes written during the 1930s, for instance, we read:
Religion is the negation of development. Rituals and myths, in enormously distant lands and times, repeat apparently similar situations:
There is something, at the root of religion, which does not want to
become, which desperately attempts to solidify the spirit in nature. […]
Hence, the historian of religion is compelled to make history ( fare la
storia) of that which is, by its very nature, the aspiration to avoid history. Writing ( fare) the history of a religion means to reproduce (rifare)
the process by which this aspiration was defeated and consumed—like
all human aspirations—by time. In this sense, religion is unwillingly
history, [it is the] drama between reality (development) and abstract
being (nature).11
This being said, the term “de-historification” rose to prominence only after
de Martino actively engaged the work of Mircea Eliade in the years immediately following the war.12 Of the dozens of examples throughout the rest of his
life,13 the clearest expression of Eliade’s religious conception of time as characterized by a “nostalgia for origins,” is arguably to be found in his Myth of the
Eternal Return: Cosmos and History (1949).14 In the book, which he considered
to be his most important one,15 Eliade famously claimed that religion seeks to
escape our historical reality choosing to “live in an ‘eternal present,’ outside of
time […] by deliberately repeat[ing] such and such acts posited ab origine by
gods, heroes, or ancestors.”16
11
12
13
14
15
16
Capocasale, “Gli appunti inediti giovanili di Ernesto de Martino per un ‘Saggio sulla
Religione civile,’” 19–20.
Ernesto De Martino, “Note di viaggio,” Nuovi Argomenti 1, no. 2 (June 1953): 47–79.
See, for example, Mircea Eliade, Images et symboles: essais sur le symbolisme magicoreligieux (Paris: Gallimard, 1952); Mircea Eliade, “Kosmogonische Mythen und magische
Handlungen,” Paideuma VI (1956): 194–204; Mircea Eliade, Mythes, rêves et mystères (Paris:
Gallimard, 1957); Mircea Eliade, “The Prestige of Cosmogonic Myth,” Diogenes XXIII
(1958): 1–13; Mircea Eliade, “The Quest for the ‘Origins’ of Religion,” History of Religions
4, no. 1 (July 1, 1964): 154–69; Mircea Eliade, “Cosmogonic Myth and ‘Sacred History,’”
Religious Studies 2, no. 2 (1967): 171–83.
Mircea Eliade, Le Mythe de l’éternel Retour (Paris: Gallimard, 1949).
Mircea Eliade, The Myth of the Eternal Return: Cosmos and History, trans. Willard R. Trask
(New York: Pantheon Books, 1954), ix.
Eliade, 5–6.
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De Martino believed that his colleague was correct in assuming that the
flight from historical reality was an essential trait of religion. Even more, he
agreed that that religion is a complex consisting of both ritual and myth, in
which the ritual repetition of mythic accounts allows the practitioner to negate
or obscure history, thus escaping historical reality through the metahistorical
universe of myth. As the subtitle to the book’s French edition—Archetypes and
Repetition—implies, Eliade argued that ritual acts are used “to annul past time,
to abolish history by a continuous return in illo tempore, by the repetition of
the cosmogonic act.”17 De Martino summarized this posture as follows:
According to Eliade, the historian of religion studies facts that, despite
being inserted into the flux of becoming, manifest a behavior that to a
great extent transcends the historical behavior of the human being. At
the heart of the various religions always the same “archetypes” are at
work, that is to say the same images and the same fundamental symbols,
in which the human condition as such expresses itself beyond all ages
and all civilizations. In this way, according to Eliade, the religious pretense to escape history and to resolve it in the ritual repetition of archetypes, has a certain sense of effective ontological value: the historian and
the phenomenologist of religion get mixed up with the man engaged in
religion in at least one aspect, inasmuch as they confirm the fundamental
religious aspiration to escape from history.18
It was in 1952, shortly after Eliade himself published his most famous book
on the theme as Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy (1951),19 that de
Martino personally contacted the Romanian scholar. In his letter, he informed
the Romanian scholar about his plans to publish an investigation on the myth
and ritual practices surrounding the sacred pole of an Australian aborigine
nomadic people made famous in Eliade’s studies. That same year, the results of
this investigation were published in the form of an article entitled “Territorial
Anguish and Cultural Redemption in the Achilpa Myth of Origins” (1952).20
17
18
19
20
Eliade, 81.
Ernesto De Martino, “Prefazione,” in Trattato di storia delle religioni, by Mircea Eliade
(Torino: Einaudi, 1954), IX.
Mircea Eliade, Le chamanisme et les techniques archaïques de l’extase (Paris: Payot, 1951).
Ernesto De Martino, “Angoscia territoriale e riscatto culturale nel mito Achilpa delle origini. Contributo allo studio della mitologia degli Aranda,” Studi e materiali di storia delle
religioni 23 (1952 1951): 52–66.
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In this composition, which has been lauded as “one of the highest and most
mature expressions of contemporary anthropology,”21 de Martino investigated
the myths and practices of an Australian people; paying particular attention
to its use of a ceremonial pole, known as “Kauwa-Auwa.” The Italian scholar
of religion demonstrated how the ritual object is used to relieve the nomadic
people’s anxiety associated with constantly having to move to new places.
Explicitly acknowledging his debt to Eliade, he argued that the pole is central to certain “rituals,” which are performed to “symbolically repeat the act of
creation.”22 For de Martino, Eliade’s studies on “foundational events that took
place in illo tempore” are “relevant” because they show how religion works with
acts that “can be ceremonially reiterated.”23
In his subsequent writings, de Martino deepened his exploration of the
crisis and the recovery of the “presence” as “de-historification.”24 Focusing
on primitive societies and magical practices, he argued that they are cultural
techniques of recovery that address critical moments of existence and act
as protection to both individual and collective identities, ultimately leading
to the strengthening of the presence by imbuing it with community values.
De-historification works by temporarily concealing the destructive potential
of personal and collective crises, be they natural disasters, economic oppression, or the loss of a family member. In so doing, it transposes these critical
moments and their negative implications into a metahistorical realm where the
incidents are actively mastered and brought under control. De-historification,
therefore, does not only allow to frame the historical crisis in a mythic and
optimistic horizon where it has already been resolved at the beginning of time,
but it also aids the reintegration of the individuals and communities affected
by the incident.
In another article, de Martino remarked again that what Eliade calls “the
archaic ontology” consists in the “resolution of the historical becoming in the
repetition of mythic archetypes, primordial events that took place once and
for all in illo tempore.”25 This repetition of myths in order to escape history,
so de Martino observed, could be summed up with the expression “stepping
21
22
23
24
25
Marcello Massenzio, “Destorificazione istituzionale e destorificazione irrelativa in
E. de Martino,” Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni 51, no. 9 (1985): 199.
De Martino, “Angoscia territoriale e riscatto culturale nel mito Achilpa delle origini.
Contributo allo studio della mitologia degli Aranda,” 2012, 227.
De Martino, 227.
Ernesto De Martino, “Fenomenologia religiosa e storicismo assoluto,” Studi e materiali di
storia delle religioni 24–25 (1954 1953): 1–25. See also, the ample archival notes on this
theme published by Marcello Massenzio. Ernesto De Martino, Storia e metastoria: i fondamenti di una teoria del sacro, ed. Marcello Massenzio (Lecce: Argo, 1995).
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 44.
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back” (passo indietro). He used this formulation to discuss his Romanian colleague’s conception of magic and argued that “the scholar who has treated this
‘step backwards’ in the mythical-ritual nexus the longest and with the greatest
abundance of data, is, without a doubt, Mircea Eliade.”26
This being said, the Italian thinker’s theory was not only shaped by Eliade
but also influenced by another giant in the twentieth century study of religion,
namely Claude Lévi-Strauss. While it is certainly correct that Lévi-Strauss took
a decisive step away from the insider-phenomenological approach, de Martino
understood that the crisis within the discipline of religious studies during his
time was not only one of a split between seemingly incommensurable positions but also one of a lack of self-awareness. In fact, he believed that the two
paradigmatic representatives of the insider and the outsider approaches had
much more in common than they themselves thought.
First of all, they shared a thematic interest. Just like de Martino and Eliade,
the French anthropologist dedicated much of his intellectual activity to the
study of magic and shamanism. Born in the same year as de Martino and a
year after Eliade, he shared important preoccupations that were cultivated
by his Italian and Romanian colleagues. It was in 1949—in between the
publications of de Martino’s The World of Magic and Eliade’s Shamanism—
that Lévi-Strauss published two of his most influential articles on the topic,
namely “The Sorcerer and His Magic” and “The Effectiveness of Symbols.”27 In
his analysis, the French anthropologist applied himself to interpret a song of
healing that was uttered by a Cuna Indian shaman during an obstructed labor.
Lévi-Strauss suggested that the shaman’s séance of healing plays on mythical
motifs of Indian culture and that this allows him to alleviate the pain of the
woman. During the episode, the spiritual healer envisions that the soul of the
laboring mother was stolen by Muu, the sacred power regulating the gestation
of the fetus. What ensues is a journey upon which the shaman must embark
in order to recover the captured soul. As he travels to the country of Muu and
her daughters, these mythical locales become identified with the human body,
specifically with physical attributes relevant to a woman in labor. The way of
Muu becomes her vagina, whereas the abode of the mythical demon signifies
the uterus of the pregnant woman. Throughout the song, the shaman retells
26
27
De Martino, 43–44.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “L’efficacité Symbolique,” Revue de L’histoire des Religions 135,
no. 1 (1949): 5–27; Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Le sorcier et sa magie,” Les Temps Modernes 41
(March 1949): 385–406. Both articles were republished in Structural Anthropology: Claude
Lévi-Strauss, “The Sorcerer and His Magic,” in Structural Anthropology (New York: Basic
Books, 1963), 167–85; Claude Lévi-Strauss, “The Effectiveness of Symbols,” in Structural
Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1963), 186–205.
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De-Historification ( 1944–1948 )
73
his struggle against evil spirits and the culminating battle against Muu over his
patient’s soul. Finally, isomorphically linked through the healer’s song, both
the shamanic flight and the physical labor culminate in triumph: Just as the
spirit releases the soul of the mother, the obstacles to the delivery of her baby
are removed.
De Martino held the French anthropologist’s interpretation of magic in
high esteem, analyzing it repeatedly and extensively throughout a series of
writings during the 1950s and 1960s.28 He was so impressed with Lévi-Strauss’
account of the Cuna healing song that he published a translated version of
the latter article in his Magic and Civilization.29 De Martino also addressed
at least one letter to his colleague, attaching a copy of one of his own books
of the Southern Trilogy.30 The Italian historian of religion saw Lévi-Strauss as
an ally because he shared his conviction that the “fundamental perspective
to evaluate the efficacy of magical symbols is not naturalistic but historicalcultural.”31 Lévi-Strauss’ interpretation, in fact, was not naturalistic. The other
way around, the anthropologue argued that the song’s therapeutic efficacy
rests in the isomorphic relationship between the symbolic realm of the text
and the severe physical parturition difficulties. As de Martino himself noted,
“the part of the magic enchantment (incantesimo) that narrates the shamanistic agon against Muu maintains itself constantly between mythical symbolism and physiological realism, with a continual passage from one to the other
level.”32 In other words, de Martino saw in Lévi-Strauss’ account—marked by
an oscillation between “the symbolic description of that which we could call
the visceral landscape and the continual reference to the physiological reality
of the uterine world in labor”33—glimpses of his own endeavors during the
1950s. As I will show later, during those years, de Martino was one of the first
28
29
30
31
32
33
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna”; Ernesto De Martino, “L’approccio
etnologico della fenomenologia paranormale,” Giornale Italiano per la ricerca psichica
1, no. 2 (May 1963): 81–86; Ernesto De Martino, “La Funzione Della Magia Nel Mondo
Primitivo,” Vie Nuove, October 22, 1964; De Martino, La fine del mondo, 266–68, 403–7,
623–26.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “L’efficacia dei simboli magici,” in Magia e civiltà, ed. Ernesto De
Martino (Milano: Garzanti, 1962), 222–46.
I will discuss de Martino’s Southern Trilogy in the following chapters. In a letter sent on
October 2 1961, Lévi-Strauss thanks his colleague for sending him the “beautiful book,”
promises that he “will read it with considerable interest,” and assures him that he will
write a “report on it.” Pietro Angelini, “Dall’epistolario di Ernesto de Martino,” Quaderni
del dipartimento di scienze sociali dell’Istituto universitario orientale III, no. 3–4 (1989): 211.
De Martino, Magia e civiltà, 220–21.
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 49.
De Martino, 49.
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to argue that the phenomenon of “Tarantism” (tarantismo)—involving spiderbitten women in the Italian South, exorcised by means of the ritual playing of
the Tarantella—was not the result of a merely biological disease but rather a
cultural phenomenon imbued with a rich symbolic horizon. Just as in the case
of Lévi-Strauss’ laboring woman, the Tarantate were not healed by means of
physical intervention but rather through the efficacy of cultural practices.
De Martino brought his own predilection for how magic alters the conception of time in order to overcome difficult situations to his reading of
Lévi-Strauss’s piece on the Cuna healing ritual. Noting that the “magic performance of the shaman opens with a long and meticulous description—
like a film in slow-motion—of the antecedents of the present situation,” de
Martino proceeded to emphasize aspects that remind us of his own treatment
of the efficacy of magic practices. More specifically, he recovered the expression “stepping backwards,” which we already encountered in his discussion of
Eliade, and applied it to the French anthropologist’s theory of magic healing.
[The song] narrates the beginning of the crisis, the loss of consciousness
of the midwife, her visit to the shaman, the shaman’s departure to the
hut of the parturient, and his arrival. In other words, his “cure” initiates
with a step backwards that reclaims the events of retrospective interest
starting from the inception of the crisis. With an incredible abundance
of details it incisively describes—as if “recommencing from the beginning”—[…] the complete sequence of events.34
In “Myth, Religious Studies, and Modern Civilization,” de Martino used strikingly similar terms to introduce Lévi-Strauss’ study. Here too, he argued that
what unites his own work with that of the French structuralist is the emphasis on “the step backward” (passo indietro), noting that it operates through a
“ritual return of an initial mythic situation.”35 He proceeds to note not only
that the “structure of this magic enchantment demonstrates a complex symbolism,” but also specified that “this symbolism is oriented in part towards the
recovery of the initial situation, and in part towards the reliving of the conflicts
and somatic processes of the labor in resolved terms.”36
Of course, while it is not his dominant focus, such a “temporal” reading of
Cuna shamanism is by no means absent in the French structuralist’s interpretation. De Martino astutely supported his interpretation by citing Lévi-Strauss’
34
35
36
De Martino, “L’approccio etnologico della fenomenologia paranormale,” 82.
De Martino, “Mito, scienze religiose e civiltà moderna,” 48.
De Martino, 49.
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own observation on the fact that “everything occurs as though the shaman
were trying to induce the sick woman—whose contact with reality is no doubt
impaired and whose sensitivity is exacerbated—to relive the initial situation
through pain, in a very precise and intense way, and to become psychologically
aware of its smallest details.”37 Throughout his examination of the Cuna healing episode, de Martino integrated the positions of Lévi-Strauss with those of
Eliade. Fundamentally, he set up Lévi-Strauss’ account in between that which
is “antecedent” (antecedente) and “initial” (iniziale), on the one hand, and that
which “present” (presente), on the other. Not only that. He also reproduced
the idea of a ritual repetition of the myth, which he inherited from Eliade,
in order to bring movement into those two extremes on the temporal spectrum. Notions that de Martino used abundantly throughout his analysis of
Lévi-Strauss’ work—the “the step backwards” (passo indietro), “slow down”
(rallentare), “recovery” (ripresa), “reliving” (rivivere), and “starting from the
top” (ricominciare da capo)—serve to highlight the importance of a dehistoricized temporality even if that idea has a negligible relevance in the French
anthropologist’s study.
2
Historicizing the De-historifying Tendencies of the Modern
Magicians in the Study of Religion
De-historification—focusing on the trope of the “step backwards”—involved
not only the establishment of a dialogue between two seemingly incommensurate perspectives within a split discipline, but also a historicization of the
crisis itself. In other words, de Martino suggested that his fellow scholars of
religion were trying to salvage their discipline’s presence through de-historification just as the shaman did in primitive society. This attitude was particularly
prevalent in his treatment of Eliade, whom de Martino accused of taking the
religious practitioner’s account at face value, so much so that the “pretense” to
abolish history “ends up becoming the theory, even the theology of the anthropologist and of the historian of religion, who is thus himself being transformed
into a mystic and an occultist in front of our eyes.”38 The most articulate critique of this position is to be found in de Martino’s collective review of three
of Eliade’s writings—besides the ever-present The Myth of the Eternal Return
(1949), he also addressed Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy (1951),
37
38
Lévi-Strauss, “The Effectiveness of Symbols,” 193.
De Martino, “Etnologia e cultura nazionale negli ultimi dieci anni,” 329. For an almost
identitical formulation, see also, De Martino, 337.
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and the Eranos Jahrbuch article entitled “Psychology and History of Religions:
Concerning the Symbolism of the ‘Center’” (1951).39 In his review, written in
1952, after recognizing his debt to Eliade’s idea that religion consists of a “the
ritual iteration of mythic archetypes,” de Martino proceeded to express his reservations: “Where we can’t follow the author—and here, we fear that he risks
to confuse the true motive for the hermeneutic theme proposed by him—is in
the anti-historic polemic, which, to say it candidly, seems to me to be set up on
a radical misunderstanding of what historicism is in its most mature form.”40
The Italian historian of religion contended that the flight from history,
which Eliade observed in religion, was not only impacting his ahistorical
approach, but also shaped his personal anti-historical philosophical orientation—so that “any distinction between science and object of science, between
religious historiography and religious worldview is wiped out.”41 In response,
de Martino reasserted his conception of historicism as “a theory of human (not
mythic) productivity of cultural values,” according to which “even the religious
pretension to save oneself from history, is part of history.”42 In another writing
from the mid-1950s, de Martino expressed this commitment to a secularist and
historicist reading of religion as follows:
On the contrary, even though religious de-historification is lived
by the believer as refusal of the “human condition,” what it brings
about is not a real de-historification, […] but rather the opening up
of the operative powers of man, so that he matures in the shadow of
the divine and the profane; and the secular discloses itself within the
sacred.43
39
40
41
42
43
Mircea Eliade, “Psychologie et histoire des religions, à propos du symbolisme du ‘Centre,’”
in Eranos-Jahrbuch: Mensch und Ritus, ed. Olga Fröbe-Kapteyn, vol. 19 (Zürich: RheinVerlag, 1951), 247–82. Ernesto De Martino, “Recensione a M. Eliade, ‘Le mythe de l’éternel
retour, archétypes et répétition,’ ‘Psychologie et histoire des religions, à propos du symbolisme du “centre”,’ ‘Le chamanisme et les techniques archaïques de l’extase,’” Studi e
materiali di storia delle religioni 23 (1952): 148–55.
De Martino, “Recensione a M. Eliade, ‘Le mythe de l’éternel retour, archétypes et répétition,’ ‘Psychologie et histoire des religions, à propos du symbolisme du “centre”,’ ‘Le chamanisme et les techniques archaïques de l’extase,’” 149.
De Martino, 152–53.
De Martino, 149–50.
Ernesto De Martino, “Fenomenologia religiosa e storicismo assoluto,” in Storia e metastoria: i fondamenti di una teoria del sacro, ed. Marcello Massenzio (1954; repr., Lecce: Argo,
1995), 63.
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De Martino’s critique of the second de-historifying magician of the twentieth century, Lévi-Strauss, is subtler in nature. This is, at least partly, due to
the fact that the French anthropologist was not primarily concerned with
the question of time. While we saw that de Martino interpreted Lévi-Strauss’
account of shamanic healing through a temporal horizon—the “step back”—
there is no doubt that the latter’s structuralism was not amenable to such
an approach precisely because of its neglect for history. As Dosse noted, in
structuralism “war was declared against historicism, the historical context,
the search for origins, diachrony, teleology and the argument was made in
favor of permanent invariables, synchrony, and the hermetic text.”44 Inspired
by the linguistics, Lévi-Strauss asserted the primacy of universal structures
of the human mind over historical variations in different cultures. Already in
The Elementary Structures of Kinship (1949),45 Lévi-Strauss distanced himself
from historians and their genetic approach. According to the French scholar,
the origin of the structures that the anthropologist studies is nowhere near as
important as their function within the system.
De Martino, however, quickly realized that this apparent disregard for history is ultimately just as much a result of the crisis of modernity as Eliade’s
nostalgia of the illo tempore. Paradoxically, it is precisely this emphasis on a
universal functioning rather than specific historical origins and developments
that the structuralist instantiation of the outsider-explanatory approach comes
to join the so-called “historians of religion” of the insider-phenomenological
orientation. Let us recall Mircea Eliade’s own conception of how the history of
religions is to contemplate myth:
Becoming aware that every religious form has a history and that is built
into a well-defined cultural complex does not complete the task of the
historian of religions. In fact, he still has to understand and clarify the
meaning, the intention, and the message of this religious form. […] In
other words, the historian of religions is required by his scientific discipline to deal with the timeless constants of religious experience and with
the structures, irreducible to historicity, which derive therefrom.46
Like Lévi-Strauss, Eliade prioritized timeless structures over historical
particulars. It is in this nostalgia for the archaic structures—what Eliade
44
45
46
Dosse, History of Structuralism. Vol. 1: The Rising Sign, 1945–1966, 386, 23.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, Les structures élémentaires de la parenté (Paris: Presses Universitaires
de France, 1949).
Mircea Eliade, “Mythologie et histoire des religions,” Diogène 9 (January 1955): 101–2.
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repeatedly called the “timeless constants of religious experience”47—that de
Martino rightly pinpointed a crucial communality between the Romanian
historian of religion and Lévi-Strauss’ structuralist endeavor. Both Eliade
and Lévi-Strauss—despite their radically different positions on the insideroutsider, phenomenology-explanation, essentialization-naturalization
spectrum—were ultimately more intent on finding structures rather than content, constants rather than transformations, mental invariants rather than cultural particulars. For both scholars, the study of religion was premised on the
search for universals, with historical evidence being hardly more than the raw
material upon which to build the structure of a universal category, whether
this be kinship, myth, or the homo religiosus.
De Martino’s intuitions have been confirmed by some contemporary
researchers. Paul-François Tremlett, speaking of “a number of perhaps counterintuitive similarities between structuralism and the phenomenology of religion,” rightly emphasizes their shared “strategic essentialism.”48 In “Religious
Symbolism and Historical Becoming,” another one of the rare articles discussing this matter, the Italian anthropologist Sonia Giusti spoke about the parallels in their respective approaches to history as follows:
Lévi-Strauss’ affirmation that it is not men who tell myths but rather
myths who narrate men also counts for Eliade. In both cases, one tries
to understand, through myths, the reasons for human behaviors on the
bases of universal structures. The difference is that while for Lévi-Strauss
the motifs for myths are to be found in the mental structures by means
of which humans culturally perceive the world, for Eliade the motifs
for myths are located in the metaphysical structures, which explode
in symbols.49
The anthropologue was particularly passionate about myths as an expression
of a culture’s unconscious, arguing that his studies of myths were able to discover underlying and universal structures of cultures. Comparing the study of
myths to the analysis of grammar, he believed that the meaning of mythical
stories lies not in their content, but rather in their structure. Citing Carmen
47
48
49
For another example, see one of his letters to his teacher Pettazzoni: Mircea Eliade and
Raffaele Pettazzoni, L’histoire Des Religions a-t-Elle Un Sens? Correspondance 1926–1959,
ed. Natale Spineto, CERF (Paris: Le Cerf, 1994), 62.
Tremlett, Lévi-Strauss on Religion, 101.
Sonia Giusti, “Simbolismo religioso e divenire storico,” in Confronto con Mircea Eliade:
archetipi mistici e identità storica, ed. Luciano Arcella, Paola Pisi, and Roberto Scagno
(Milano: Jaca Book, 1998), 419–20.
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Bernand, we could say that “the content disappears in favor of the structural
logic.”50 Lévi-Strauss was especially concerned with binary oppositions as he
considered them to be the most dominant structural logic of both language
and myths. In the words of another commentator, we could say that “dividing the world into mutually exclusive categories produces meaning: culture/
nature, man/ woman, black/white, good/bad, us/them.”51 Besides Freudianism,
it is well known that Lévi-Strauss developed his thinking about culture in close
reliance upon linguistics, which he considered to be the most “scientific” of
all the social sciences.52 Of particular importance was the work of the Swiss
linguist Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913).53 Saussure’s Course in General
Linguistics (1916), consisting of notes by his students on a series of lectures
given at the University of Geneva, is famous for making linguistics into a system based on difference and relationships.54 According to Saussure’s theory,
the “signifier” (le significant, e.g. the sound image “cat”) and the “signified” (le
signifié, e.g. the concept or mental image of a cat) are not given naturally, but
stand in an arbitrary relationship.55
Now, in Saussure’s linguistics, this arbitrariness of language is counteracted
by the emphasis on a fixed system of language (langue).56 As Terence Hawkes has
illustrated, Lévi-Strauss appropriated Saussure’s system of linguistics to offer a
universal science of culture. Thus, although he “stalks it through the particular
varieties of its parole,” the French anthropologist’s priorities are not idiographic
but rather nomothetic as he searches for “the langue of the whole culture, its
system and its general laws.”57 It has even been argued that “in his scheme
the diversity of local nuance is lost in the unity of universal systematicity.”58
Against the grain of the paradigms of cognitive, cultural, and historical
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
Carmen Bernand, “Anthropologie religieuse,” in Théories de la religion: diversité des pratiques de recherche, changements des contextes socio-culturels, requêtes réflexives, ed. Pierre
Gisel, Jean-Marc Tétaz, and Valérie Nicolet Anderson (Genève: Labor et Fides, 2002), 160.
Storey, Cultural Theory and Popular Culture, 239.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “L’analyse structurale en linguistique et en anthropologie,” Word 1,
no. 1 (April 1, 1945): 33–53.
Michael Lane, Structuralism: A Reader (London: Cape, 1970), 13–14; Dosse, History of
Structuralism. Vol. 1: The Rising Sign, 1945–1966, xxii, 200.
Ferdinand de Saussure, Cours de linguistique générale (Lausanne: Payot, 1916), 144, 168–69.
Saussure called the arbitrariness of the link between signifier and signified “the first principle of linguistics.” Saussure, 100, 182; Jonathan Culler, Saussure (London: Fontana Press,
1976), 19–29.
Saussure, Cours de linguistique générale, 182–83; Roy Harris, Reading Saussure: A Critical
Commentary on the Cours de Linguistique Générale (La Salle: Open Court, 1987), 132, 219.
Terence Hawkes, Structuralism and Semiotics (London: Methuen, 1977), 39.
Paul Stoller, “Rationality,” in Critical Terms for Religious Studies, ed. Mark C. Taylor
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 246.
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relativism, Lévi-Strauss argued that there existed a hidden but universal pattern organizing all human mental and cultural life. Russell T. Mccutcheon, a
declared advocate for the outsider-explanatory approach to religion, emphasizes that this tradition “models itself after the natural sciences in attempting to generate universal theories of human behavior from the analysis of
specific cases.”59 This approach is “based on certain generalized regularities
in their observations, generalizations which they might label as laws,” aiming
at determining “the economic, political, psychological […] causes” of religious
behavior.60
In posthumously published notes,61 de Martino discussed Lévi-Strauss’
“History and Anthropology” (1949), which would become the opening essay
of Structural Anthropology.62 Here, he noted that his French colleague made a
distinction between the science of history, which “organizes its data in relation
to conscious expressions of social life,” and anthropology, which “proceeds by
examining its unconscious foundations.”63 Lévi-Strauss himself wrote:
The issue can thus be reduced to the relationship between history and
ethnology in the strict sense. We propose to show that the fundamental
difference between the two disciplines is not one of subject, of goal, or of
method. They share the same subject, which is social life; the same goal,
which is a better understanding of man; and, in fact, the same method,
in which only the proportion of research techniques varies. They differ, principally, in their choice of complementary perspectives: History
organizes its data in relation to conscious expressions of social life, while
anthropology proceeds by examining its unconscious foundations.64
As one commentator aptly put it, it is “the radicalization of these notions like
system and model, sometimes mathematizable (mathématisable) like structures of kinship,” which forms the basis for his firm belief in the “incontestable
59
60
61
62
63
64
Russell T. McCutcheon, ed., The Insider/Outsider Problem in the Study of Religion: A Reader
(London: Cassell, 1999), 128.
McCutcheon, 5.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 403–5.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Histoire et ethnologie,” Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 54, no.
3/4 (1949): 363–91; Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Introduction: History and Anthropology,” in
Structural Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1963), 1–30.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, Structural Anthropology (New York: Basic Books, 1963), 18. See also,
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Histoire et ethnologie,” Revue de Métaphysique et de Morale 54, no.
3/4 (1949): 363–91.
Lévi-Strauss, “Introduction: History and Anthropology,” 18.
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superiority of anthropology over history.”65 Later in life, de Martino increasingly started to regard the work of the French structuralist as a problematic
endeavor. Telling the story of how Lévi-Strauss argued that the anthropologist
should assume “the point of view of God […] to understand humans as if they
were completely outside of the game ( fuori gioco) […] as if he were an observer
of an unknown planet and as if he had an absolutely objective and complete
perspective, […] as if they were ants,”66 de Martino continued:
It seems to me that this scientific ideal of considering humans like ants
transforms itself into the prophetic message that humanity reduces itself
inevitably into a sort of anthill: that is, the message that humanity inevitably advances towards an apocalypse without eschaton, towards the
total ruin of what is human. This then is not even any longer a prophetic
message but a cold scientific prediction, which already dictates that we
should adapt to the event just as it is necessary to adjust oneself in the
autumn for the following and inevitable winter.67
De Martino, in response, remarked that such “distinctions do not hold up
because historiography has always been engaged, at least in its more mature
age, in reconstructing the unconscious motivations and the unintentional
results of the human acting in society.”68 He described Lévi-Strauss’ division as
“artificial and incongruous,” and argued instead that “all that there is, is the one
historical science.”69 According to de Martino, this type of historian is not primarily interested in “reproducing the manner in which the consciousness of
the historical agents comprehends its own acting.” Rather, “after having ascertained this consciousness, he moves […] to reconstruct the true meaning of
an individual initiative, an institution, an epoch, a civilization, and, in general,
any ‘event’.” De Martino emphasized that this move is a move “beyond”—both
in the “sense of its motivation and its results.” It is a maneuver, he specified
“beyond the consciousness, which the contemporaries that were engaged in it
would have had” of their own historical action.
Invoking Karl Marx’s dictum that “men make their own history, but they do
not know that they are making it” (gli uomini fanno la loro propria storia, ma
non sanno che la fanno), de Martino further noted that Lévi-Strauss used “this
65
66
67
68
69
Richard Marin, “La Nouvelle Histoire et Lévi Strauss,” Caravelle. Cahiers Du Monde
Hispanique et Luso-Brésilien, 2011, 165.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 689.
De Martino, 689–90.
De Martino, 404.
De Martino, 405–6.
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famous formula” in the sense that the “first term justifies history, the second
anthropology.”70 Thus, de Martino ultimately criticized his French colleague
for the same reasons that he rejected Eliade’s conception of science. By relegating the actual historical circumstances outside of the purview of their intellectual endeavors, they not only rejected the study of history in societies where
magic is practiced but also failed to address their own anti-historical bias. In
other words, de Martino used his theory of de-historification to historicize his
contemporaries’ tendency to flee from history. De Martino, by contrast, gave
Marx’s notion a different spin, as he used it as an argument for an integrated
and unified historical science that studies the historical import of magic both
in its explicit and implicit dimensions:
[…] it is also to be noted that […] the writer of this formula—and in reality the entire orientation of Western civilization—is a man who “knows”
that human history is made by men. This is why the formula of Marx
justifies the use of a unitary historicist criterion in the interpretation of
all human facts. This criterion is the recognition that any historiographical research starts from the analysis of conscious human facts to move
towards the problem of the “unconscious” results of human actions [that
lie] beyond the motivations and objectives, which come to the awareness
(coscienza) of the actors: Historically “true” is the entire process, which
leads from the unconscious motivations, via a certain necessary limitation of consciousness, to trace back to certain results which are found
beyond this limitation.71
De Martino’s theory of religion as de-historification would remain central to
his work until the end of his life. In posthumously published notes from his
final years of research, we find passages in which he both acknowledges the
mechanism of religious life as Eliade saw it and decisively argued for its profoundly worldly and civilizational function.
If one does not accept [the autonomy of humanity] then there is nothing left to do but to negate the reality of this condition, to conceal it and
mask it in the grand protective themes of religious life, of myth and ritual,
of theology and metaphysics, of magic and mysticism. There is nothing
left to be done than to reduce the rhythms of daily labor to a world of
70
71
De Martino, 404. For the passage, on which de Martino comments, see Lévi-Strauss,
“Introduction: History and Anthropology,” 23.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 405.
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signs and symbols and to carry out the task of establishing—here and
now—a new order in the shadow of an order that is already established
in illo tempore. In that case, the doing (il fare) will be masked in repeating
and in imitating, the being awake will be included in dreaming, and one
will be in history as if not being part of it because one is already outside
of it. However, in the meantime through this pia fraus, one will work and
create, and the building of civilization will be constructed.72
Amongst these final notes, we also come across reflections on some other
pieces of writing of the French anthropologist that sport more sensibility to historical issues. Judging by a section entitled “The Concept of De-historification
in Claude Lévi-Strauss,” it appears that the Italian thinker intuited that the
anthropologue’s work was by no means devoid of thinking about the importance of history. On the contrary, de Martino cited a passage from The Savage
Mind (1962), in which we read:
I have suggested elsewhere that the clumsy distinction between “peoples
without history” and others could with advantage be replaced by a distinction between what for convenience I called ‘cold’ and ‘hot’ societies:
the former seeking, by the institutions they give themselves, to annul the
possible effects of historical factors on their equilibrium and continuity
in a quasi-automatic fashion; the latter resolutely internalizing the historical process and making it the moving power of their development.73
Had de Martino lived another twenty years, his intuitions would have been
confirmed. In fact, in later years, Lévi-Strauss took on a position that was strikingly similar to that of de Martino. In a paper presented at the Marc Bloch
Conference in 1983, the French structuralist relativized his distinction between
“hot” and “cold” civilizations, arguing that he “did not intend to define real categories but only a heuristic goal.” In the same paper, which was published as
“History and Anthropology”—taking the same name as his article written over
three decades earlier—he further relativized his previous stance.
All societies are historical in the same way, but some admit it frankly
while others revolt against it and prefer to ignore it. Thus, if one can rightfully classify societies on an ideal scale—not according to their degree of
72
73
De Martino, 356.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, The Savage Mind (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1966),
233–34.
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historicity, which is similar for all of them, but to the manner in which
they feel it—it is important to locate and analyze borderline cases: under
which conditions and in which form do collective thinking and individuals open themselves to history? When and how, do they no longer look at
it as disorder and threat but instead see in it a tool for acting upon and
transforming the present?74
Another example of this growing awareness of the historical reality in socalled “cold” societies comes from an interview with Didier Eribon from 1988.
If he earlier described them as outside of history, he now notes that “they
imagine themselves as primitives because their ideal is to stay in a state when
the gods created them at the origin of time. Of course, they create themselves
the illusion and don’t escape history any more than all others.”75 While de
Martino would have wholeheartedly agreed with such statements—likely noting that the societies in question are the ones that have perfected the logic
of producing history through de-historification—he nonetheless went further
than the French anthropologist. In fact, the Italian thinker openly critiqued
the contemporary scientists’ tendency to de-historify time. In his discussion
of Lévi-Strauss and Marx, for instance, de Martino demonstrated a dialectical
approach, which moves decisively beyond any type of black and white, or hot
and cold thinking. Instead, he insisted that Marx’s formulation needed to be
relativized as the two extremes are ultimately not capable of existing on their
own. On the one hand, “if men really did absolutely not know [that they make
history], they could never conquer this knowledge.” On the other hand, “if this
knowledge could one day be fully conquered and making history coincided
precisely with the operative consciousness that one has of it, on this day history would also end. [In that case], historiography would kill history.”76
3
The Magic Christ of Science: Heroic Historicism and the Active
Provocation of Crisis in Pursuit of Critical Thinking
In introducing de-historification, I noted that it is intended to help individuals
and societies overcome critical moments of existence by transporting historical reality into a space outside of time. It operates by temporarily concealing
the destructive potential of the crisis by transposing the present events into a
74
75
76
Claude Lévi-Strauss, “Histoire et ethnologie,” Annales 38, no. 6 (1983): 1218.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, De près et de loin, ed. Didier Eribon (Paris: O. Jacob, 1988), 176.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 405.
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metahistorical realm where the incidents are actively mastered and brought
under control. In de-historification, the crisis has always already been resolved
at the beginning of time. Now, basing his study on the countless examples he
drew from ethnographies of primitive societies, de Martino argued that dehistorification may also work by actively simulating or provoking a crisis. The
shaman, according to this understanding, is a heroic figure who protects the
presence of others through his courageous engagement in magical practices.
De Martino went even as far as calling the shaman a “veritable magic Christ,
mediator for the entire community of being-in-the-world as redemption from
the risk of not-being-there.”77 In other words, what sets the shaman apart from
other members of the community is that he actively seeks out the crisis. The
shaman is the key protagonist in the world of magic and the technique of dehistorification precisely because he actively provokes the instability of the self
through trance-like states.
While the members of the community can lose their united presence without restitution, in such a way that their fragile being-there is
an unstable psychic cosmos that risks to precipitate into chaos at any
moment, the shaman is the hero that knew how to bring himself to the
threshold of chaos and that has been able to make a pact with it. Indeed,
it is because the shaman has become the unconditional master of his
own frailty, that he has also acquired the capacity to overcome the limits
of his own being-there and to make himself into the clairvoyant and organizing center of the weakness of others.78
Likewise, since de Martino’s discussion of shamanic magic as de-historification
always fertilized his understanding of science during the years before and after
WWII, it is not surprising that he applied the move from crisis to recovery to
his analysis of religious studies. Becoming a magic Christ himself, a “mediator for the entire community (of scientists),” he used de-historification to lead
his field from the state of a split discipline that is driven blindly by its antimagical polemic to a critical discourse on magic. De Martino described this
type of approach “heroic historicism” (storicismo eroico),79 and argued that his
philosophy of science is dedicated to “the boundless task of spiritual resolution of reality, which, thanks to effective thinking, melts time after time the
intellectualist concretion that seems to put a limit to immanence. Time and
77
78
79
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 98.
De Martino, 94–95.
De Martino, 3.
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time, it leads the inertia of the fact ( fatto) back to human making ( fare) and
molding (plasmare).”80 Like the shaman’s practice of redemption of the presence, however, this movement is never linear, but rather a dialectical process
that uses crisis as the motor for recovery. De Martino’s own growth as a thinker
in religious studies operated by means of a stitching movement in between
two tissues that only exist because of the rupture within the discipline itself.
Let us look at this heroic process of unifying a ruptured science in more detail.
De Martino usually opened up his articles on de-historification by praising the
importance of the insider-phenomenological approach for excelling at “the
description of that which appears to the consciousness of the believer”—such
as “the encounter with the numinous, the being seized by the radically other,
the reabsorption of the here and now in the ritual repetition of an inaugural
metahistorical event, [and] the permanent nexus between mythic figuration
and ceremonial act.”81 However, in all of his writings, de Martino was equally
quick at curtailing his enthusiasm with the caveat that this methodological
orientation limits its analysis to the position of the believer: “That which is the
starting point for the man engaged in religion,” so he wrote, “constitutes […]
only a stage or a moment of the true hierogenetic process to be reconstructed.”
By invoking the slogan “Mitsingen ist verboten,” which is “written on a sign in
the concert halls of Germany,” de Martino explains that “for the historian of
religion in any capacity, it is equally forbidden to compete with the believers in the immediate testimony regarding the presence of the numinous.”82
Specifically, de Martino distanced himself decisively from Eliade’s abolition
of history. Just as the two authors disagreed about the “reality” of magic, so
they differ in their conception of the “reality” of de-historification. In his 1952
review to The Myth of the Eternal Return, de Martino succinctly described the
difference in their respective positions as follows:
Eliade affirms that man opposes history even when he attempts to make
it—even when he pretends to be nothing else than history—but the truth
is that man is in history even when he pretends to escape it. As a consequence, from this perspective, the great cultural theme of the iteration
80
81
82
De Martino, 4.
Ernesto De Martino, “Mito e religione,” in Profezie e realtà del nostro secolo: testi e documenti per la storia di domani., by Franco Fortini (Bari: Laterza, 1965), 534.
De Martino, “Storicismo e irrazionalismo nella storia delle religioni,” 77.
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of mythic archetypes appears like a paradoxically productive pretense,
which—despite its [contrary] intention—is new history.83
Just like Guilford Dudley—who defined him as an “anti-historian of religion”84—
Vittorio Lanternari—who described him as dominated by a “visceral antihistoricism inspired by a vein tending towards mysticism”85—or Gavin
Flood—who accused him of “implicit theological and ahistorical understanding of religion”86—de Martino realized that Eliade’s inability to distance
himself from the believer’s point of view seriously hampered his hermeneutic approach to religion. In what might be the most concise summary of the
controversy between the two, Nicola Gasbarro notes how de Martino differs
from Eliade because he insists on a distinction between the mechanism of dehistorification active in religious practice, on the one hand, and the scholars
historicizing activity guiding his interpretation, on the other.
For Eliade, the mythic-ritual nexus is dehistoricizing: the situation of
crisis is traced back to a mythic model that has already resolved the
unresolvable, and the ritual does nothing more than to sacrally repeat
this paradigmatic miracle. De Martino is concerned with a technical dehistorification that leads to redemption, to the entry into the specific cultural history, transforming the given situation into value. The mechanism
is dehistoricizing, but the effect and the function are historical.87
De Martino’s confrontation with Eliadean ideas about religion and history
remained stable throughout his life. For instance, in the notes for his posthumously published book on the apocalypse, de Martino offered elaborate
commentaries on several of his colleague’s books. In a section dedicated to
Myths, Dreams and Mysteries (1957), he observed that “historiography has the
task to convert that which men believe to do, into that which men are really
doing in order to legitimize either their beliefs or the reality that manifests
83
84
85
86
87
De Martino, “Recensione a M. Eliade, ‘Le mythe de l’éternel retour, archétypes et répétition,’ ‘Psychologie et histoire des religions, à propos du symbolisme du “centre”,’ ‘Le chamanisme et les techniques archaïques de l’extase,’” 150.
Guilford Dudley, “Mircea Eliade as the ‘Anti-Historian’ of Religions,” Journal of the
American Academy of Religion 44, no. 2 (1976): 345–59.
Vittorio Lanternari, La mia alleanza con Ernesto de Martino e altri saggi post-demartiniani
(Napoli: Liguori, 1997), 24.
Gavin Flood, Beyond Phenomenology: Rethinking the Study of Religion (London:
Continuum, 1999), 5–6.
Nicola Gasbarro, “Ernesto de Martino: microstoria di un ‘nostro,’” Studi e materiali di storia
delle religioni 51, no. 9 (1985): 219.
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itself because of them.”88 De Martino, deeply grounded within the discipline of
religious studies, was cognizant that the field gave rise to scholarly approaches
that were precisely trying to distinguish between that what people believe to
be doing and that what they are truly doing. One of these thinkers, of course,
was Claude Lévi-Strauss. In his study of the shamanic healing practice, for
example, the French anthropologist famously interpreted the shaman’s activity that he encountered in the region of northwest Colombia and southern
Panama as a form of psychoanalysis. In his study, Lévi-Strauss made frequent
reference to the work of Sigmund Freud, speaking of psychoanalysis as “the
modern version of shamanistic technique.”89
In both cases, the purpose is to bring to a conscious level conflicts and
resistances which have remained unconscious, owing either to their
repression by other psychological forces or—in case of childbirth—to
their own specific nature, which is not psychic but organic or even simply
mechanical. In both cases also, the conflicts and resistances are resolved,
not because of the knowledge, real or alleged, which the sick woman progressively acquires of them, but because this knowledge makes possible
a specific experience, in the course of which conflicts materialize in an
order and on a level permitting their free development and leading to
their resolution.90
Lévi-Strauss not only compared the traditional healer to a primitive psychoanalyst, but also made the claim that the mechanism of healing could operate in the same way as abreaction in Freudian analysis. According to this
model of healing, the reaction of the treatment takes on both a mental and
a physical dimension, even if it is elicited exclusively through psychological
influence. Commenting on a series of “characteristics” that can be found in
“the shamanic cure,” the French anthropologist noted that “we know that its
precondition is the unprovoked intervention of the analyst, who appears in
the conflicts of the patient through a double transference mechanism, as a
flesh-and-blood protagonist and in relation to whom the patient can restore
and clarify an initial situation which has remained unexpressed or unformulated. All these characteristics can be found in the shamanistic cure.”91 The
Belgium-born theorist took inspiration from the Freudian theory of the
88
89
90
91
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 272–73. Eliade, Mythes, rêves et mystères.
Lévi-Strauss, “The Effectiveness of Symbols,” 204.
Lévi-Strauss, 198.
Lévi-Strauss, 198.
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unconscious as he sought to discover the “unconscious foundations” of
society.92 As anthropologist, Lévi-Strauss believed that his task was “to grasp,
beyond the conscious and always shifting images which men hold, to the complete range of unconscious possibilities.”93
By acknowledging a deeper layer hidden behind the conscious awareness
of humans, he recognized that the perspective of the religious practitioners
needs to be critically investigated as they likely lack awareness of the true
causes, reasons, and mechanisms of their beliefs. In The Raw and the Cooked
(1964), Lévi-Strauss argued that he is not primarily preoccupied with how
“men think in myths, but how myths operate in men’s minds without their
being aware of the fact.”94 As André Green asserts, the French anthropologist
contended not only that the “role of consciousness is to lie to itself,” but also
that the “unconscious structure plays the role of an indicator of the true message of the human spirit.”95
De Martino was attracted to the outsider-explanatory approach because
it moves beyond pure phenomenology and description of myth and ritual in
order “to explain why people employ either of these devices in their daily lives
in the first place.”96 Like the naturalistic current, de Martino was trying to move
beyond the perception of the believer. However, unlike the type of approach
propagated by thinkers like Donald Wiebe, he did not simply “presume that
when religious people claim to have had supernatural experiences that defy
rational explanation, they are mistaken in some way.”97 On the contrary, while
he accused Eliade of failing to critically question the pretenses of religious
people, he criticized the proponents of the outsider-explanatory approach for
disregarding the intentions of the believers.
Historiography, as science of the critique of human cultural actions (operosità culturale umana), is the measuring of the pretenses of human acting. It is the passage from that which man believes to be doing to that
which he is really doing. Thus, it is the analysis of the unconscious motivations and of the unconscious results of a certain type of operating. But
what man believes to be doing is not accidental in regards to that which
92
93
94
95
96
97
Lévi-Strauss, Structural Anthropology, 18.
Lévi-Strauss, 23.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, The Raw and the Cooked: Introduction to the Science of Mythology
(New York: Harper & Row, 1969), 12.
André Green, “Le rejet de la psychanalyse par C. Lévi-Strauss,” Revue française de psychosomatique, no. 38 (December 13, 2010): 145.
McCutcheon, Manufacturing Religion, 107.
McCutcheon, The Insider/Outsider Problem in the Study of Religion, 127.
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he really does. Limiting oneself to the reduction of all human pretenses
to their effective reality is bad historiography because in this way the
other important moment of the historical research stays in obscurity,
namely the reconstruction of the historical necessity of the world of pretenses. […] The sacred mythical-ritual symbolism includes, for example,
a series of pretenses: But if one were to believe that one has completed
one’s own historical task by limiting oneself to reduce this symbolism
to “that which men really do,” then a whole series of problems of fundamental historical importance would fall away: The genesis, the structure,
and the function of the mythical-ritual symbolism and its diverse ways of
connecting itself to the totality of cultural life.98
In this chapter, I showed that while de Martino’s de-historification was a theory of magic that addressed the perplexing thoughts and practices he found
in “primitive” societies, its ultimate aim hit much closer to home. Developing
his thinking through a dialogue with Mircea Eliade and Claude Lévi-Strauss,
he identified “magic” as a category of crisis that perfectly embodied modernity and produced a decisive split in the discipline of religious studies in the
twentieth century. Evolving his approach beyond that of his more famous
colleagues, he expanded the scope of de-historification to use it as a tool for
critical thinking that actively engages the crisis through dialectics and historicization. De Martino regarded his own age as an age of magic. An age that
is best imagined as the drama of the loss and redemption of the presence. On
the one hand, the presence—that is the person, the individual, the being-inthe-world—is no longer guaranteed and under constant threat of being lost.
On the other hand, we witness the emergence of extraordinary figures, who
are capable of navigating these moments of crisis and to help their community overcome them. If de Martino called the shaman of the “primitive” age
a “magic Christ,” then he himself was a modern day shaman, a “hero of the
presence.”99 Just as Sergio Berardini has rightly pointed out that “in the shaman, it is possible to see the ‘first’ weltgeschichtliche Individuum through which
the spirit ‘has become man’,”100 de Martino’s critical theory of de-historification
is an attempt to re-found the self as a historical actor in light of the crisis of
modernity. De Martino’s dialectical thinking reproduced the shamanic process
of de-historification. Just as the shamanic crisis is a feigned one, de Martino at
98
99
100
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 460.
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 122.
Sergio Fabio Berardini, Ethos, presenza, storia: la ricerca filosofica di Ernesto de Martino
(Trento: Università degli studi di Trento, Dipartimento di lettere e filosofia, 2013), 132.
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first engaged with Eliade and Lévi-Strauss in a way that inevitably reproduced
the crisis within the modern discipline of religions studies. In both cases, the
dissolution of the self, the crisis of the presence—which is usually feared as an
expression of utter abdication of identity—is voluntarily pursued and sought
out. In a central passage of The World of Magic, we read:
[…] sometimes in the world of magic, the dissolution of being, the risk
of the presence, seems to acquire the significance of a dominant ending
that is voluntarily pursued. Solitude, darkness, fasting, very rigorous trials, orgiastic dance, concentration, monotonous chant, rolling of drums,
incubations, fumigations, narcotics: Couldn’t it be that these techniques
appear for the stimulation of the trance and the deliberately sought-out
collapse of the horizon? In that case, we would have to demonstrate that
the presence of these techniques does not only contradict, but even confirm the theme of the threatened being-there that redeems itself.101
This unhinging and reassembling, this putting into crisis and subsequent
redeeming, was nothing else than an expression of the heroic historicism
that de Martino advocated as a response to the lazy historicism of mainstream Italian thinking during his time. As Pietro Angelini noted, “a ‘heroic’
historicism cannot and should not back down. The heroism, on the part of de
Martino, is located precisely in this resolution to not write a history of magic.
Because it is a history that is yet to be founded, and in order to do that it is
required to descend on one’s own into that dark crevasse out of which Western
man has immerged, wounded but victorious.”102 Due to his dialectical move
from crisis to critique, complementing the insider-phenomenological insight
into the functioning of religion with the outsider-explanatory thrust of analysis, de Martino would generally be harsher in his critique of Eliade than of
Lévi-Strauss. However, as his dialectical method of thinking critically about
religion would not come to rest in either one of the two extremes, we will
soon see that de Martino not only expressed significant sympathy for the selfreflexive trends in Lévi-Strauss’ Tristes Tropique, but also voiced increasingly
harsh criticisms later in his life.
101
102
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 85–86.
Angelini, Ernesto de Martino, 31.
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Critical Ethnocentrism (1949–1959): The Southern
Period and the Articulation of a Post-colonial
Anthropology alongside Claude Lévi-Strauss
1
Notoriety without Success: Controversies with Croce
and Intellectual Isolation within the Roman School of History
of Religions
The World of Magic can be regarded as a symbol for de Martino’s fundamental
role as a promoter for the study of religion on the Italian peninsula. Because
of his involvement with some of Italy’s most distinguished publishers, such
as Giangiacomo Feltrinelli (1926–1972), Alberto Mondadori (1914–1976), and
Giulio Einaudi (1912–1999), it has been argued that “half of the books published
in the field of anthropology and religious studies” between the late 1940s until
the mid-sixties, ‘carried the stamp of de Martino’.”1 His collaboration with the
Einaudi publishing house was an immense success, leading to the publication
of a series known as Collection of Religious, Anthropological, and Psychological
Studies (Collezione di studi religiosi, etnologici e psicologici).2 It was co-directed
by de Martino and the renowned Italian literary figure Cesare Pavese (1908–
1950) until the latter’s suicide in 1950. Supported by Raffaele Pettazzoni and
Angelo Brelich, two important historians of religion—who collaborated with
translations and introductions3—the series is also commonly known by the
name Purple Series (Collana viola) for the distinguishing color of its cover.
However, his magnum opus also stands for de Martino’s isolation within
this disciplinary matrix. Indeed, his professional development as a historian
of religion was not burgeoning as he had hoped. In 1948, after his book was
published as the first volume of the Purple Series, de Martino was rejected
from a teaching position in anthropology at the Sapienza University in Rome.
There, two of his closest allies, Boccassino and Pettazzoni, considered his work
to be too philosophical and not anthropological enough. In the words of one
1 Angelini, 10.
2 Gilberto Mazzoleni, “Il mito, il rito e la storia secondo la scuola storico-religiosa di Roma,”
in Le religioni e la storia: a proposito di un metodo, ed. Gilberto Mazzoleni and Adriano
Santiemma (Roma: Bulzoni, 2005), 34.
3 Mancini, “Fra pensiero simbolico, religione civile e metapsichica,” 655.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_007
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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Critical Ethnocentrism ( 1949–1959 )
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commentator, we could say that de Martino “experienced notoriety but no
success.”4 The academy rejected him for his wide range of concerns and orientations that failed to align with any single one of the intellectual orientations
of his time. He was neither really accepted by the proponents of the Italian
School of History of Religions nor willing to limit his curiosity in psychological interpretations of religion, which remained largely foreign to this tradition of scholarship. Placido and Maria Cherchi’s illustrative description of de
Martino’s “anchoring within the historical post-pettazzonian school [as] the
docking of a solitary seafarer at a hospitable island,” might be the most appropriate sketch of his affiliation to the Roman school.5
Without a professorship, de Martino had no choice but to teach in high
schools. After working in Lucca and Faenza, he returned to Bari in 1945 to
resume his teaching position there.6 At this time, he was joined by his wife and
his two children, who returned from Cotignola, carrying The World of Magic
in their luggage. In the summer of 1947, de Martino finally accepted the call
from the Liceo Virgilio in Rome and began teaching there by the side of his
wife Anna, who was employed as an art history teacher. However, even though
he was officially engaged there from 1947 to 1959, de Martino was frequently
on leave for numerous reasons.7 Most importantly, the post-war years were
marked by physical sickness and de Martino spent months in the hospital,
undergoing several surgeries for various ailments on his lungs between 1948
and 1951.
More importantly, his magnum opus led to further isolation by challenging Croce’s historicist philosophy. Indeed, de Martino explicitly dedicated his
study to dimensions that were far from being considered legitimate objects
of study by his teacher. Taking Hamlet’s reminder to Horatio—“there are
more things in heaven and earth […] than are dreamt in your philosophy”—
as his guiding principle, de Martino addressed the crisis of classical Italian
historicism. Describing it as “lazy” (pigro) and “preaching” (sermoneggiante),
he claimed that this type of philosophy “tends to interpret the dignity of the
real as spirit in a metaphysical sense and to transmute it into a static truth,
4 Riccardo Di Donato, “Ernesto de Martino,” in Il Contributo Italiano Alla Storia Del Pensiero—
Storia e Politica (2013) (Milano: Enciclopedia Treccani, 2013), http://www.treccani.it/
enciclopedia/ernesto-de-martino_%28altro%29/.
5 Cherchi and Cherchi, Ernesto De Martino, 20.
6 Patrizia Marzo, “Etnografia e servizio sociale: il contributo interdisciplinare di Vittoria De
Palma,” Rassegna di Servizio Sociale dell’EISS 1 (March 2011): 61.
7 Ernesto De Martino and Pietro Secchia, Compagni e amici: lettere, ed. Riccardo Di Donato
(Scandicci: La Nuova Italia, 1993), xix.
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in which the mind rests, dogmatizing.”8 In 1946, in a commemoration for his
first teacher Adolfo Omodeo, de Martino similarly criticized the mainstream of
Italian historicism for being “sermonizing or even psalmodious,” regarding history “detached from the real plexus of reconstructive thought,” thus inevitably
converting itself “into a new philosophy of history.”9
Croce would not have been the intellectual leader of an entire generation
if he didn’t counter the challenges posed by his student. In his review of The
World of Magic, Croce addressed it within the context of “the years that we
are currently living in,” noting on “the serious and terrifying drama,” which
was manifesting in his contemporaries’ “tendency to immerge and submerge
themselves into the irrational.”10 He rhetorically asked whether we will “invoke
the wizards, which we have already experienced in the form of dictators of
undifferentiated and totalitarian states, entering into a new savage age only
to leave it after a few centuries,” or, whether we will instead “stand by our own
interior strengths and resist?” Before closing his review with a harsh critique
of “the sanctification or at least veneration that de Martino cultivated for the
wizard, putting him at the origin of history and civilization,”11 Croce deployed
his forces into the battlefield. He lambasted his rebellious student for making the transcendental unity of self-awareness, that is “the presence,” into his
“supreme principle,” thus “severing the spiritual unity of his forms with an
impossible incision.”12 Croce argued that “neither the categories of consciousness, language, art, thought, practical life, moral life, nor the synthetic unity
that groups all these things, are historical products—products of epochal
manifestations of the spirit—but rather they are spirit that creates history.”13
Since the acute observations by Renato Solmi in 1952, scholarship has
argued that de Martino, in response to these reprimands, returned within the
fold of Croceanism by abdicating his interpretation of the historicity of the
self. Commentators used a diverse range of terms—such as “return” (“ritorno”),
“reverence” (“riverenza”), “retraction” (“sconfessione”), or “repentence” (“pentimento”)—to describe de Martino’s attitude towards Croce after the publication
8
9
10
11
12
13
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 4.
De Martino, “Commemorazione Adolfo Omodeo,” 341.
Benedetto Croce, “Intorno al magismo come età storica,” in Il mondo magico: prolegomeni
a una storia del magismo, by Ernesto De Martino (1948; repr., Torino: Bollati Boringhieri,
2012), 253.
Croce, 253.
Croce, 249.
Croce, 248.
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Critical Ethnocentrism ( 1949–1959 )
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of The World of Magic.14 In three specific instances throughout the 1950s, in fact,
de Martino stated that “Croce was right,”15 avowed to “have gradually rejected
the postulation of a magic world as a historical age,”16 and clarified that “history
is never the history of categories but takes place within the categories.”17
2
Shaking Earth and Intellectual Transitions: Political Militancy and
Ethnographic Journeys in the Italian South
This being said, de Martino’s relationship with Croce remained ambivalent
even after his supposed return. After the war, it was his political activity that
forced de Martino to distance himself from his teacher. In fact, even after
becoming president of the Liberal Party and publishing History as the Story of
Liberty, Croce “had little taste for politics.”18 In the words of David Roberts, we
could say that de Martino was one of those “intellectuals,” who, “at a moment
of dramatic collective decision for his culture,” took their distance from Croce
“because he didn’t seem to have anything convincing to say on a number of
matters of immediate concern.” Croce, so these critics claimed, offered little
more than “a sterile conception of liberty, an empty faith in history, and an
evasive, politically expedient interpretation of fascism.”19 As a result, young
Italians like Ernesto “were bound to shop around when the culture opened up
after fascism” and Croce “inevitably seemed a bit provincial.”20
Once again, the semi-fictional earthquake narrative surrounding his birth,
somewhat paradoxically, allows the intellectual historian to firmly implant de
Martino within the ground of his native land. Just as Benedetto Croce lost his
parents and his only sister on the island of Ischia during the earthquake of
July 1883, two other thinkers who moved decisively beyond the orbit of the
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
Renato Solmi, “Ernesto De Martino e il problema delle categorie,” Il mulino, no. 7
(May 1952): 315–27; Cases, “Introduzione”; Sasso, Ernesto de Martino fra religione e filosofia,
253ff.
De Martino, “Crisi della presenza e reintegrazione religiosa,” 19.
De Martino, Il mondo magico, 273.
Ernesto De Martino, “Prefazione,” in Le origini dei poteri magici, by Émile Durkheim,
Marcel Mauss, and Henri Hubert (Torino: Boringhieri, 1951), 9–14.
David D. Roberts, Benedetto Croce and the Uses of Historicism, First (Stanford: University
of California Press, 1987), 26.
David D. Roberts, Historicism and Fascism in Modern Italy (Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 2007), 79.
Roberts, 69.
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historicist philosopher lost their closest family members in earthquakes.21 The
novelist Ignazio Silone (1900–1978) lost his mother in the earthquake in the
Abruzzi in 1915 and the historian Gaetano Salvemini (1873–1957) lost his wife,
his sister, and all five of his children in the Messina earthquake described by
de Martino in his semi-fictional birth-narrative. De Martino knew both figures
and shared their concern for opening up the Italian intellectual horizon to the
Italian South, Marxist social theory, and existentialist thought—in short, influences that decisively transcend the concerns of Italy’s most important philosopher of this time.
Of course, the ultimate fruit of this expansion of horizons is the so-called
“Southern Trilogy,” which consists of Death and Ritual Weeping (1958), South
and Magic (1959) and The Land of Remorse (1961). The years in question were
marked by increased integration of de Martino’s bourgeois identity with that
of the masses of the Italian South. Before leaving for Rome to teach at Virgilio,
de Martino met a new love in the form of Vittoria de Palma (b. 1930),22 who
was his student of philosophy in Bari in the 1946–1947 school year. As a consequence, de Martino repeatedly tried to dissolve his marriage with Anna
through the Catholic Church. In Italy, a land where divorce had no legal basis
at this time, de Martino’s attempts remained unsuccessful and he had no
choice but to make Vittoria his new “life partner.” Separating from his wife in
the late 1940s, he nonetheless employed her to translate Eliade’s Techniques of
Yoga (1948) and continued to share an intense political militancy with her.23
As for the two new lovers, upon their move to Rome, Vittoria dedicated her
time to the study of anthropology, opening up the possibility for shared ethnographic expeditions in the Italian South during the 1950s. In the preface to
21
22
23
Adamson, “The Language of Opposition in Early Twentieth-Century Italy”; David Gilmour,
The Pursuit of Italy: A History of a Land, Its Regions and Their Peoples (London: Allen Lane,
2011).
After the work of Charuty, which contains a few precious pages of information, the best
study on De Palma is a recent article by Marzo. Marzo, “Etnografia e servizio sociale”;
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 46–50. As for the date of birth of Vittoria, things are not
clear to me: in her study, Marzo says that she was born in 1927. Di Donato, on the other
hand, mentions once that she was 21 in 1951 and another time that she was 20 in 1949.
What is even more perplexing is that Marzo cites the first of Di Donato’s passages without
commenting on the obvious discrepancy regarding the DOB that she states in the opening passages. Marzo, “Etnografia e servizio sociale”; Riccardo Di Donato, I greci selvaggi.
L’antropologia storica di Ernesto de Martino (Roma: Manifestolibri, 1999), 161, 187. Through
personal inquiries with Adelina Talamonti, this plot has received another twist. While I
was able to verify that her official birthdate is August 25, 1927, she claims that her document is not correct and that she was instead born in 1928.
Mancini, “Postface,” 414.
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Death and Ritual Weeping, the first book of the Southern trilogy, de Martino
offered his partner a beautiful dedication, highlighting how her practical and
emotional qualities contributed immensely to the success of his study on practices of lamentation in the Italian South.24 Financially too, with de Martino’s
salary from his job as a high school teacher as the only source of income, the
situation of the couple was anything but comfortable and marked by significant hardship; a circumstance which quite possibly contributed to Ernesto’s
increasing identification with the underprivileged strata of the South of Italy.25
In The Land of Remorse, certainly his most popular book, de Martino offered
a study of the spider-bitten women of Southern Italy. Based on fieldwork
conducted in the Salentine peninsula in 1959, de Martino studied Apulian
tarantism, a form of possession related to the belief in the bite of a mythical tarantula and exorcistic dance practices that operate by means of a special type of music whose name derives from that of the spider, the so-called
Tarantella. De Martino’s work, drawing on interdisciplinary research, offered
an account of the phenomenon that is both rigorous and compassionate as the
possession cult is not reduced to a mental illness but rather explained in light
of its cultural history, specifically the consistent marginalization of the Italian
South. In the book, he cites a Jesuit missionary, Michele Navarro—who himself
described the lands as an “Italian India” (“Indias de por acá”)—to demonstrate
how the South was conceived of as a radical alterity.26
It is apparent that de Martino, unlike Croce’s “narrowly Eurocentric historicism,” envisioned his scholarship as centered on the marginalized groups
of people that had only recently “irrupted into history.”27 This is nowhere as
apparent as in South and Magic, a study of ceremonial magic and witchcraft
in southern Italy, in which the problematic nature of magic for Western society becomes the driving question of investigation.28 In fact, a local correlate
of the global processes of decolonization and liberation of Western imperialism, the irruption of subaltern masses was accompanied by a national rise to
prominence of the Southern population of Italy, which suffered from its own
24
25
26
27
28
Ernesto De Martino, Morte e Pianto Rituale Nel Mondo Antico. Dal Lamento Pagano Ai
Pianti Di Maria (Torino: Boringhieri, 1958).
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 46–47.
Ernesto De Martino, La terra del rimorso (Milano: Il saggiatore, 1961), 43.
De Martino, “Intorno a una storia del mondo popolare subalterno,” 1949, 421; De Martino,
La fine del mondo, 277–78.
Ernesto De Martino, Sud e Magia (Milano: Feltrinelli, 1959). This book has been translated
into English with a slightly different title: Ernesto De Martino, Magic: A Theory from the
South, trans. Dorothy Louise Zinn (Chicago: Hau Books, 2015).
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sort of suppression in the preceding centuries.29 The “South,” also known of
mezzogiorno (literally meaning “mid-day” in Italian), designates large parts of
the country whose participation in the processes of modernization has lagged
behind the rest of the country. Until today the region is described as primitive
and savage, poor and agricultural, feudal and corrupt, patriarchal and discriminatory, superstitious and irrational.
Although the idea of the “Italian India”—stemming from the sixteenth
century when the South consisted of the Neapolitan Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies—shows the remarkable constancy of this “othering,” the “Southern
Question” truly emerged after the Unification of Italy (Unità d’Italia) in 1860. In
many ways, it reached its peak towards the middle of the twentieth century.30
First, the liberation of the Southern part of the country from Mussolini in the
fall of 1943 was followed by several uprisings of the peasants who occupied
the so-called latifundia, large tracts of privately owned lands.31 Then, in 1945,
when fascism was finally defeated in the North, the Southern Question polarized even more as the mezzogiorno was discriminated as a radical form of alterity, separated by an invisible yet insurmountable boundary.
While these three book-length explorations of various phenomena of religious and magic practices in the Italian South have received some attention in
recent years—with two of them having even been translated into English—it
is important to note that there exist also other sources of interest for the reconstruction of de Martino’s Southern Period.32 In fact, in his bibliography, we find
a list of over 80 smaller publications in between 1948 and 1957, which not only
protocol de Martino’s remarkable ethnographic journeys into the Italian South
and the refinement of the theoretical conceptions of religion and magic, but
also his political maturation as a socialist and communist activist. De Martino
was a key figure in Italy’s coming to terms with the crisis of the South, particularly through his publication of an article entitled “About a History of the
World of the Subaltern Masses” (1949). The article, published in the journal
Società, hit the Italian intelligentsia like a bomb and caused a vast and fertile, albeit heated, debate with some of Italy’s leading thinkers, which would
29
30
31
32
Cherchi, Il peso dell’ombra, 27.
Norberto Bobbio, Ideological Profile of Twentieth-Century Italy, trans. Lydia G. Cochrane
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1995), xviii–xx.
Carla Pasquinelli, ed., “Introduzione. Gli intellettuali di fronte all’irrompere nella storia del
mondo popolare subalterno,” in Antropologia culturale e questione meridionale: Ernesto
de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955 (Firenze: La
Nuova Italia, 1977), 1–2.
Ernesto De Martino, The Land of Remorse: A Study of Southern Italian Tarantism, trans.
Dorothy Louise Zinn (London: Free Association Books, 2005); De Martino, Magic.
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last well into the following decade.33 The controversy not only dominated the
pages of the Communist journal, where de Martino would publish no less
than eight articles, but also a host of other less specialized journals and daily
newspapers—most prominently L’Unità, Avanti!, Il Mondo, Il Nuovo Corriere,
Nuovi Argomenti, Paese Sera, Cronache meridionali, and Rinascita.
The discovery of exotic lands just a stone’s throw away from Rome after
WWII was also a decisive moment in the development of Italian anthropology,
a discipline still in its emerging stages in a country that was not marked by
important colonialist expansions.34 One student of de Martino described it as
a veritable culture shock, a “trauma produced by the confrontation with a total
alterity.”35 De Martino himself used the term “ethnological expedition” (“spedizione etnologica”) to describe his journeys into the Italian South, in order to
emphasize this spirit of discovery.
Not unlike his youthful fascination with fascism as a civil religion, it was once
again political activism that preceded de Martino’s intellectual engrossments
with the Southern Question. After returning from the front of the Senio during
his time as a partisan in hiding, Ernesto became politically active in the Italian
South and made himself a name as a founding member of the Italian Labor
Party (Partito italiano del lavoro, PIL). In August 1944, he participated, together
with his university teacher Adolfo Omodeo, at the Congress of the Action Party
(Partito d’Azione, PdA) in the Southern town of Cosenza. After the Liberation
(Liberazione), the party, which was played such an important role during the
Resistance, would no longer satisfy de Martino’s thirst for political militancy
and so he maneuvered even more left on the political spectrum by joining the
Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity (Partito Socialista Italiano di Unità
Proletaria, PSIUP) in 1945, then the Italian Socialist Party (Partito Socialista
Italiano, PSI) in 1948, and finally the Communist Party in 1953.36
This political militancy—particularly during his years in the PSI, when he
worked as the party’s secretary in Bari, Molfetta, and Lecce—led de Martino
33
34
35
36
Most of the articles fertilizing this debate have recently been republished in Raffaele
Rauty, Quando c’erano gli intellettuali: rileggendo “Cultura popolare e marxismo” (Milano:
Mimesis, 2015). I cite from this version.
Rainer Wassner, “Der Beitrag von Ernesto de Martino zur italienischen Kulturanthropologie,” Anthropos 78, no. 1/2 (1983): 43.
Amalia Signorelli, Ernesto de Martino: teoria antropologica e metodologia della ricerca
(Roma: L’asino d’oro, 2015), 96.
The date of entry into the PCI is anything but clear either. For many years scholars claimed
that he became a communist in 1949 or 1950. However, an article by Valerio Severino has
shown that he only officially joined the party in 1953. Valerio Salvatore Severino, “Ernesto
de Martino nel PCI degli anni Cinquanta tra religione e politica culturale,” Studi storici 44,
no. 2 (2003): 527.
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gradually into ethnographic work. Although a completely outline of de
Martino’s fieldwork remains a desideratum, his archival notes offer us a picture of his thorough exploration of the Italian South.37 In 1946, while in Bari,
he conducted a first “informal” research on the people in the South for the bimonthly Marxist journal Quarto Stato to scrutinize the socio-economic transformations in the area in the immediate after-war years.38 In “Anthropology
and National Culture in the Last Ten Years” (1953), an article rich in autobiographical references, de Martino retraced his development from Naturalism
and Historicism to The World of Magic through the years of historical crisis of
the 1930s and 1940s, before underlining the importance of his political engagement for the third step in his intellectual development, the transition from an
armchair anthropologist to an engaged ethnographer.
Precisely in the years that followed the Liberation, during my political
activity in Puglia as secretary of the Socialist Federation of Bari and as
commissioner of the one in Lecce, I happened to meet a humanity that
until then had a substantially conventional existence, which meridionalistic literature, traditional ethic-political historiography, and the
very tedious and frigid folkloristic writings could present me with. […]
But I entered into the homes of the Apulian peasants as a “friend,” as an
explorer of men and of forgotten human stories, who at the same time
spies on and controls his own humanity; as someone who, alongside the
people he met, wants to become a participant in the constitution of a
better world in which we all, I who searched and they who were found,
would have become better.39
37
38
39
Some of this material has been made available by a massive project of research entitled
“Study and Classification of the Archive of Ernesto de Martino” (Studio e classificazione dell’archivio di Ernesto de Martino), which was coordinated by Clara Gallini. For
some results of this effort, see Clara Gallini, “La ricerca sul campo in Lucania. Materiali
dell’archivio de Martino,” La ricerca folklorica, no. 13 (April 1, 1986): 105–7; Ernesto De
Martino, I viaggi nel Sud di Ernesto de Martino, ed. Clara Gallini and Francesco Faeta
(Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 1999); Ernesto De Martino, La ricerca sui guaritori e la loro
clientela, ed. Adelina Talamonti (Lecce: Argo, 2008); Ernesto De Martino, Etnografia del
tarantismo pugliese: i materiali della spedizione nel Salento del 1959, ed. Amalia Signorelli
and Valerio Panza (Lecce: Argo, 2011).
Ernesto De Martino, “Inchiesta di ‘Quarto Stato’ sul mezzogiorno. Terra di Bari,” Quarto
stato 25–26, no. 30 (January 1947): 32–36; Ernesto De Martino, “Cultura e classe operaia,”
Quarto stato 3, no. 1 (December 1948): 19–22.
De Martino, “Etnologia e cultura nazionale negli ultimi dieci anni,” 318–19.
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De Martino gradually expanded his independent research, shifting his
focus away from a purely materialistic reading of the Southern Question to
shed light on the cultural aspects of the region. In “Lucanian Notes” (1950)
and “Travel Notes” (1953), we not only find the first portents of the immensely
important concept of “critical ethnocentrism,” but also an increasing interest in folk songs, popular theatre, life stories of peasants, and religious and
magic beliefs. His intention to integrate these marginalized realms of society finds an expression in a previously underestimated document of de
Martino’s Southern Period, namely the first radio transmission of his expedition from 1953. In “Expedition in Lucania,” he reported several cases of “unfortunate” (sventurato) birth accounts. In light of de Martino’s depiction of his
own nativity scene in the wake of cosmic trauma, it is particularly the case
of Caterina Guglia, which proves relevant. Introducing the story of the old
woman, de Martino noted that her birth-account shows that “the theme of
the unfortunate birth lights up in images, which speak of a true catastrophe
that accompanies the birth.” In the poetic verses recounting her own story,
Caterina sings:
When I was born
My mother died
My father died the following day
Even the midwife died
I went to get baptized
With nobody around me
When I was born
The deepest seas dried up
And for that entire year
There was no spring in this world
When I was born
The stars turned dark
And the sun stopped shining.40
The almost autobiographical nature of de Martino’s documentation does
not end here. The anthropologist commented on the account by noting that
Caterina “did not remember the exact year of her birth, but only knew that she
was born in the year of the earthquake” and that “she remembered the verses
40
Ernesto De Martino, Panorami e spedizioni. Le trasmissioni radiofoniche del 1953–54, ed.
Luigi M. Lombardi Satriani and Letizia Bindi (Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2002), 91–92.
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of her birth as a catastrophe with immediate memory.”41 In more explicitly
autobiographical writings of those years, we find that de Martino frequently
experimented with ways to overcome his own limitations as a man torn
between intellect and action. Here, he not only identified ethnographically
with the destiny of the subaltern classes, but also believed that it was through
political action that his internal tensions could be overcome. More precisely, it
is through the militancy as a communist that he united the numerous threads
consisting of the historical-cultural crisis of the world surrounding him, his
fragmented personality, and his reforming mission as a public intellectual:
I am an intellectual of transition, torn by contradictions, […] born into
the urban lower middle class of the Italian South. I carry within me the
numerous weaknesses and the vile sentimentalism of this class without
destiny. Nonetheless, I have learned to understand this painful condition
and I apply myself to construct myself on a theoretical plane, as a man
that I am not in reality. But the contradictions of my being, which reflect
themselves ceaselessly in my thoughts, render this path exhausting and
problematic. Great theoretical lucidity and many contradictions in real
life, a powerful spirit and a fragile existence: This is who I am. All the
freedom that I am deprived of in action is transformed, in a cathartic way,
into freedom of conceptualization. […] I cannot reform myself without
reforming the world. But, in truth, by the time the world will be transformed, I will not have been on this earth for many centuries. My shortcoming is the product of secular imperfections, of the society to which
I belong. In order to overcome them on the plane of reality, one would
have to undo concretions of history that have been transmitted from generation to generation; a feat beyond my power. I am nothing more than
a hero of the spirit, within the bounds of a purely speculative heroism.
Why did I join the working class? Because I hate myself as man, because
I detest the lower middle-class traditions of the mezzogiorno that have
made me who I am: Uncertain, hesitating, full of contradictions, and feeble in the world of action. This certainly is my “shortcoming.” My “greatness” is to have gained a pitiless awareness of this fact and to have joined
the class that will reform the world.42
41
42
De Martino, 91.
Milaneschi, “Ernesto de Martino e il Cristianesimo,” 252; De Martino and Secchia,
Compagni e amici, XXI; Mancini, “Postface,” 495–96; Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 37.
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103
The Rise of the Cultural-Discursive Paradigm and Self-Reflexive
Anthropology
It is in light of this emotional and self-critical language that scholarship
recently argued that de Martino must be regarded an anticipator of postcolonial thought in his own right.43 Although he undertook his expeditions
primarily on Italian soil—particularly amongst the peasants of the Southern
regions—this encounter provoked a profound perspectival shift in his thinking that parallels developments in the global post-colonial, interpretative, and
self-reflexive approaches.44 After a period of confidence and complacency following WWII—a sort of hibernation after the great global crisis—a new type
of critical thinking began to emerge in the 1960s to then develop into a fullfledged paradigm across multitudinous fields of the humanities during the
1970s and 80s.45 This period was marked by important socio-political upheavals, such as the independence movements in the Third World, the relinquishment of colonies by European powers, the American war in Vietnam, and the
rise of civil rights movements. Clifford Geertz described this paradigm shift in
terms of a transition from “othering” to “self-doubt” that very accurately reflect
de Martino’s own metamorphosis:
The trouble begins with uneasy reflections on the involvement of
anthropological research with colonial regimes during the heyday of
Western imperialism and with its aftershadows now; reflections themselves brought on by accusations, from Third World intellectuals, about
the field’s complicity in the division of humanity into those who know
and decide and those who are known and are decided for. […] But it
hardly ends there. Driven on by the enormous engines of postmodern
self-doubt—Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Gramsci, Sartre, Foucault, Derrida,
most recently Bakhtin—the anxiety spreads into a more general worry
about the representation of “The Other” (inevitably capitalized, inevitably singular) in ethnographic discourse as such. Is not the whole
enterprise but domination carried on by other means: “Hegemony,”
43
44
45
Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion.
Francesco Faeta, Questioni italiane: demonologia, antropologia, critica culturale (Torino:
Bollati Boringhieri, 2005).
Georg G. Iggers, Q. Edward Wang, and Supriya Mukherjee, A Global History of Modern
Historiography (Harlow: Pearson Longman, 2008), 251–52; Julian Hamann, Die Bildung
der Geisteswissenschaften: Zur Genese einer sozialen Konstruktion zwischen Diskurs und
Feld (München: UVK Verlag, 2014), 211–12.
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“monologue,” “vouloir-savoir,” “mauvaise foi,” “orientalism”? “Who are we
to speak for them?”46
Scholars of religion too, gradually gained a more sophisticated understanding
of the earlier approaches and how they related to processes of modernization
and colonialism. Upon closer analysis, they discovered that modernization was
just as divided as the discipline of religious studies and, with time, it became
clear that the insider-phenomenological and the outsider-explanatory models
were essentially representative of two alternative modes for envisioning our
own culture within this complex construction of modern Western identity. If
the first approach was usually implicated in a critique of modernity by taking the culturally and religious other as a model for a superior civilization, the
second approach was deeply grounded within modernity’s values and usually
construed “religion” as a retrograde and primitive form of society that is to be
abandoned and overcome by means of modern politics and science.
These radically opposed approaches to religion form part of a unified vision.
We could define this perspective as the “ontological paradigm” and insert it
within a phenomenon that has been described as the “ambiguity of modernity”: Religion is either a higher reality that needs to be approached through
personal experience in order to revive modern humanity’s reality or it is an epiphenomenon of other cultural practices that needs to be abandoned in order
for the process of modernization to come to its conclusion. Just as Zygmunt
Baumann found the stability of modernity to be hinging on its instability as
the “dysfunctionality of modern culture is its functionality,” the discipline of
religious studies functioned because of its double nature as represented in the
insider-phenomenological and the outsider-explanatory approaches.47 “When
we lack the second level of self-reflexive critique, when we presume that our
categories and ‘worlds’ are completely adequate presentations of the world
around us,” so McCutcheon explains, “we are left with the peculiar modernist
view of the world, which, in an utter irony, is shared by religious and positivist
scholars of religion alike.”48
In Beyond Phenomenology (1999), Gavin Flood offers a lay of the land of
the discipline of religious studies by the end of the twentieth century, arguing
that the scholar has three approaches at his disposal. The first two—which
46
47
48
Clifford Geertz, Available Light Anthropological Reflections on Philosophical Topics
(Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2000), 95.
Bauman, Modernity and Ambivalence, 9.
Russell T. McCutcheon, Critics Not Caretakers: Redescribing the Public Study of Religion
(Albany: State University of New York Press, 2001), 61.
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correspond closely to the insider-phenomenological and the outsiderexplanatory approaches—have existed for a long time and are premised on
the “dichotomy of reductive explanation […] and empathetic phenomenology.” The third, by contrast, is a relatively new development, which Flood proceeds to define it as follows:
This position is both critical and dialogical. It desires both to understand
and to offer explanations of religion or religious practices as completely
embedded within other cultural practices, but reflexively recognizes the
embodied/embedded, narrative nature of the enterprise. In this way it
draws upon postmodern critiques of modernist, overarching rationality,
but recognizes that any embodied narrative draws upon cultural values
which it inevitably articulates, and, at least in the late modern world, is
sensitive to the human reasons as to why people elect certain cultural
practices.49
The proponents of what I call the cultural-discursive paradigm insist that there
is no value-free form of science because of the impact of our own priorities.
This type of awareness is premised on the idea that the relationship between
the self and the other is more complicated than a simple binary, as it is shaped
by issues of power, voice, and perspective. In light of this, the human sciences,
particularly the disciplines of anthropology, history, and religious studies,
became culturally and discursively self-reflective undertakings.
4
Tristes Tropiques, Critical Ethnocentrism, and the Anticipation of
the Cultural-Discursive Paradigm
De Martino anticipated some of these transformations on the international
scene by at least a decade as he emphatically presented anthropology as a science that is not concerned with what is culturally other, but rather with the
self-reflexive return to one’s own culture. This becomes particularly apparent
if his concept of “critical ethnocentrism,” which Vittorio Lanternari described
as “one of the most refined and acute instruments and methods that anthropological science has ever elaborated.”50 Already in Naturalism and Historicism
in Anthropology, De Martino anticipated the cultural-discursive paradigm’s
sensibility for power, explaining that “a colonial politics enlightened by
49
50
Flood, Beyond Phenomenology, 148.
Lanternari, La mia alleanza con Ernesto de Martino e altri saggi post-demartiniani, 124.
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ethnological knowledge is politics and not ethnology” just as “the ethnologist
who works for the colonial administrator is a politician.” Rather than colonizing other cultures, he concluded, the anthropologist should “promote a different orientation of ourselves towards ourselves by means of a broadened
awareness of our being that has to emerge from anthropological knowledge.”51
Similarly, in The World of Magic, he spoke of anthropology’s task to “raise problems whose solution leads to the expansion of self-awareness (all’allargamento
dell’autocoscienza).”52 Finally, during the Southern Period, these ideas would
culminate in a new method for anthropology, which he described as follows:
In critical ethnocentrism, the western (or westernized) anthropologist assumes the history of his own culture as a unit of measurement
of alien cultural histories. At the same time, in the act of measuring, he
gains awareness of the historical prison and of the limits of use of his
own system of measurement and opens himself to the task of a reform
[…] of the very categories of observation, which were at his disposal at
the beginning of the research. Only by critically and deliberately putting
the history of the West at the center of the contrasting research can the
anthropologist contribute to the inauguration of a vaster anthropological
awareness than the one contained in dogmatic ethnocentrisms.53
To define the key traits of de Martino’s critical ethnocentrism, it might be
best to investigate his confrontation with one of his century’s greatest intellectuals, namely Claude Lévi-Strauss. Although the relationship to the French
structuralist was so important that it would occupy de Martino until the very
end of his life, featuring prominently in his posthumously published notes,54
the origin of his fascination was likely the ethnographic encounter with the
people of the Italian South. Not unlike Bronislaw Malinowski, one of the most
famous ethnographers and inventor of the term “participant observation,” de
Martino and Lévi-Strauss developed some of their most important theories
in the context of ethnographic field research.55 In both cases, we note a dras51
52
53
54
55
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 225.
De Martino, 213; De Martino, Il mondo magico, 3.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 396–97.
De Martino, 394–98.
For one of the first reflections within official anthropology on the challenges involved
in the ethnographic encounter, one must turn Malinowski. See, for example, Bronislaw
Malinowski, Argonauts of the Western Pacific: An Account of Native Enterprise and
Adventure in the Archipelagoes of Melanesian New Guinea (London: Routledge, 1922),
xv, xvii.
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tic transformation of their conception of anthropology, which moved from
the anonymous neutrality of science—encountered earlier in their psychoanalytic theorizing on ritual efficacy—to the human warmth and emotions
of the personal experience in the field. Although in the preceding chapter,
I have shown that the French structuralist program must be inscribed within
the outsider-explanatory approach, this is only part of the truth. In fact, ultimately both de Martino and Lévi-Strauss can be regarded as important anticipators of the cultural-discursive paradigm in anthropology.
4.1
Anticipating Said’s Orientalism: Anthropology of Guilt and the
Ethnographic Encounter
A first trait of post-colonial anthropology that can be found in the works of
both Lévi-Strauss and de Martino is a type of “crisis of conscience.” As Robert
McCauley and Thomas Lawson recently suggested, anthropologists of the
cultural-discursive paradigm “are abandoning explanatory theorizing and
some are abandoning science altogether out of guilt about the role that anthropological research has played in colonial repression.”56 The transformations in
geopolitical reality in the 1960s and 70s were accompanied by a general rise
of awareness of long-standing forms of complicity between anthropology and
imperialism, which is best epitomized in one of the most impactful books of
the cultural-discursive turn, namely Edward Said‘s Orientalism (1978). The cultural critic argued that academic orientalism was “a western style for dominating, restructuring, and having authority over the Orient.”57 In arguing for a
self-critical attitude towards academic conceptions of the culturally other—
paying particular attention to issues of imperialism and power—Said’s oeuvre
stands for the rise of postcolonialism in the humanities.
If Alessandro Testa even went as far as arguing that Lévi-Strauss cultivated
post-colonial “sensibilities” in his Structural Anthropology,58 this tendency
becomes particularly evident in another one of the French anthropologist’s
works, namely Tristes Tropiques (1955). The book has rightly been described
as one that is infused with “pessimism,” giving a “vivid feeling of the profound
metaphysical despair,” and offering a picture of “the entire civilized world
56
57
58
E. Thomas Lawson and Robert N. McCauley, “Crisis of Conscience, Riddle of Identity:
Making Space for a Cognitive Approach to Religious Phenomena,” in Philosophical
Foundations of the Cognitive Science of Religion, ed. Robert N. McCauley (London:
Bloomsbury Academic, 2017), 55.
Edward W. Said, Orientalism (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978), 11.
Alessandro Testa, “Estasi e crisi. Note su sciamanismo e pessimismo storico in Eliade,
de Martino e Lévi-Strauss,” in Sciamani e sciamanesimi, ed. Alessandro Saggioro and
Leonardo Ambasciano (Roma: Carocci, 2010), 107–8.
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[as] moving rapidly and inexorably towards its ecological self-destruction.”59
Lévi-Strauss, retracing his ethnographic expeditions amongst the indigenous
tribes of Brazil from the Mato Grosso to the Amazon, reflected on his complicity in constructing anthropology as a science that imposes itself on other
cultures. In the beginning of this book, famously opening with the sentence
“Travel and travellers are two things I loathe,” Lévi-Strauss explained that “fifteen years have passed since I left Brazil for the last time and often, during
those years, I’ve planned to write this book, but I’ve always been held back by
a sort of shame and disgust.”60 Unlike his structuralist books, which were premised on a pure science from “the point of view of god,” in Tristes Tropiques,
we read of a more coercive type of scholarship as other cultures are said to
be “like game-birds in the trap of our mechanistic civilization”61 in a process
of “overcoming all others.”62 Rhetorically, he asked: “I sometimes wonder if I
was not attracted to anthropology, however unwittingly, by a structural affinity
between the civilizations which are its subject and my own thought-processes.”
He continued by comparing his thinking to a “brush-fire” as it “burns itself into
territory, […] leaving devastation behind.”63 In another passage, he noted that
his ethnographic journeys taught him that “the notion of travel has become
corrupted by the notion of power,” before elaborating as follows:
The great civilization of the West has given birth to many marvels; but
at what a cost! As has happened in the case of the most famous of their
creations, that atomic pile in which have been built structures of a complexity hitherto the order and harmony of the West depend upon the
elimination of that prodigious quantity of maleficent by-products which
now pollutes the earth. What travel has now to show us is the filth, our
filth, that we have thrown in the face of humanity.64
There is no doubt that Tristes Tropiques played a fundamental role in the
development of de Martino’s critique of anthropological ethnocentrism. In
the introduction to The Land of Remorse (1961), de Martino cited Lévi-Strauss’
ethnographic self-reflection no less than three times—including the passage
59
60
61
62
63
64
John Raphael Staude, “From Depth Psychology to Depth Sociology: Freud, Jung, and
Lévi-Strauss,” Theory and Society 3, no. 3 (1976): 331–32.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, Tristes Tropiques, trans. John Russell (New York: Criterion Books,
1961), 17.
Lévi-Strauss, 42.
Lévi-Strauss, 90.
Lévi-Strauss, 56.
Lévi-Strauss, 39.
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of remorse and redemption cited above.65 More generally speaking, during
the Southern Period, de Martino frequently spoke of anthropology in similar
terms, as “guilt,” “remorse,” “responsibility,” and “redemption” became vital
notions for framing his endeavours. It also appears that de Martino anticipated many of the core ideas of his French colleague as his own transition
from an armchair anthropologist to that of an engaged ethnographer led him
to develop a new understanding of his role as a scientist. Anthropology, so
Placido Cherchi put it, became “a real encounter, a living testimony to one’s
own dramatic ‘diversity’.”66 While de Martino acknowledged that he needed
to repay an “immense debt incurred” towards the peasants he studies in the
South in an article from the early 1950s67—such references continue well
into the 1960s68—the most famous passage is contained in an article entitled
“Lucanian Notes;” a text published half a decade before Lévi-Strauss’ Tristes
Tropiques. Following his first encounter with the peasants in what is now the
Italian region of Basilicata, he described it as a powerful moment that provoked a “feeling” (sentimento), which is “more than anything an anxious sense
of guilt.” Finally, he confessed that “in front of these beings held down at the
status of beasts despite their aspiration to become humans, I personally, as a
petit-Bourgeois intellectual from the mezzogiorno, feel guilty.”69
4.2
Anticipating Fabian’s Time and Other: Anthropology as
Self-Reflexivity and Introspection
Clifford Geertz not only described Lévi-Strauss’ Tristes Tropiques as “the finest
of his texts and the one that most illuminates the whole of his work,”70 but
also argued that it is “probably the most emphatically self-referring anthropological text we have, the one that absorbs the world’s ‘why’ most shamelessly
into a ‘how to write.’”71 Similar things can be said about de Martino’s “Lucanian
Notes.” Like in Lévi-Strauss’ work, we are dealing here with an essay “whose
subject is in great part itself; whose purpose is to display what, were it a novel,
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
De Martino, La terra del rimorso, 40–41.
Cherchi, Il peso dell’ombra, 32.
Ernesto De Martino, “Importanti sviluppi della iniziativa Zavattini,” in L’opera a cui lavoro:
apparato critico e documentario alla “Spedizione etnologica” in Lucania, ed. Clara Gallini
(Lecce: Argo, 1996), 41.
In a 1964 article published in Culture and School, he speaks of a “pathos of remorse and
guilt in front of the separated brother and the unrelated (irrelata) dispersion of cultures.”
De Martino, “Etnologia e civiltà moderna,” 10.
Ernesto De Martino, “Note lucane,” Società 6, no. 4 (December 1950): 666.
Clifford Geertz, “The World in a Text: How to Read ‘Tristes Tropiques,’” in Works and Lives:
The Anthropologist as Author (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1988), 27.
Geertz, 21.
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we would call its fictionality; a painting, its planarity; a dance, its comportment:
its existence as a made thing.”72 Indeed, de Martino’s ethnographic report represented a radical turn in his work as it is the first time that the ethnographer
appears as one of the protagonists of his writings. He described his own subjective experience and his reactions to the encounters in the field, which were
frequently emotional in nature. Thus, we learn not only that he felt guilt, but
also experienced a series of other emotions: outrage and shock, humiliation
and empathy, anger and fury. In his “Travel Notes,” similarly, he described his
own experiences as an ethnographer while encountering the ritual weeping
practices, which would culminate in Death and Ritual Weeping, as follows:
These women, who cry surrounding the coffin should, for me as historian,
hold only the value of a document of quality, found in a dusty archive. As
a historian, I should only look at the most favorable moment to register
their metrical weeping. But here, I am also absorbed in these events of
living history, I too have become a protagonist of the drama.73
As Amalia Signorelli recently claimed, it is this “narrating himself” as anthropologist, his “reenacting himself” (mettersi in scena), which is “probably the
characteristic of these writings that most conditioned—both positively and
negatively—the judgment of the readers.”74 De Martino emphasized that
what he felt was not “a testimony of original sin” in the form of “the guilt” in a
Christian or Western cultural sense. On the contrary, he explained that describing it in such a way would only be an attempt to liberate himself “from the
weight of an uncomfortable analysis, transfiguring this entirely human responsibility into the heavens.” Instead, so de Martino concludes, it is “my guilt.”75
In their call for self-reflexivity, the works of Lévi-Strauss and de Martino
anticipated another key trait of the cultural-discursive paradigm. Indeed, only
five years after Said’s piece, Johannes Fabian published Time and the Other: How
Anthropology Makes its Object (1983). Fabian’s book further confirmed Said’s
intuition that anthropology constructed the “other” by “implying distance, difference, and opposition,” in order to construct a world “for Western society to
inhabit, rather than ‘understanding other cultures,’ its ostensible vocation.”76
Very similar to Fabian, the first principle of de Martino’s critical ethnocentrism
72
73
74
75
76
Geertz, 28.
De Martino, “Note di viaggio.”
Signorelli, Ernesto de Martino, 22.
De Martino, “Note lucane,” 666.
Johannes Fabian, Time and the Other: How Anthropology Makes Its Object (New York:
Columbia University Press, 1983), 111–12.
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is that it uses the encounter with what is culturally other to reflect on the self.
In the continuation of his “Lucanian Notes,” we read:
After my encounter with the Rabatani, I realized that there was not merely
their problem, the problem of their emancipation, but there was also my
problem, the problem of a Southern intellectual from a petit-bourgeois
class. This intellectual, with a certain cultural tradition and a certain “civilization” absorbed during schooling, as a result of the encounter with
these people, was forced to examine his conscience and to become, so to
speak, an ethnographer of himself.77
For de Martino, anthropology and religious studies were no longer disciplines
of investigation that limited their interest to what is “other,” but rather tools
for self-reflection and critical examination of one’s own cultural-religious horizon. As Placido Cherchi put it, de Martino’s paradigmatic shift might “be the
first time in the field of anthropology that the journey towards the ‘other from
the self’ is overturned into a journey inside of ourselves or that the observing subject finds itself being self-critically reduced to the rank of object of
observation.”78 More recently, Forgacs offered the Anglophone readership a
laudable description of de Martino’s “ethnographic encounter [as a] kind of
critical self-interrogation,” in which “the ‘remote’ became familiar, as the ‘irrational’ behavior of the people observed became comprehensible and they
started to be seen as agents in their own world and not just objects of a scientific gaze.” As a consequence, the observers would be forced to look critically
at their own processes of observation,” asking “searching questions about the
nature of their own science and the values of their own subculture in the very
act of attempting to explain the other.”79 The second passage that de Martino
cites from Tristes Tropiques in his own investigation on the exorcistic cults surrounding the spider-bitten women of the Italian South, is precisely intended to
support this self-reflexivity in anthropology.
It is a time, above all, of self-interrogation. Why did he come to such a
place? With what hopes? And to what end? What is, in point of fact, an
anthropological investigation? Is it the exercise of a profession like any
other, differentiated only by the fact that home and office-laboratory are
77
78
79
De Martino, “Note lucane,” 666.
Cherchi, Il peso dell’ombra, 35.
David Forgacs, Italy’s Margins: Social Exclusion and Nation Formation since 1861
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 141–42.
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several thousand miles apart? Or does it follow upon some more radical
decision—one that calls into question the system within which one was
born and has come to manhood?80
In his own analysis of this passage, de Martino concluded that “the ethnographic journey situates itself in the framework of modern humanism as the
total revolution of the mythic journey into the beyond.” Instead of this trip,
which “magicians, shamans, initiates, and mystics […] undertake to recover
in this elective beyond the loss of the presence in critical moments of historical becoming,” de Martino emphasized that anthropology is a means to “go
beyond […] one’s own circumscribed humanity put into question by a certain
historical conjuncture.” The ethnographic exploration, so de Martino concluded, is a “gaining of awareness and a stimulus […] to arrive at systems of
cultural choices that are simply ‘different’ from ours, in which we were ‘born
and grew up.’”81
4.3
Anticipating Smith’s Imagining Religion: Anthropology as the Study
of Culture and the Critical Questioning of Our Categories
We have already seen to what extent Tristes Tropiques was a book about the
science of anthropology, arguing against itself. Yet it was also a book about
Western ethnocentrism and how anthropology could help us gain awareness of our own limitations. “If the West has produced anthropologists,”
Lévi-Strauss argued at one point in the book, “it is because it was so tormented
by remorse that it had to compare its own image with that of other societies,
in the hope that they would either display the same shortcomings or help the
West to explain how these defects could have come into being.” A few lines
later, we read, “if anthropology cannot take a detached view of our civilization,
or declare itself not responsible for that civilization’s evils, it is because its very
existence is unintelligible unless we regard it as an attempt to redeem it.”82
For de Martino, the redemption of the science of culture revolved around
the critique of categories, particularly the concept of “religion.” It is no coincidence that the first time de Martino came across the term “ethnocentrism” was
in a book by another French-trained thinker, whose work is uniquely sensitive to the use of Western categories in evaluating other cultures. It was Sergeĭ
Mikhaĭlovich Shirokogoroff, who in his The Psychomental Complex of Tungus
80
81
82
Lévi-Strauss, Tristes Tropiques, 374; De Martino, La terra del rimorso, 40–41.
De Martino, La terra del rimorso, 41.
Lévi-Strauss, Tristes Tropiques, 388.
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(1935), repeatedly used the term “ethnocentrism” in order to launch a critique
of contemporary anthropologists and their failure to approach shamanism
with the necessary theoretical openness.83 Indeed, Shirokogoroff’s oeuvre
was not only innovative because of its revaluation of magic phenomena performed by the shamans—moving beyond the psychopathological assessment
of earlier thinkers to appreciate the practices as culturally and psychologically productive—but also for its methodological intuitions.84 Inspired by the
Russian thinker’s work, de Martino accused the “men of science,” who consider
the practices amongst extra-European peoples as “superstition” and “folklore,”
of holding an “ethnocentric” attitude.85 These ethnocentric thinkers posit
their own culture as the measuring stick for other cultures. In Shirokogoroff’s
work, the critique of positivist science, the revaluation of magic phenomena, and the turn to a critique of ethnocentrism went hand in hand.86 As
Andrei A. Znamenski recently reported, the Russian anthropologist insisted
on “accept[ing] cultures strictly on their own terms.”87
Interestingly, the questioning of Western concepts, such as “reason” or “science” was also an integral part of the thinking of Lévi-Strauss. Indeed, the
French anthropologist, despite his structuralist approach to cultures, became
increasingly critical of his own culture’s tools of measurement. In his description of Lévi-Strauss’ The Savage Mind, Georg Iggers rightly noted that it was
marked by a “questioning of the possibility of conducting objective historical inquiry at all,” as his “disillusionment with the quality of modern Western
civilization brought about a profound reaction against the modern scientific
outlook.” Ultimately, so the historian insists, “Claude Lévi-Strauss denied that
modern scientific rationality offered any advantage over ‘savage’ mythical
thought in seeking to come to terms with life.”88
83
84
85
86
87
88
Using the formulation “ethnocentric,” he adds in brackets: “to repeat an expression from
Shirokogoroff.” Ernesto De Martino, “Percezione extrasensoriale e magismo etnologico
II,” Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni 19–20 (1946): 31.
Ulla C. Johansen, “Sergei Michajlovich Shirokogoroff: Psychomental Complex of the
Tungus,” in Hauptwerke der Ethnologie, ed. Christian F. Feest and Karl-Heinz Kohl
(Stuttgart: Kröner, 2001), 428; Andrei A. Znamenski, The Beauty of the Primitive:
Shamanism and the Western Imagination (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007), 113.
Ernesto De Martino, “Percezione extrasensoriale e magismo etnologico I,” Studi e materiali di storia delle religioni 18 (1942): 10.
Sergei Mikhailovich Shirokogoroff, “What Is Shamanism: Part 1,” China Journal of Science
& Arts 2, no. 3 (1924): 276.
Znamenski, The Beauty of the Primitive, 111.
Georg G. Iggers, Historiography in the Twentieth Century: From Scientific Objectivity to the
Postmodern Challenge (Middletown: Wesleyan University Press, 2005), 8.
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De Martino’s conception of anthropology found its most radical expression
in ways that are reminiscent of his readings of both the Russian and the French
anthropologists. In the last years of his life, the Italian thinker believed that
the ethnographic encounter with other cultures forces us to drastically question and revise our own evaluative categories as “the ethnographic encounter
constitutes an opportunity for the most radical examination of conscience
possible to Western humanity.” This “examination […] brings with it a reform
of anthropological knowledge and of its evaluative categories.”89 In so doing,
de Martino set in motion important developments that continued within
the Italian school of history of religions after his death. Particularly Dario
Sabbatucci (1923–2002), who took the position as the second chair in history
of religions at the Sapienza University in Rome as soon as it was established
in 1971, carried forward de Martino’s reservations about the ontological conception of categories. Specifically, Sabbatucci famously argued for the radical
historicization of the term “religion,” stating that it is an artificial category created within the Western cultural context.90 Even more radically, Sabbatucci
believed that a truly critical study of religion would ultimately lead to the
“dissolution of the specifically religious in the generally cultural.”91 As international scholars have commented on this rare instance in which the Roman
School’s thinking outside of Pettazzoni moved beyond the awareness of the
Italian peninsula, they have argued that Sabbatucci can be regarded as the
Italian exponent of a comprehensive transformation within the international
discipline of religious studies.92 In fact, on the international scene, one of the
first symptoms of the paradigm shift was a radical turn to culture in virtually
every field of the humanities.
In religious studies, this trend is visible not only in the growth of interest in
“religion and culture,” or “cultural studies,”93 but also in the debates surrounding the category of “religion,” which frequently culminate in an attempt to
89
90
91
92
93
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 391.
Dario Sabbatucci, “Kultur und Religion,” in Handbuch religionswissenschaftlicher
Grundbegriffe, ed. Hubert Cancik, Burkhard Gladigow, and Günter Kehrer, vol. 1 (Stuttgart:
Kohlhammer, 1988), 46.
Sabbatucci, 57.
Michael Stausberg, “Western Europe,” in Religious Studies: A Global View, ed. Gregory D.
Alles (London: Routledge, 2008), 17; Johann Figl, “Phénoménologie de la religion,” in
Théories de la religion: diversité des pratiques de recherche, changements des contextes
socio-culturels, requêtes réflexives, ed. Pierre Gisel, Jean-Marc Tétaz, and Valérie Nicolet
Anderson (Genève: Labor et Fides, 2002), 19; Burkhard Gladigow, Religionswissenschaft
als Kulturwissenschaft (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer, 2005), 34.
Randi R. Warne, “New Approaches to the Study of Religion in North America,” in New
Approaches to the Study of Religion Volume 1: Regional, Critical, and Historical Approaches,
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dissolve it within the larger concept of “culture.”94 The first principle in this
new paradigm for the investigation of religion was Jonathan Z. Smith, who in
1981 had argued that “there is no data for religion” and that “religion is solely
the creation of the scholar’s study,” encouraging his peers to be “relentlessly
self-conscious,” as it is this quality that “constitutes his primary expertise
[and] his foremost object of study.”95 Since then, we have seen a veritable
explosion of research dedicated to the historical review of the discipline of
religious studies most of it focused on the formation of the concept of religion. Scholars, amongst them Talal Asad, David Chidester, Michel Despland,
Timothy Fitzgerald, Peter Harrison, Tomoko Masuzawa, Russell McCutcheon,
Ernst Feil, Hans Kippenberg, Guy Stroumsa, Kocku Von Stuckrad, Wouter
Hanegraaff, and Daniel Dubuisson, have joined Smith in arguing that the concept of “religion” is not a given but a created category that has its own history.
The growing field of cultural anthropology followed in the footsteps of postcolonial studies to not only perform a historicization of the concept of “religion,” but also to demonstrate that its creation was not neutral, but rather a
prescriptive and hegemonic process that was deeply embedded within politics
and power dynamics.96 These thinkers revealed that the crafting of “religion”
was implicated in a larger process of “othering.”97 Taking place during the colonial encounter with a cultural alterity, the category “religion” turned out to be
essential for the self-definition of the modern West.98 Furthermore, they have
noted that similar processes were implicated in the construction of other categories, such as “politics,” “culture,” the “East,” “tradition,” “economics,” “law,”
“magic,” and so forth.99
94
95
96
97
98
99
ed. Peter Antes, Armin W. Geertz, and Randi R. Warne (Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, 2008),
31–32.
Timothy Fitzgerald, The Ideology of Religious Studies (New York: Oxford University Press,
1999), xi.
Jonathan Z. Smith, Imagining Religion: From Babylon to Jonestown (Chicago: University of
Chicago Press, 1982), xi.
Smith, Relating Religion, 230, 274.
Michael Stausberg, ed., Religionswissenschaft (Berlin: De Gruyter, 2012), 442.
Styers, Making Magic, 20.
Said, Orientalism; Benedict Anderson, Imagined Communities: Reflections on the Origin
and Spread of Nationalism (London: Verso, 1983); Eric J. Hobsbawm and Terence Ranger,
eds., The Invention of Tradition (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992); Styers,
Making Magic; Timothy Fitzgerald, Discourse on Civility and Barbarity a Critical History
of Religion and Related Categories (New York: Oxford University Press, 2007); William Sax,
Johannes Quack, and Jan Weinhold, eds., The Problem of Ritual Efficacy (Oxford University
Press, USA, 2010).
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4.4
Anticipating the Writing Culture Movement: Anthropology and the
Language of the People
The cultural-discursive tendency in de Martino’s oeuvre took on even more
expansive contours as he started to pay attention to symbolism and language
during his ethnographic expeditions in the Italian South. Several other scholars have pointed to de Martino’s charisma as a speaker, his originality in using
creative language, and his flair for drama that gave his writings an almost theatrical tone.100 Commentators like Clara Gallini and Alessandro Testa have made
more specific claims. They rightly pointed to the fact that de Martino used antiontological conceptions of language that pay high tribute to symbols. Testa, for
instance, compares de Martino’s intuitions with the theses of Geertz, “according to which one should not study that what he calls ‘the ontological status’ of
a cultural fact, but ‘the thing to explore is its significance’.”101 Gallini, similarly,
suggests that “the tarantula is a ‘symbolic’ animal and [that] the entire analysis
of its ritual develops itself in terms and in a language through which the point
at which de Martino was arriving in progressing with his theoretical research
[…] shines.”102
There is no doubt that de Martino was indeed attentive to the sundry facets
of language and communication. However, rather than thinking within the disciplinary areas of linguistics and semiotics, his concern with language emerges
from the ethnographic encounter itself. In fact, reflexivity, for de Martino, was
a two-way street as it did not only involve the ethnographer and his categories,
but it also had to address the culturally other and his modes of communication. During the Southern Period, in an attempt to break out of the ivory tower
of the academy, he became particularly interested in alternative means to educate the common people.103 This day-to-day aspect of his thinking manifests
particularly in his consistent use of various media to communicate his scholarly insights. Thus, he not only collaborated with some of Italy’s most prestigious publishers, but he also effectively used mass media. De Martino wrote for
100
101
102
103
Giovanni Jervis, “Ricordo di Ernesto de Martino,” in Ernesto De Martino nella cultura europea, ed. Clara Gallini and Marcello Massenzio (Napoli: Liguori, 1997), 316; Clara Gallini,
“La ricerca, la scrittura,” in Note di campo: spedizione in Lucania, 30 sett.–31 ott. 1952, by
Ernesto De Martino (Lecce: Argo, 1995), 46.
Alessandro Testa, “Le destin tylorien. Considérations inactuelles sur la ‘réalité’ de la
magie,” ethnographiques.org 21 (November 2010): 10.
Clara Gallini, “Presentazione,” in La terra del rimorso, by Ernesto De Martino (Milano: Il
saggiatore, 2013), 13–34.
Lanternari, La mia alleanza con Ernesto de Martino e altri saggi post-demartiniani, 30.
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magazines and newspapers,104 published special editions with photographs,105
and prepared documentary programs for radio and television.106
In all of those ventures, he presented his research findings in more popular
forms. Particularly the photographs of Franco Pinna and the musical recordings of Diego Carpitella represented intriguing and easily digested evidence
from the forgotten world of Italy’s South. De Martino not only tried to lend
his voice through multiple media to reach the Italian people, but he further
attempted to give a voice to the populace more properly speaking. De Martino
skillfully blended high culture and low culture for political and intellectual
purposes. Giordana Charuty noted that his ethnographic journey
[…] becomes the instrument for the establishment of another figure of
mediation—the organic intellectual—who has to break the isolation of
the social class to whom he belongs. […] In the same fashion, the inquiry
is conceived as a tool to make the “subjects” happen by means of an
implicit injunction, namely to narrate one’s life. [All this serves] to transform a collection of objective facts into speaking up (prise de parole), in
the written form of letters of grievances, which is association to a very
important act: the signing with one’s name.107
Although rarely written by the author’s own hands—in a cultural context
where illiteracy was common—the letters composed by the Southern peasants
have an authentic and subjective feel to them. Instead of long questionnaires,
where short answers and boxes with check-marks impose most of the structure
upon the respondents, de Martino’s use of letter-writing allowed the narrative
subject to express himself more freely.108 In two short articles written in the
communist magazine Vie Nuove in July and August 1952—headlined with the
title “Inquiry Into the Customs of Lucanian Farmers”—de Martino not only
reported on some of the letters of the peasants he interviewed and attached
a series of pictures revealing the life-circumstances amongst the marginalized strata of Italian society, but he also reiterated his motivation behind his
104
105
106
107
108
De Martino wrote for cultural magazines, such as Società, or Nuovi Argomenti and newspapers, such Il Paese, Il Calendario del popolo, or Il Messaggero.
See my discussion of the two articles published in Vie Nuove below.
The Radio transmissions have been edited by Luigi M. Lombardi Satriani and Letizia
Bindi, De Martino, Panorami e spedizioni. Le trasmissioni radiofoniche del 1953–54.
Charuty, Ernesto de Martino, 320.
Despite the formal freedom, however, the letters still read rather dry, moving in between
detailed descriptions of daily activities and complaints towards the government that read
like copies of socialist political pamphlets. Archives De Martino, 6.15.
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ethnographic journeys.109 He noted that these explorations were “not born
from the pedantic intention to inform a limited circle of specialists about
customs, superstitions, and popular tradition that have not yet been inventoried” or “from a sort of romantic passion,” but from an altogether different
motivation:
Leaving from Rome, we know that the fact of an expedition in Lucania—
it’s almost as if we were going to get to know the cultural life of the Bantu
peoples, or of the Hottentots, whereas in reality we were simply dealing
with our brothers and compatriots—would by its very virtue denounce
ancient and recent guilts. Indeed, it was our task to not only collect their
legacy but to also repair these guilts. But, most of all, we know one thing:
the cultural problem of conducting an expedition of this type was not
born in us as the fruit of our individual whim, or from an act of personal
unjustified brilliance, but because the very Lucanian proletariat, as part
of the national proletariat, was in movement, and had by now posed the
question of its emancipation within its most advanced strata. In this way,
they required also us, men of culture, to emancipate the Italian cultural
life from this monstrous limit for whom the Lucanian farmer is only a
poor boor, illiterate, ignorant, superstitious.110
In these popular publications, we not only note the coexistence of anthropological guilt and ethnographic disgust—manifest in a self-critical attitude in
light of a blatant form of ethnocentrism—but also a great emphasis on doing
anthropology from the bottom up. The goal of his inquiry was “to conscientiously reestablish the reality of things and to let them speak, as much as possible, in their own words.”111 On the international scene, the cultural turn’s
emphasis on the intricate association between knowledge, power, and political
domination gradually led to a dual focus that reflects de Martino’s discussions
of the South. On the one hand, “the underdogs, the perceived ‘victims’;”112
on the other hand, the role played by Western intellectuals. In the 1980s,
this trend was continued by the so-called Subaltern Studies Group, whose
109
110
111
112
Ernesto De Martino, “Sonno, fame, e morte sotto le stelle,” Vie nuove VII, no. 30 (July 27,
1952): 12–13; Ernesto De Martino, “Amore e morte nei canti dei braccianti lucani,” Vie
nuove VII, no. 31 (August 3, 1952): 12–13.
De Martino, “Sonno, fame, e morte sotto le stelle,” 12.
De Martino, 13.
Roberts, Historicism and Fascism in Modern Italy, 271.
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best-known work, Selected Subaltern Studies, was published in 1988.113 Around
the same time, feminist and gendered approaches to history emerged, further
contributing to the movement towards studies “from below.”114 Subsequently,
in the wake of this narrativist philosophy of history, anthropologists also
started to pay more attention to the relationship between ethnography and
writing.115 This increase in focus on the process of writing itself culminated
in what is known as the Writing Culture Movement. The volume founding this
movement, Writing Culture: The Poetics and Politics of Ethnography, was edited
by James Clifford and George E. Marcus in 1986 and has been described as an
attempt at “out-Geertzing Geertz.”116
In the same year, George E. Marcus and Michael M. J. Fischer published
Anthropology as Cultural Critique: An Experimental Moment in the Human
Sciences, in which they argue that “anthropology is not the mindless collection of the exotic, but the use of cultural richness for self-reflection and selfgrowth.”117 “Anthropology,” so they claim, is “to serve as a form of cultural
critique for ourselves. In using portraits of other cultural patterns to reflect
self-critically on our own ways, anthropology disrupts common sense and
113
114
115
116
117
Ranajit Guha and Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, Selected Subaltern Studies (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1988). See also, Vinayak Chaturvedi, Mapping Subaltern Studies
and the Postcolonial (London: Verso, 2000).
Caroline Walker Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast the Religious Significance of Food to
Medieval Women (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1987); Joan Wallach Scott,
Gender and the Politics of History (New York: Columbia University Press, 1988); Georges
Duby and Michelle Perrot, eds., A History of Women in the West (Cambridge: The Belknap
Press of Harvard University Press, 1992); Gerda Lerner, Frauen finden ihre Vergangenheit:
Grundlagen der Frauengeschichte (Frankfurt am Main: Campus-Verlag, 1995); Hans
Medick, Anne-Charlott Trepp, and Karin Hausen, Geschlechtergeschichte Und Allgemeine
Geschichte: Herausforderungen Und Perspektiven (Göttingen: Wallstein, 1998); Gisela
Bock, Frauen in der europäischen Geschichte: vom Mittelalter bis zur Gegenwart (München:
C.H. Beck, 2000); Bonnie G. Smith, Women’s History in Global Perspective (Urbana:
University of Illinois Press, 2004).
Paul Rabinow, Reflections on Fieldwork in Morocco (Berkeley: University of California Press,
1977); George E. Marcus and Dick Cushman, “Ethnographies as Texts,” Annual Review of
Anthropology 11 (1982): 25–69; James A. Boon, Other Tribes, Other Scribes: Symbolic Anthropology in the Comparative Study of Cultures, Histories, Religions, and Texts (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1982); George E. Marcus and Michael M. J. Fischer, Anthropology as Cultural Critique: An Experimental Moment in the Human Sciences (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1986).
James Clifford and George E. Marcus, eds., Writing Culture: The Poetics and Politics of
Ethnography (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986). Sydel Silverman, “The United
States,” in One Discipline, Four Ways: British, German, French, and American Anthropology,
ed. Fredrik Barth et al. (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005), 322.
Marcus and Fischer, Anthropology as Cultural Critique, ix–x.
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makes us reexamine our taken-for-granted assumptions.”118 Scholars have
noted that the Writing Culture Movement is premised on a radical identification between ethnography, writing, and theory, so that the “ethnographic experience and its representation in writing are of a piece.”119 Applications of such
self-reflexive, personal, and participatory forms of ethnographic writing have
also been practiced by anthropologists of religion, with Karen Brown’s Mama
Lola (1991) being one of the most prominent examples.
George Saunders, who directly associated de Martino with the work of the
Writing Culture Movement, rightly noted that he anticipated many of the traits
of the cultural-discursive paradigm.120 De Martino not only noted that the illiteracy of the Southern peasants is a result of his own society, which “condemns
them to labor,” but he also recognized that they “never inertly accepted this
sentence” and continued to cultivate “their own cultural world.” As a result,
de Martino showed that they have their own language in the form of an oral
tradition, which “has been the natural carrier of this work of cultural memories, the truly great school, which substituted the one that society denied
them. It is to this tradition, to this school that we tried to come closer to during
our journey.”121
Although the four examples outlined in this chapter have shown that
de Martino anticipated certain key traits of post-colonial anthropology, it
would be a mistake to over-emphasize these communalities. In fact, even
the “Lucanian Notes”—arguably the most cultural-discursive moment in de
Martino’s career—contain a response towards the loss of hope in light of the
anthropologist’s guilt; primarily in the form of what we could call a “combative” attitude. De Martino’s sense of guilt for his complicity in colonialist domination of marginalized strata of his country is accompanied by a much more
forceful feeling, namely anger (collera).
I perceive that another mood is associated with this sense of guilt: Anger,
the big historical anger that solemnly spreads out from the most authentic
part of my very being. Here, I assess the distance that separates me from
Christianity, which is essentially hatred of sin and sacramental salvation
of history threatened by sin. My anger, by contrast, is entirely historical
118
119
120
121
Marcus and Fischer, 1.
Silverman, “The United States,” 324.
Saunders, “‘Critical Ethnocentrism’ and the Ethnology of Ernesto De Martino,” 878;
George R. Saunders, “Un appuntamento mancato: Ernesto de Martino e l’antropologia
statunitense,” in Ernesto de Martino nella cultura europea, ed. Clara Gallini and Marcello
Massenzio (Napoli: Liguori, 1997), 43.
De Martino, “Sonno, fame, e morte sotto le stelle,” 12.
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because all of history is my own fault (just as it is the fault of the social
group to which I belong). My anger cannot find any sacramental outlet,
nor liturgical compensation. It is Christian love, but overturned, amputated of any theological extension, and ultimately constrained to walk on
its own feet. Precisely because of its historical nature, my anger is that
of the men who struggle to emerge from the darkness of the Rabatani
district, and my fight is their fight. I thank the Rabatanian district and
its people for having helped me better understand myself and my duty.122
While de Martino’s gratefulness reminds us of The Scope of Anthropology,
Lévi-Strauss’ inaugural lecture at the Collège de France, where the French
anthropologist acknowledged that he will never be able to repay his debt to
the people he studied—vowing to remain “their pupil, their witness”—there is
an important difference between the two statements.123 As we shall see in the
following chapter, he not only understood the risks involved in the culturaldiscursive paradigm—particularly a romantic longing for cultural alterity and
a revival of religious sentiment—but he also repudiated any relativism relying on negative or deconstructive terms. Instead, he formulated his science on
combative attitude best summed up in the “loyalty to the cultural homeland.”
122
123
De Martino, “Note lucane,” 667.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, The Scope of Anthropology; (London: Cape, 1967), 53.
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chapter 6
Loyalty to the Cultural Homeland (1960–1965):
Critical Ethnocentrism as an Anticipatory Defense
against Relativism and Interpretative Anthropology
1
A Critic of Interpretative Anthropology Ante Litteram:
The Anthropologist of Guilt Becomes a Philosopher of the
Apocalypse of Relativism
During the final years of his life, de Martino’s bibliography boasts a variety of
different writings, such as a collection of theoretical articles published as Fury,
Symbol, Value (1962), interventions on the epic biography of Sigmund Freud by
Ernest Jones, an article overviewing the history of anthropology, or an anthology of texts provocatively entitled Magic and Civilization (1962). This being
said, there was one topic that dominated de Martino’s final life-stage, namely
the apocalypse.1 While certain interests—particularly the Judeo-Christian
conceptions of time, the repetition of mythic contents, moments of crisis and
recovery in primitive cultures, or the phenomenology of psychopathological
conditions—appear to correlate to virtually every earlier stage of his career,
his fascination with the apocalypse in modernity is also a direct result of the
historical context in which de Martino found himself during the 1960s. Indeed,
like many of his contemporaries, de Martino was acutely aware of the division
of the world into two hegemonic blocks during the Cold War and the accompanying terror of the atomic threat.2 In “The Problem of the End of the World,” a
conference presentation held the year before his death, he explained:
It is anything but improbable that the modern age’s acute cultural consciousness of the ending of the world has also drawn nourishment from
the possibility of the nuclear war or from the terrifying episodes of
1 Ernesto De Martino, Furore simbolo valore (Milano: Il saggiatore, 1962); De Martino, Magia e
civiltà; Ernesto De Martino, “Etnologia e storiografia religiosa nell’opera di Freud,” Homo 4,
no. 1 (January 1963): 47–50; De Martino, “Etnologia e civiltà moderna.”
2 Clara Gallini, “Introduzione,” in La fine de mondo, by Ernesto De Martino (Torino: Einaudi,
1977), xlii; Cherchi, Il signore del limite. Tre variazioni critiche su Ernesto de Martino, 3–4;
Giovanni Jervis, “Psicopatologia e apocalissi,” in Dell’apocalisse. Antropologia e psicopatologia in Ernesto de Martino, ed. Bruna Baldacconi and Pierangela Di Lucchio (Napoli: Guida,
2005), 51.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_008
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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Loyalty to the Cultural Homeland ( 1960–1965 )
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genocide in the Nazi death camps. But already the fact that we needed the
two hundred thousand of Hiroshima or the six million Jews that perished
in the extermination camps indicates to us how deep the roots of our
crisis are. As a matter of fact, the image of just a single human face that
carries the signs of violence and injury suffered on the hands of another
human being should suffice to set in motion […] the dramatic tension of
the world that can but should not end. […] There are other aspects of the
modern world that have rendered our sensibility for the risk of the end
more acute. The very fast transformations in lifestyles introduced by the
diffusion of technical progress, the migratori currents from the countryside to the city, from underdeveloped to industrial regions, the sudden
leap from more or less rudimentary economies or even tribal societies
to economies and societies already integrated in the Western world have
all led to the crisis of a great number of traditional cultural homelands.
The rapid processes of transition, the lacerations and the voids that they
entail, the loss of cultural models in a situation that can no longer use the
familiar ones, bring about considerable crises and, in the most dramatic
mode, propose anew the elementary problems of the relationship with
the world.3
Staying true to the topos of the earthquake, de Martino collected a series of
accounts from psychopathology that depict catastrophic visions, describing
experiences of the “wholly other of the solid ground on which one walks: ‘the
ground that fails (manca) under the feet,’ the earthquake, the collapsing of the
ground.”4 In one passage, he discussed the case of a farmer from Bern, whose
apocalyptic visions were protocolled by two German psychiatrists in 1950. In
this account of the “apocalyptic delirium,” de Martino noted that the Swiss
patient “perceives the abyssal character of his world like an ‘earthquake’.”5 In
another passage, de Martino cited a similar account, this time protocolled by
the psychiatrist Albrecht Wetzel:
Darkness, stiffness, immobility, inertia, collapsing of the ground, earthquake: I thought an earthquake was about to happen. I read in the bible
that there is division on earth and so I thought that God would have
3 Ernesto De Martino, “Il problema della fine del mondo,” in Il Mondo di domani, ed. Pietro
Prini (Roma: Edizioni Abete, 1964), 227.
4 De Martino, La fine del mondo, 84.
5 De Martino, 201. For the original account, see Alfred Storch and Caspar Kulenkampff, “Zum
Verständnis Des Weltuntergangs Bei Den Schizophrenen,” Der Nervenarzt 21, no. 3 (1950):
102–8.
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come down to earth to give them only one confession. I saw that it was
dark, there was no cloud, and then everything was so calm, immobile, the
leaves hung inert. Then, when they moved, I thought there was an earthquake somewhere … I did not hear the earthquake. Already a few days
earlier I had told my husband that an earthquake was going to happen.6
In this depiction, we not only witness the importance of the earthquake as
a means to express the fear of the apocalypse, but also the close association
between the trembling of the earth and the religious, particularly Christian
narratives surrounding the end. De Martino himself, repeatedly mentioned
the Christian accounts of the events leading up to the end of the world, paying particular attention to Matthew 24,1–8, where earthquakes are named as
one of the most important signs of the coming of apocalyptic times.7 For de
Martino, in fact, the material dimensions of the apocalypse were only a superficial epiphenomenon of a much deeper civilizational crisis. Dedicating the
final years of his life to reflections of a moral and philosophical nature of the
end of the world, de Martino believed that the socio-political upheavals of
his age “evoke a much more secrete, profound, and invisible catastrophe,” of
which the “mushroom cloud of Hiroshima” is only the “real image,”.8
The expression “crisis of traditional homelands” points to the true nature of
this intellectual nature of the apocalypse, which is nothing else than a naked
catastrophe of everything that is worldly, homely, and familiar. In the posthumously published notes of The End of the World (1977), de Martino speaks
to the future generation about an apocalypse without eschaton and explained
that it should be understood as the threat of disintegration of our cultural
universe, of our system of socially and inter-subjectively shared values, which
shapes our collective actions. In the crisis affecting their culture during the
1960s—and well into the following decades—Western intellectuals had lost
the ability to transform the universe into a world that they could domesticate
and populate with their own horizons of meaning. The most radical expression of this loss of meaning, so de Martino believed, was twofold and corresponded to the cultural-discursive paradigm: The crisis was cultural and found
6 De Martino, La fine del mondo, 35. For the original account, see Albrecht Wetzel, “Das weltuntergangserlebnis in der schizophrenie,” Zeitschrift für die gesamte Neurologie und Psychiatrie
78, no. 1 (1922): 403–28.
7 De Martino, La fine del mondo, 336, 343. In another instance, he also cites Apocalypse, 6,
12–17, where the accounts starts with a great earthquake. He also references Matthew 27, 51
and Luke 23, 45, noting that they recount the time when Jesus was crucified as a moment
when the earth was shaking. See, De Martino, 319, 338.
8 De Martino, La fine del mondo, 470.
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Loyalty to the Cultural Homeland ( 1960–1965 )
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its expression in cultural relativism (the subject of this chapter), and it was
discursive and manifested in postmodernism’s symbolization of reality (to be
discussed in chapter 6).
Regarding the cultural and the discursive turns, de Martino offered both
an analysis of the movement, pointing to their inherent risks, as well as an
anticipatory answer to the crises they provoked. I am aware of the fact that
I commit the sin of engaging in an anachronistic reading of de Martino’s work
that does not correspond to the principle of historical contextualization that
marked the first chapters of this book. However, I felt it worth-while to speak of
de Martino’s relationship to relativism and postmodernism—even if only ante
litteram—for two reasons: First, because he can offer us resources to understand and counteract certain intellectual trends that persist in contemporary
academia. Second, because existing scholarship on de Martino celebrated him
as a harbinger of postmodernism, thus warranting a more thorough discussion
of his role within this trend.
In highlighting de Martino’s critical stance towards the cultural-discursive
paradigm, I decisively contradict Fabrizio Ferrari’s statement that “de Martino’s
theories anticipated […] post-modern discourses.”9 In this first introduction to
de Martino’s life for anglophone readership, an otherwise commendable effort,
Ferrari uses the terms “post-modern” and “post-modernism,” “post-structural”
and “post-structuralism,” and “post-colonial” and “post-colonialism” well over
fifty times. In support of his line of reasoning, he cites expressions of these
currents from a long list of illustrious figures: Derrida, Ricoeur, Levinas, Sartre,
Geertz, Crapanzano, Taussig, Rosaldo, Clifford, Marcus, Said, Bhabha, and
Spivak.10 Of course, as I have shown in the previous chapter, Ferrari is right in
9
10
Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion, 105. While Ferrari cites Berrocal and
Saunders repeatedly throughout his study (even using their translations of de Martino’s
texts), he seems unaware of the postmodern receptions of Hauschild, Lanternari, or
Dei and Simonicca. Ferrari’s claims are also significantly stronger and more definite
than those of his predecessors. While Dei and Simonicca speak of a “prefiguration” and
Saunders explicitly notes that de Martino should not be seen as a postmodern ante litteram, Ferrari reverses this tendency by speaking specifically of “his postmodernism
ante litteram.” Fabio Dei and Alessandro Simonicca, “‘Il fittizio lume della magia’: su de
Martino e il relativismo antropologico,” in Ernesto de Martino nella cultura europea, ed.
Clara Gallini and Marcello Massenzio (Napoli: Liguori, 1997), 271; Saunders, “Un appuntamento mancato: Ernesto de Martino e l’antropologia statunitense,” 57; Fabrizio M. Ferrari,
Ernesto De Martino on Religion, viii.
Note the similarity of this list with the one produced by James Clifford in his Writing
Culture, where he lists Emmanual Le Roy Ladurie, Natalie Davis, Carlo Ginzburg, Stephen
Greenblatt, Hayden White, Edward Said, Fredric Jameson, Pierre Bourdieu, Michel
de Certeau, Raymond Williams, Tzvetan Todorov, and Louis Marin. James Clifford,
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arguing that de Martino’s thought anticipated ideas developed by these thinkers. On the whole, his science was one without clearly defined foundations,
essences, or universals that defined much of his age. His thinking was deconstructive and open-ended. He participated in a global attempt to move beyond
the dualisms that have defined the modern age and one could even argue that
his thinking is dialogical, moving in the realm of thirds, rather than according to a binary logic. Finally, like many of the cultural-discursive paradigm’s
greats listed by Ferrari, he was acutely attuned to the shifting boundaries
between secularization and political religion, science and religion, emic and
etic approaches to religious phenomena, and so forth. This being said, as I will
show, de Martino was not simply anticipating the postmodern, postcolonial,
and post-structural thinkers, but also formulated a critical analysis of their
premises and an anticipatory response to them.
2
Moving with and beyond Antonio Gramsci: From Progressive
Folklore to a More Successful Colonialization
Before engaging in the intellectual afterlife of de Martino, however, it might be
useful to look at another Italian thinker, whose work has been associated with
postcolonial theory, namely Antonio Gramsci (1891–1937). Indeed, it seems
clear that Gramsci played an important role in de Martino’s development as
an anthropologist and thinker of the South. If I have already shown how de
Martino critiqued the divided nature of his discipline by critically engaging
the international study of religion and magic, it is important to note that he
also lamented the presence of a similar division in the treatment of the Italian
South. In their attitudes, Marxists and Populists—the two camps engaged in
the Southern Question—reflected what George Saunders called the dual function of “the alien” as something that “attracts and repels simultaneously.”11 De
Martino himself caricatures the two attitudes as follows:
On the one hand, these traditions are considered as simple relicts of a
mediocre past, as a document of the backwardness of the Southern plebs,
as a medley of oddities and superstitions that one hopes disappear as
11
“Introduction: Partial Truths,” in Writing Culture: The Poetics and Politics of Ethnography,
ed. James Clifford and George E. Marcus (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1986), 3.
George R. Saunders, “The Magic of the South: Popular Religion and Elite Catholicism
in Italian Ethnology,” in Italy’s “Southern Question”: Orientalism in One Country, ed. Jane
Schneider (Oxford: Berg, 1998), 178.
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Loyalty to the Cultural Homeland ( 1960–1965 )
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quickly as possible; on the other hand, one idolizes the cheerful and noisy
splendor of the popular celebrations of the South, the archaic customs
of Lucania and Sardinia, the charm of the songs from Gallura or from
Lugodoro, and one almost regrets that this world is about to die out.12
Unlike de Martino’s work, Gramsci’s treatment of what Timothy Brennan calls
“Southernism”13 has received ample attention across the globe. There is no
doubt that Antonio Gramsci fought the same battles as his much less famous
colleague. On the one hand, although he has been called “the patron saint of
the Italian Communist party,”14 Antonio Gramsci relentlessly stood up for a
more self-consciously critical orientation of Italian Marxism. Like de Martino,
Gramsci spent much of his time “combating the dogmatic economism” of his
Italian comrades.15 On the other hand, in articles such as “Observations on
Folklore” (1950), Gramsci was leery of any folkloric, picturesque, and romantic
conception of the mezzogiorno, arguing that “however isolated and seemingly
remote such communities may appear, they are in fact embedded in larger
political and economic realities.”16
Antonio Gramsci was born in 1891 on the island of Sardinia and lived through
an exceptionally difficult childhood marked by marginalization due to familial
neglect, economic poverty, and a particular physical deformity that made him
hunch-backed. Despite leaving school at age eleven to support his family, he
ended up studying at the University of Turin, where the bright and passionate
youth found himself in an entirely different cultural context than in his native
region. In what was then Italy’s industrial capital, Gramsci benefitted not only
from a thriving university, but also entered into contact with a self-conscious,
organized, and combative working class.17 Once the Italian Socialist Party split
in January 1921 at Livorno, Gramsci was quick to establish himself as one of the
leaders of the newly formed Italian Communist Party (PCI, Partito Comunista
Italiano). Spending two years in Moscow, representing the party, he returned
12
13
14
15
16
17
Ernesto De Martino, “Amore e morte,” Meridione 9, no. 1–2 (1956): 77.
Timothy Brennan, “Antonio Gramsci and Postcolonial Theory: ‘Southernism,’” Diaspora:
A Journal of Transnational Studies 10, no. 2 (2001): 143–87, https://doi.org/10.1353/
dsp.2011.0004.
Hughes, Consciousness and Society, 99.
Hughes, 102; Kate Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2002), 22, 72, 89.
Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology, 5, 99; Carles Feixa, “Más allá de Éboli:
Gramsci, de Martino y el debate sobre la cultura subalterna en Italia,” in El folclore progresivo y otros ensayos, by Ernesto De Martino, ed. Carles Feixa (Barcelona: Universitat
Autònoma de Barcelona, 2009), 18–19; Signorelli, Ernesto de Martino, 19.
Wohl, The Generation of 1914, 192.
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to an Italy ruled by Mussolini and lived a clandestine existence before being
arrested and sentenced to twenty years in prison in 1926. Released in 1934 due
to ill health, he died three days later, at age forty-six.
Like de Martino, Gramsci has been described as the epitome of the “crisisborn hero,” whose work was driven by the aspiration to transform a broken
society.18 While this activist orientation, the integration of action and theory
was a hallmark of Marxist philosophy since its inception in the works of Marx
and Engels, there is no doubt that these two attributes coalesced in Antonio
Gramsci’s opus more than in any other Marxist before him.19 Kate Crehan, in
one of the most stimulating studies on the Sardinian thinker, has noted that
Gramsci’s “analytical starting point was very different from that of academic
anthropology” as he was “first and foremost a political activist whose primary
concern was to bring about political change in Italy.”20 Gramsci used the term
“organic intellectual” (intellettuale organico) to describe the ideal thinker, who
is able to integrate political activism aimed at the practical transformation the
world with intellectual engagement intent on generating knowledge.21 Perhaps
the greatest energy de Martino drew from Gramsci’s work as an organic intellectual geared towards transforming culture, is the latter’s insistence on the
need to enable the Southern peasants to become historical actors of their own
destiny, to remedy their poverty and misery, and to contribute to the unification of Italy. Gramsci believed that all previous movements of unification,
including the Risorgimento led by Giuseppe Mazzini had failed to overcome
the division in the Italian nation.22 De Martino himself called for the “unification of the national culture as Gramsci conceived it,” and defined the process
as “the formation of a new cultural life of the nation that heals the fracture
between high culture and the culture of the people.”23
De Martino’s attempts at unification can be divided into different expressions, which evolved throughout this period and ultimately led him beyond
both Gramsci and the Southern Question. In a first phase during the late 1940s,
18
19
20
21
22
23
See, for example, Mihály Csíkszentmihályi, Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience.
(New York: Harper & Row, 1990), 234.
Joachim Ranke, Marxismus und Historismus bei Antonio Gramsci: philosophische und sozialwissenschaftliche Untersuchungen (Frankfurt am Main: P. Lang, 1989); Crehan, Gramsci,
Culture and Anthropology.
Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology, 5.
Hughes, Consciousness and Society, 102–3; Saunders, “The Magic of the South,” 188;
Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology, 128–64; Mancini, “Postface,” 288–89.
Wohl, The Generation of 1914, 195.
Ernesto De Martino, “Il folklore progressivo,” in Antropologia culturale e questione meridionale: Ernesto de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955,
ed. Carla Pasquinelli (1951; repr., Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1977), 145.
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he simply tried to augment the Marxist focus on the economic circumstances
by complementing it with an increased attention to the real needs of the people. In “The Civilization of the Spirit” (1948), for example, he described the case
of a day laborer from the town of Minervino, who expressed anguish in light
of his weakening strength, his inability to work and provide, and his fears of
becoming a burden to his family.24 In his reflections on the peasant’s experience, de Martino not only converted these anxieties into an existential fear of
losing any type of spiritual value and human dignity in light of an “image […]
of life and world […] as oppressive dependence on ‘matter’,” but he also called
for a “real, revolutionary liberation of man from the servile moment of inevitable materialistic dependence.”25
In the same vein, his “Lucanian Notes” (1950) considered the case of another
day-laborer by the name of Rocco Tammone. After introducing his dire economic situation with a “naked list of numbers”—precisely outlining his hours
of work, the size of the land he was working, the harvest of grain and wine,
and the amounts of money he owes to different people in town—de Martino
then proceeded to describe him as a “man full of humanity.”26 He reproduced a
letter that Tammone sent to Rocco Scotellaro, the Socialist mayor of his hometown, in which he tells the story of a tragic accident of a four-year old child of
his own family.27 In his conclusion, de Martino comments:
The humanity of Rocco Tammone poses the general question of the
humanity and of the “civilization” of the people of Tricario. As much as
the use of the word “civilization” in referring to the material conditions
of existence of these people could sound atrociously derisive, it is a fact,
that even such conditions nourish experiences and affection, customs
and ideologies, which shape civilization and history. There is a basic form
24
25
26
27
Ernesto De Martino, “La civiltà dello spirito,” in Scritti minori su religione marxismo e psicoanalisi, ed. Roberto Altamura and Patrizia Ferretti (1948; repr., Roma: Nuove edizioni
romane, 1993), 115.
De Martino, 116–17.
De Martino, “Note lucane,” 653.
De Martino, 652. Son of a farming family of Tricarico, a large village in the province of
Matera, Scotellaro attended the liceo in the North of Italy only to return to Basilicata
in his early twenties to emerge as one of the most important writers, researchers, and
political activists of the mezzogiorno. Both of them being members in the Italian Socialist
Party, Ernesto knew Rocco personally and the young man—who had become mayor of
Tricarico by that time—invited him and Vittoria several times between 1949 and 1952 to
stay in his family’s home. The literary production of the peasant poet, published only after
his early death in 1953, has not only been compared to that of his most influential mentor,
Carlo Levi, but also to neorealism.
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of experience from which the people of Tricarico has to continuously
defend itself in order to save its proper humanity, in order to ward off
the savage temptation of things, without prospect, sordid, and deformed.
In these houses, with this life, it is very difficult to preserve oneself as
human, to at least sustain a weak shimmering of this complex of love and
relationships that characterizes humanity.28
In this immensely influential article, de Martino also hints at his second
strategy that could lead to the unification of Italy, namely “progressive folklore” ( folklore progressivo). In this second stage, which is concomitant to his
increased ethnographic expeditions and his new identity as a “militant ethnographer” starting around 1950, he argued that the portrayal of Southern reality in un-romanticized ways was no longer enough for unifying the country.
Instead of images of the poor produced by the elite, de Martino focused on
the revolutionary potential of the subaltern masses itself. In one of his oeuvre’s
most impactful passages, we read “men and women came out of their filthy
hideouts and asked me to tell and to narrate, to render the history of their
hardship and their trembling rebellion public.”29 The following year, in an article entitled “Progressive Folklore,” de Martino noted that “if we want this to be
a concrete and real unification, it also has to involve the admission of that progressive popular production to the cultural circle, which […] ties itself to the
process of political and social emancipation of the people themselves.”30 He
defines “progressive folklore” as the “informed proposal of the people against
their own socially subaltern condition” and as a position that “comments and
expresses the struggles to emancipate from it in cultural terms.”31
In a talk at the conference organized by the Gramsci Foundation (Fondazione
Gramsci) to present the publication of the Fourth Volume of Gramsci’s Prison
Notebooks, de Martino lauded “the multiplication of progressive elements in
folklore itself, that is to say cultural elements that are born as protest by the
people against their own subaltern condition, or that culturally comment and
express the struggles to emancipate themselves from it.”32 He explained that
he sees this combative force in various newly emergent traits of the Southern
culture, such as the Resistance, the occupation of lands and factories, strikes
28
29
30
31
32
De Martino, 654.
De Martino, 660.
De Martino, “Il folklore progressivo,” 145.
De Martino, 144.
Ernesto De Martino, “Gramsci e il folklore,” in Antropologia culturale e questione meridionale: Ernesto de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955,
ed. Carla Pasquinelli (Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1977), 156–57.
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and political celebrations.33 De Martino became particularly fascinated with
one form of progressive folklore, namely popular songs. In another article
from this period, he invited all his readers to send him any progressive popular
songs, and elaborated their nature as follows:
There exists today in Italy a whole prominent patrimony, a genuine solemn singing comment, which accompanies the laborer and peasant
movement in its history. These are songs that sometimes express simple
protest, other times open rebellion against the subaltern condition to
which the people are condemned. These are satirical folk songs against
the enemy of class, epic memories of ancient and recent struggles, lyric
derelictions to passionate anticipation of the better world of tomorrow.
[…] It is up to us to assemble this heritage, to conserve it, to put it back
into circulation, and, most of all, to stimulate its increase: this is an aspect
of the new humanism underway that cannot be neglected.34
Progressive folklore reveals an ambiguous dimension in de Martino’s relationship with Gramsci. While every article he wrote about progressive folklore references his name, Gramsci appears to be serving primarily as a shadow, which
allowed de Martino to define his own contours.35 Passages that would actually
support his argument are conspicuously absent in his treatises. Consider, for
instance, the curious fact that de Martino completely ignored the previously
mentioned “Observations on Folklore.” Here, Gramsci distinguished between
“various strata” of Southern culture, “the fossilized ones which reflect conditions of past life and are therefore conservative and reactionary, and those
which consist of a series of innovations, often creative and progressive, determined spontaneously by forms and conditions of life which are in the process
of developing and which are in contradiction to or simply different from the
morality of the governing strata.”36 The reason for this neglect might lie in the
fact that in Gramsci, the potential for progress that grows out of the oppositional
33
34
35
36
De Martino, 156–57.
Ernesto De Martino, “Il folklore,” in Antropologia culturale e questione meridionale:
Ernesto de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955, ed.
Carla Pasquinelli (Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1977), 147.
For attempts to explain this strategy, see Angelini, Ernesto de Martino, 68–69; Pasquinelli,
“Introduzione,” 26.
Antonio Gramsci, Letteratura e vita nazionale. (Torino: Einaudi, 1950), 216–17; Antonio
Gramsci, Selections from Cultural Writings, ed. David Forgacs and Geoffrey Nowell-Smith
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1985), 190. See also, Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and
Anthropology, 108.
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nature of subaltern culture is immediately relativized by his overall negative
conception of Southern society, which is described as an implicit, incoherent,
contradictory, and disintegrated worldview.37 In her discussion of Gramsci’s
attitude, Jane Schneider rightly detects a “pessimism about the capacity of
Southern peasants to act in history.”38
De Martino himself would ultimately transcend Gramsci, particularly in
the second half of the decade, which would culminate in the books of the
Southern Trilogy, published between 1958 and 1961. It is at this moment that
de Martino’s project of unification of Italy gradually lost its militant and political undertones to become philosophical project concerned with the destiny
of (post)-modern Western society. If the shifting boundaries between hegemonic and subaltern cultures remained a propelling energy, its nature is now
explored in another way: The encounter with the uncivilized South becomes
less a problem of the South, and more a problem of the limited civilizational
power of the North—what Alessandro Testa called a “sort of unsuccessful
colonialization.”39
In the final years of the 1950s, the dying down of political activism, the
gradual improvement of his health, and tentative indications of professional
recognition in academia went hand in hand to transform de Martino’s life radically. Although it is not clear whether he actively left the party or just chose
not to renew his membership in 1957, there is no doubt that his socialist political ambitions took a severe blow as a consequence of two events demonstrating the culturally intolerant and authoritarian nature of socialist regimes.40
Within a few months in 1956, the Poznań Uprising in Poland and the Hungarian
Revolution against Stalinism posed the greatest threat to the Soviet control
of these territories since WWII, leading to violent suppressions that ended up
costing the lives of thousands and the displacement of hundreds of thousands.
The same incidents in the East also reconfirmed his growing isolation within
Marxist circles and his rising disappointment about the failure of Italian communism to truly emancipate the subaltern masses.41
37
38
39
40
41
Gramsci, Letteratura e vita nazionale., 215; Gramsci, Selections from Cultural Writings, 189.
Jane Schneider, “Introduction: The Dynamics of Neo-Orientalism in Italy (1848–1995),” in
Italy’s “Southern Question”: Orientalism in One Country, ed. Jane Schneider (Oxford: Berg,
1998), 14.
Testa, “Estasi e crisi. Note su sciamanismo e pessimismo storico in Eliade, de Martino e
Lévi-Strauss,” 108.
Patrizia Ferretti, “Nota biobibliografica,” in Scritti minori su religione marxismo e psicoanalisi, ed. Roberto Altamura and Patrizia Ferretti (Roma: Nuove edizioni romane, 1993),
162–63; Gallini, “Introduzione,” LXXV–LXXVI; Angelini, Ernesto de Martino, 154.
Gallini, “Introduzione.”
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As he gradually distanced himself from Gramsci and from militant ethnography, de Martino made his first steps in the university system by becoming a
lecturer (libero docente) in anthropology (1953–1955) and history of religions
(1956–1958) at the Sapienza University in Rome. In the last years of his life, he
finally received some much-deserved recognition from his contemporaries. In
1958, he published Death and Ritual Weeping, winning the prestigious Viareggio
Literature Prize precisely eleven years after it was awarded to none other than
Gramsci for his Prison Notebooks. A year later, he achieved another milestone
in his career as he was appointed as full professor (professore straordinario) of
religious studies; not in Rome, where his friend Angelo Brelich inherited the
position of Raffaele Pettazzoni, but at the University of Cagliari on Sardinia.
Before leaving for the island in the summer of 1959, de Martino and his interdisciplinary team of researchers undertook one last expedition in the Italian
South, where they documented the case of the tarantate, women possessed by
the spirits of spiders whose richest ritualistic expression takes place during the
yearly celebration of St. Paul on the 28th and 29th of June. The results of the
research on tarantism in the small town of Galatina, in the heart of Salento,
was handed over to Mondadori publisher the following year and published as
The Land of Remorse in 1961. With that project, de Martino finally closed his
Southern Period for good. Arrived at the zenith of his fame in Italy—endowed
with a permanent position as the chair in religious studies at Cagliari—the
foremost anthropologist of the Italian South added another remarkable twist
to his intellectual itinerary. Abandoning the research of folklore, he decided to
dedicate his new life to old passions centered on the destiny of Western civilization, once again articulated in between decline and rebirth. As he himself
put it, he returned to research “born in the arena of contemporary history,”
circumscribing it as the “cognitive clarification of operative nodes in which our
own age is caught up.”42
3
Nostalgia for the Lost Homeland: An Anticipatory Analysis of
the Cultural Turn and the Surprising Parallels between Cultural
Relativism and the Insider-Phenomenological Approach
While I will not engage every thinker on Ferrari’s list mentioned above, even a
short glance at the priorities of the main protagonists of the shift in the intellectual climate during the cultural and linguistic turns makes it clear why
historians of the discipline of religious studies tend to emphasize that the
42
Ernesto De Martino, “Prefazione,” in Furore simbolo valore (Milano: Il saggiatore, 1962), 33.
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insider-phenomenological current was replaced as the cultural-discursive paradigm came to the fore. Michael Stausberg, for example, maintains that “the
1970s marked the twilight of the phenomenology of religion, the rejection of
which has now become the standard prologue to contemporary attempts at
self-understanding within the field.”43 Gavin Flood, similarly, noted a “shift
of emphasis from a philosophy of consciousness to a philosophy of the sign,
from consciousness to language, culture and intersubjectivity around the same
time.”44 Of course, my own account in chapter 5, in which I noted that the
ontological paradigm was gradually superseded by the cultural-discursive
model of thought, has certainly lent some credibility to this account. This, however, is far from the whole story. De Martino rightly intuited that the insiderphenomenological approach received a surprising afterlife in the emergent
third model for the study of religion. The key to understanding the continuity
between these two seemingly different currents of thought lies in their shared
cultural relativism, which is driven by a nostalgia for cultural alterity.
From a historical point of view, so much is well-known, the continuous
presence of relativism makes sense as American interpretative anthropology
was ultimately nourished through the umbilical cord of a German matrix.
Specifically, the concept of culture, in the American context, was primarily
shaped by Franz Boas (1858–1942), who emigrated from Germany to New York
at the age of twenty-nine. After growing up in Westphalia, Boas studied geography, which led him to a one-year fieldwork stay on Baffin Island (1883–1884).
It was during this year of research amongst the indigenous Eskimo population that Boas stood up against the geographical determinism of his teacher
Friedrich Ratzel and started to promote his appreciation of cultural phenomena as autonomous of geographic, racial, or biological conditioning. After
returning to Germany, where he worked at the Royal Ethnological Museum
in Berlin and attained his habilitation with Adolf Bastian in 1896, Boas settled in the United States to work at Columbia University and at the American
Museum of Natural History.
In the first decades of the twentieth century, Boas and his disciples collectively changed the face of American anthropology, leading it gradually from
evolutionism to cultural relativism. Although the students of Boas were anything but a coherent and unified group, they all propagated their teacher’s
conception of culture as a bounded whole.45 As one commentator put it, “the
43
44
45
Stausberg, “Western Europe,” 32.
Flood, Beyond Phenomenology, 117.
Stocking includes Lowie, Leslie Spier, Herskovits, Wissler, Speck, Kroeber, Sapir, Radin,
Benedict, and Mead in the list of Boasians. George Ward Stocking, “Introduction: The
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Boasian paradigm, elaborated and reshaped by his students over three generations, dominated American anthropology until mid-century.”46 Particularly,
Ruth Benedict’s Patterns of Culture (1934) has exerted a tremendous influence
on American anthropology, continuing to promote values of cultural relativism through its attempts to achieve a “deep penetration into the genius of
the culture.”47
The Boasian model persisted even into the final decades of the twentieth century. In fact, one of the most vital offshoots sprouting from the fertile
ground of Boasian anthropology was Clifford Geertz (1926–2006). Born in
California, serving in the U.S. Navy in WWII, and graduating from Harvard
in Social Anthropology, the formative events in Geertz’s career were the
personal encounters with cultural alterity through his fieldwork on the
Indonesian islands of Java and Bali, and in Morocco. Appointed as professor
at the University of Chicago in 1960, he would become the first social scientist
appointed at the prestigious think tank known as the Institute for Advanced
Study at Princeton ten years later. Throughout this period, he gradually moved
towards what has been described as “extreme culturalist positions,”48 which
would ultimately culminate in the publication of the foundational book of the
cultural turn, namely The Interpretation of Culture (1973).
A rather banal but nonetheless powerful indication for Geertz’s underlying affinity with Boasian thinking about culture, comes from the title of his
paradigm-shifting book. Indeed, by using the plural grammatical form, Geertz
indicates that he, like Boas before him, was not searching for culture as a
universal concept but rather cultures as particular and unique constructs. In
“Religion as a Cultural System,” which was published as part of his magnum
opus, he famously defined culture as having “neither multiple referents, nor, so
far as I can see, any unusual ambiguity.” Instead, so he specified, “it denotes an
historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols, a system
of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms by means of which men
communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about and attitudes
towards life.”49 Similarly, in “Thick Description,” the celebrated opening essay
of his collection, he not only described “culture” as the concept “around which
46
47
48
49
Basic Assumptions of Boasian Anthropology,” in The Shaping of American Anthropology,
1883–1911: A Franz Boas Reader, by Franz Boas (New York: Basic Books, 1974), 17.
Silverman, “The United States,” 345.
Franz Boas, “Introduction,” in Patterns of Culture, by Ruth Benedict (Boston: Houghton
Mifflin, 1934), xv.
Silverman, “The United States,” 287.
Clifford Geertz, “Religion As a Cultural System,” in The Interpretation of Cultures: Selected
Essays (New York: Basic Books, 1973), 89.
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the whole discipline of anthropology arose,”50 but he also gave it a particularistic, one might even say nationalistic, valence. He argued that according
to his anthropological method, “descriptions of Berber, Jewish, or French culture must be cast in terms of the constructions we imagine Berbers, Jews, or
Frenchmen to place upon what they live through, the formulae they use to
define what happens to them.”51
As for de Martino, he not only understood that cultural relativism was
“born out of the crisis of historicism in the first half of the twentieth century
in Germany, constituting thus a typically Western phenomenon,”52 but also
recognized the long shadow of the fascination with alterity within the rising cultural-discursive paradigm. In The End of the World, reviving terminology that originated in the context of crisis and nostalgia for cultural rebirth
during the interwar years, de Martino described the apocalyptic 1960s as an
age marked by a state of “being-acted-upon” (essere-agito-da), “radical unfamiliarity,” a sense of “strangeness (estraneità), Unheimlichkeit, and the Ganz
Andere.”53 American anthropology and its celebration of the contingent, the
incommensurable, the different, and the unique is ultimately a return to the
earlier historicism debate.54 In short, the crisis of 1965 was in many ways just
another permutation of the crisis of 1918.
More recently, international scholarship has confirmed de Martino’s intuitions, noting that Geertz inherited important characteristics from the German
conception of culture as it rose in the American context under Franz Boas.
Kate Crehan, for example, emphasized that for him too, “culture, like a nationality, tended […] to be seen as referring to a specific people, often associated
with a specific territory, and who were characterized by a particular world view,
expressed through a common language.”55 Similarly, Daniel Pals notes that
“interpretive anthropology […] appreciates the particular self-defining character of every culture.”56 Finally, Silverman argues that Geertz’s vision “pointed
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
Clifford Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward and Interpretive Theory of Culture,” in The
Interpretation of Cultures: Selected Essays (New York: Basic Books, 1973), 4.
Geertz, 15.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 281.
De Martino, 16.
Wolfgang Kämmerer, Friedrich Meinecke und das Problem des Historismus (Frankfurt am
Main: Peter Lang, 2014), 296–99.
Crehan, Gramsci, Culture and Anthropology, 46. Crehan also used the example of James
Clifford, another figure on Ferrari’s list, to illustrate that “hybridity” is still underpinned
by a “persistent assumption of the existence of distinct cultures, elements of which may
intermingle in all kinds of ways but which nonetheless somehow remain rooted in that
culture to which they ‘belong.’” Crehan, 61.
Daniel L. Pals, Eight Theories of Religion (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006), 308.
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to a highly particularistic, relativistic, and aesthetic program for anthropology,
one that had much in common with earlier scholars’ interest in ethos and was
reminiscent of Benedict’s notion of the patterning of distinctive, coherent cultural systems.”57
By recalling Otto’s “wholly other” in his analysis, de Martino also suggested
that the cultural-discursive paradigm’s relativism was closely associated to
another core trait of the insider-phenomenological approach, namely the
nostalgic longing for a traditional and non-modern world-view. Just like relativism, this religious nostalgia likely stems from the Boasian conception of
Kultur, whose origins reach well beyond the beginning of the twentieth century. In fact, the particularistic model of culture has its richest roots in German
Romanticism, and, more specifically, in the thought of Johann Gottlieb Herder
(1744–1803).58 Opposing the Enlightenment belief in a teleological development of human civilization, Herder asserted the importance of a plurality of
individual cultures.59 Boas himself, acknowledged the influence of Herder on
his own thinking and argued in favor of “the diversity of cultures.” In fact, following in the footsteps of the German romantic tradition, he proposed “a stance
of cultural relativism, the idea that it is necessary to grasp cultures in their own
terms and their own historical contexts before attempting generalizations.”60
Importantly, the relativists’ insistence on the autonomy of cultures and the
rejection of evolution was frequently accompanied by a reverse form of ethnocentrism, which celebrated the non-modern or “primitive” cultures as purer
and more authentic expressions of Kultur. The principle of the peculiarity of
culture, its particularistic richness, led to an infatuation with what is alien
and a critique of what is one’s own. As Helen Carr put it in her Inventing the
American Primitive, “the Boasian ethnographers, like primitivist poets, created
through their writing a world which possesses the virtues lost by modernity.”61
De Martino, always attuned to the risk of division in times of crisis,
described the final years of his life as a period in which the Western world
had to make a choice that it already faced in the earlier half of the twentieth
57
58
59
60
61
Silverman, “The United States,” 288.
Thomas Hylland Eriksen and Finn Sivert Nielsen, A History of Anthropology (London:
Pluto, 2001), 23; William Yewdale Adams, The Philosophical Roots of Anthropology
(Stanford: CSLI Publications, 2001), 313.
Consider, for example, Herder’s Ideas on the Philosophy of the History of Mankind
(1984–91).
Silverman, “The United States,” 262.
Helen Carr, Inventing the American Primitive: Politics, Gender and the Representation of
Native American Literary Traditions, 1789–1936 (New York: New York University Press,
1996), 252.
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century. Either, “one maintains faith in reason, as telos of humanity represented in distinguished fashion in the West, or one instead abdicates in front
of the irrational and return to make it into the fundamental theme of life: This
is the alternative called Europe, because we Europeans are living it in such a
dramatic manner that has no equal in no other civilization of our planet.”62
As his description of Western or European exceptionalism already reveals, de
Martino’s choice was clearly on the opposite side of the spectrum from that of
relativist anthropology.
In important ways, the interpretative approach to culture as it was practiced by Clifford Geertz is based on a revisitation of the Methodenstreit that
ravaged the academy in the early twentieth-century. If the explanatory models
of Marxism and structuralism started to gain dominance in the years after the
Second World War, from the 1970s onward, anthropology took a turn towards
hermeneutics. As one commentator put it, “it seemed fairer to understand (verstehen) the other than to explain (erklären) it.”63 Lawson and McCauley have
pointed to the fact that “those cultural anthropologists who have abandoned
explanatory theorizing in favor of hermeneutic explorations” became important allies of the proponents of the insider-phenomenological approach, who
“jumped at the chance to enlist hermeneutically aligned cultural anthropologists. They are grateful for allies with a ‘humanistic’ rather than a ‘theological’
or ‘scientific’ orientation.”64 Geertz’s work itself gives ample evidence of this
attitude. In an interview from 2002, for example, he spoke of his analysis of the
Balinese cockfight as follows: “You try to make sense of it, i.e., make sense that
they make of it. Try to understand how they make sense of their world. In that
way, it is phenomenological and hermeneutic. It is an attempt to understand
things from the native’s point of view.”65
Both insider-phenomenological and cultural-discursive approaches value
the stance of the religious practitioner more than the thinkers of the outsiderexplanatory approach. Gavin Flood, in his description of the third approach
in religious studies, admits that “the idea of ‘empathy’ is relevant here,” while
immediately commenting on the “problematic” nature of this term as it “has
62
63
64
65
De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” 106–7.
Werner Schiffauer, “Grenzen des ethnologischen Verstehens,” in Grenzen des Verstehens:
philosophische und humanwissenschaftliche Perspektiven, ed. Gudrun Kühne-Bertram and
Gunter Scholtz (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2002), 237.
E. Thomas Lawson and Robert N. McCauley, “Crisis of Conscience, Riddle of Identity:
Making Space for a Cognitive Approach to Religious Phenomena,” Journal of the American
Academy of Religion 61, no. 2 (1993): 213.
Arun Micheelsen and Clifford Geertz, “‘I Don’t Do Systems’: An Interview with Clifford
Geertz,” Method & Theory in the Study of Religion 14, no. 1 (2002): 10.
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unnecessary implications of a philosophy of consciousness which a dialogical model would wish to avoid.”66 Of course, part of Flood’s embarrassment
stems precisely from the fact that the emphasis on states of consciousness and
experience is pervasive throughout the cultural-discursive paradigm. Let us
consider another example from Geertz’s work, namely his definition of religion as “a system of symbols which acts to establish powerful, pervasive, and
long-lasting moods and motivations in men.”67 Unlike the objectivity of evolutionary or structuralist approaches, Geertz emphasized the primacy of subjective and intuitive experiences for apprehending religion. Georg Iggers, the
historian of European intellectual history, noted that the Geertzian separation
of the social reality from the web of symbolic significance ultimately “results
in methodological irrationalism,” as “the interpretation of symbols cannot be
tested empirically.” Even more importantly, Geertz’s emphasis on culture as
a web of meaningful symbols invited “the reintroduction of the anthropologist’s subjectivity or imagination into his subject matter.”68 Since the individual historical facts do not refer to an underlying reality, they need to be
reconstituted in a meaningful way through the subjective imagination of the
“interpretative” anthropologist. This form of cognitive relativism, of course, is
just as inherent in any approach that explores religion through insider experience as it is for those who argue for a hermeneutical conception of culture
as a text. Texts, by their very nature, can be read in innumerable ways. As
Burke put it: “A fundamental problem with the metaphor of reading is that
it seems to license intuition. Who is in a position to arbitrate when two intuitive readers disagree? Is it possible to formulate rules of reading, or at least to
identify misreadings?”69
4
Science Is Not for the Stateless: An Anticipatory Critique of the
Cultural Turn Based on the Ethnocentric Imperative
Based on my discussion in the first few chapters, it is obvious that the young
Ernesto already articulated a critique of relativist thinking in religious studies, primarily in response to Rudolf Otto and Mircea Eliade. In his “Code for
a Historicist Anthropology,” written during the second half of the 1930s, de
Martino’s self-reflexivity took on an aspect that decisively contradicts the
66
67
68
69
Flood, Beyond Phenomenology, 148.
Geertz, “Religion As a Cultural System,” 90. Emphasis is mine.
Iggers, Historiography in the Twentieth Century, 125.
Peter Burke, What Is Cultural History? (Cambridge: Polity, 2004), 116.
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anthropology of guilt and self-critique found in relativism. Instead, the document culminates in a fierce defense of ethnocentrism: “Anthropology cannot
be not Eurocentric.” “That means,” so de Martino continued, “it cannot be
accompanied by the awareness that the Western civilization, maturing through
Christianity, the reformation, the Enlightenment, and historicism, represents
the highest level that humankind has successfully reached to this day.”70 In
light of these youthfully brash words, Fabrizio Ferrari argues that de Martino
was “misguided by the then totalitarian climate in Italy,” thus falling “prey to
Eurocentrism and Christian-centrism.” Not only that, he also concludes that
“such a discourse, imbued with the ‘rational modernity’ and racial prejudice
of fascism, will be eventually reconsidered and surpassed, especially in the
Southern trilogy.”71
Upon closer analysis, however, this assessment is problematic as de
Martino’s thinking was, until the end of his life, marked by “unconditional
confidence in European culture.”72 In an article dedicated to the folklore of
Southern Italy, written in 1950, he brandished relativism as “philosophy of idiots ( filosofia degl’imbecilli)” and explained that it was driven by the idea that
“Western man should indeed get rid (spogliarsi) of his cultural heritage (patrimonio culturale).”73 In the notes to The End of the World, he similarly concluded
that as the relativist “ethnographer attempts to totally disregard his own proper
cultural history under the pretense of ‘making himself naked as a worm,’” he
loses his own “specialistic vocation,” and “exposes himself […] to the risk of
immediate ethnocentric analysis.”74 Put differently, while de Martino recognized the danger of cultural imperialism, he was clear on the fact that it is not
remedied by cultural relativism or some sort of anti anti-relativism.
We cannot place our own civilization next to the others and consider them
all as equal perspectives, to be chosen at par as evaluating points of view.
This is not how cultural “provincialism” is defeated. We need to engage
in a dialogue with the world but we need to truly know our own part,
otherwise we risk to fall into an enormous chatter (pettegolezzo), into an
ambiguous and dumb gossiping, into an opportunism (camaleontismo)
70
71
72
73
74
De Martino, Naturalismo e storicismo nell’etnologia, 228.
Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion, 110.
Lanternari, La mia alleanza con Ernesto de Martino e altri saggi post-demartiniani, 125.
Ernesto De Martino, “Ancora sulla Storia del Mondo Popolare Subalterno,” in Antropologia
culturale e questione meridionale: Ernesto de Martino e il dibattito sul mondo popolare subalterno negli anni 1948–1955, ed. Carla Pasquinelli (Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1977), 91–92.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 391.
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that simulates openness and variety of interests while being only a mask
for a limitless abdication.75
In “Promises and Dangers of Anthropology,” an influential article published in
Fury, Symbol, Value (1962), de Martino argued that cultural relativism makes
us apprehend the ethnographic encounter as an opportunity to abandon our
own culture to immerse ourselves so much in the other that we completely
lose our own values. Of course, de Martino himself was not entirely immune to
the “dangers” involved in this type of thinking. Anthropology, so he concluded,
is intended to “generate a cultural awareness, which, in the very moment it
opened itself up to the intuition of so-called primitive societies, also put into
question the bourgeois determination of Western civilization by opening it
up to scrutiny and measuring its internal limits of origin and development.”
However, the goal of “putting ourselves into question,” so he insisted, is not
to abandon our own cultural values, but rather to strengthen our identity by
means of a renewed sense of “Westernness.”
All of this serves the intention to gain a greater loyalty to the character
and destiny of Western civilization. [Its objective is] to avoid a false historical piety of the variously abdicating irrationalism, of the bewilderments of a relativism without perspective, and of the pseudo-objective
suspensions of a neutralism that revealed the death of any capacity of
choice and of the very will of history.76
Approvingly citing a passage of Tristes Tropiques, de Martino was also aware
that he shared certain priorities with Lévi-Strauss as he too recognized that
the confrontation with cultural alterity must invariably lead to self-reflection.
In Structural Anthropology, for example, the French anthropologist described
his endeavor in almost demartinoan terms, as characterized by “two apparently contradictory attitudes, namely, respect for societies very different from
ours, and active participation in the transformation of our own society.”77 At the
same time, however, de Martino would have argued that while the Frenchman’s
work stood for the dangers of anthropology, his own position exemplified its
promises. Placido Cherchi takes the view that “contrary to what it might seem,
the growing attention that de Martino would dedicate to the theme of critical
ethnocentrism […] is not to be read as the consequence of an unconditional
75
76
77
De Martino, 281.
De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” 87.
Lévi-Strauss, Structural Anthropology, 335.
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consensus to the perspective set down in the book of Lévi-Strauss, but as a
need to exorcise its intimate riskiness.”78 An exemplum for why this assessment might very well hold true comes from Race and History (1952), where
Lévi-Strauss argued that relativism stands for a leveling off of societies as all
cultures are seen to be equally worthy. In this publication, part of a UNESCO
series against racism, the French anthropologist harshly criticized the “false
evolutionism,” which manifests as “a great temptation to try to arrange cultures
in the first category in an order representing a succession in time.”79 Instead,
he suggested that all cultures should be seen on equal footing on a temporal
horizon and be set apart in space.
De Martino could not possibly agree with the final consequences of this
type of self-reflection as he feared that it would lead to an abdication of all
the cultural values of the Western world. Many years after de Martino’s death,
scholarship on the French structuralist’s work has confirmed that Lévi-Strauss
himself had an important nostalgic streak. It was particularly Jean-Jacques
Rousseau, who, for Lévi-Strauss, fulfilled this role of “a second strand or current in his thought.”80 In fact, Lévi-Strauss himself acknowledges as much
when he states that “Marx and Freud make me think,” whereas “Rousseau sets
me aflame.”81 The French anthropologist himself was exposed to important—
albeit frequently underestimated—influences from German speaking lands.
More relevantly, perhaps, these German inspirations came to him indirectly
through American anthropology. In fact, before being appointed as maître de
recherche at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in 1948
and being elected to the Collège de France in 1959, Lévi-Strauss spent several
years in the 1940s in exile in the United States, where he not only met Roman
Jakobson at the New School for Social Research in New York, but also the
anthropologist Alfred L. Kroeber. It is through these encounters in New York,
which included visits to Franz Boas’ ethnographic collections—displayed in
the American Museum of Natural History—that Lévi-Strauss got imbued with
a German tradition of culture.
Returning to the concluding remarks of de Martino’s “Promises and
Dangers,” we find clues to just how radically his position differed from that
of his French counterpart. Here, he articulated his conception of the defining
characteristic of the ethnos of Western culture as the idea of a goal or end,
78
79
80
81
Cherchi, Il peso dell’ombra, 47.
Claude Lévi-Strauss, Race and History (Paris: UNESCO, 1952), 16.
Tremlett, Lévi-Strauss on Religion, 23.
Claude Lévi-Strauss and Didier Eribon, Conversations with Claude Lévi-Strauss (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1991), 168.
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a telos. “The initial scandal of the ethnographic encounter,” so de Martino
argued, forces the anthropologist not only to “suspend and put into question”
his own culture, but also allows him “to retrace [its history] with his thought
and to newly found the telos of the West stimulated by the relationship with
the ethnos.” Thus, the “highest promise of a reformed anthropology” lies precisely in this renewed sense of selfhood in light of the scandal of encounter.82
In writing about anthropology, de Martino did not leave his science in the state
of disintegration, rather the deconstruction advocated for by his insistence on
self-reflexivity leads to a renewed energy and courage for construction. Put
differently, relativism was never expressed in purely negative or deconstructive terms but rather in terms of combat and struggle to promote progress. De
Martino’s critical ethnocentrism, to use the words of Silvia Mancini, is premised on a “strong cognitive model.”83 Consider, for instance, the following
passage from the same article, where we read:
Certainly, a science of the ethnos understood in this way required necessarily a series of choices and compromises (compromissioni) [that stand]
in radical opposition to the ideal of science as absolute neutrality. It
required that we take sides (prendere partito). […] In reality, the anthropologist that claims to approach the ethnos by excluding—for “scientific professionalism” and for “love for objectivity”—any methodic and
explicit verification of the values of Western civilization, makes himself
unconsciously into a prisoner […] of all of his inherent folklore of political, religious, and philosophical clashes (cozzanti). […] The truth is that,
in general, science is not of the stateless (apolidi) and that, in particular,
the science of the ethnos establishes itself as the deliberate putting into
question (messa in causa) of one’s own Western citizenship under the
stimulus of the initial scandal of the ethnographic encounter.84
The political undertones of de Martino’s critique of “stateless-ness” is hardly a
coincidence. In fact, his decisive and courageous science was, since his youth,
always accompanied by a call to political activism. In his typically dialectical
style, he recognized that our belonging to a state is both conservatively limiting
and innovatively freeing at the same time. Being loyal to our homeland means
that we can never encounter the other free of our own presuppositions, on the
one hand, and that every political action can be revolutionary in transforming
82
83
84
De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” 116.
Mancini, “Postface,” 452.
De Martino, “Promesse e minacce dell’etnologia,” 91.
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our own state, on the other. In response to cultural-discursive abdications of
rootedness, de Martino suggested that we embrace a radical “loyalty” ( fedeltà)
to our “own cultural world” (proprio mondo culturale) in light of the steady rise
of interest in cultural and religious alterities. De Martino’s response to the crisis, thus, was as clear in the 1950s and 60s as it was decades earlier during his
time as a student at the University of Naples: “I would not say that Europe can
not abandon reason and embrace systems of choices that are foreign to its
telos, but I say that it certainly should not. It should not do so because the cultural choices are not arbitrary, exchangeable at will, but form coherence and
loyalty that also entail ultimate sacrifices.”85
De Martino’s awareness of relativism as a danger to his discipline grew
stronger over time, with his judgment becoming more radical as the years
passed. In The End of the World, de Martino responded to the nostalgia for
alterity by introducing the idea of a “cultural homeland” (patria culturale). It
is only through the appaesamento—a term that can be translated as “assimilation,” “territorialisation” or “appropriation”—within one’s own cultural horizon that humanity can function. In emphasizing the importance of one’s own
homeland, de Martino’s position must be distinguished not only from that of
Lévi-Strauss, but also from that of the cultural-discursive paradigm. In “Thick
Description: Toward and Interpretive Theory of Culture,” Geertz wrote that
“cultural analysis is (or should be), guessing at meaning, assessing the guesses,
and drawing explanatory conclusions from the better guesses, not discovering
the Continent of Meaning and mapping out its bodiless landscape.”86 If Geertz
concluded his relativist manifesto by sarcastically stating that “if we wanted
home truths, we should have stayed at home,”87 de Martino invited anthropologists to do just that: “European civilization is an asset to defend, increase
(accrescere), and expand (dilatare).”88 In Magic and Civilization, de Martino
discussed the positive aspects of one of the most ethnocentric elements of
Western culture, namely the “anti-magical polemic.”
[…] in the West, the concept of magic also has weight as a protective
measure against this different sickness, which is the radical unfaithfulness (infedeltà) to the anti-magical polemic of our civilization; with the
abdication in front of the charismas of magic as consequence. Every
85
86
87
88
De Martino, 106–7.
Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward and Interpretive Theory of Culture,” 20.
Clifford Geertz, “Distinguished Lecture: Anti Anti-Relativism,” American Anthropologist
86, no. 2 (1984): 276.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 281.
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civilization chooses its own “loyalty” ( fedeltà) and ours has chosen the
loyalty to reason and history. In virtue of this choice, when the reason
we possess appears too narrow in front of new problems of life and history, we are compelled to consciously choose a broader and more human
reason. We should never disavow the type of loyalty in which we are
culturally and historically inserted. Our civilization has chosen loyalty
to reason and history: not in the dogmatic sense of a choice which took
place once and for all in a given era, but in the sense of a choice, which
is always called into questioned anew, tried and re-tried, modified and
corrected, or even reinterpreted in new light as the particular historical
situations gradually change.89
This dialectical conception of loyalty as something that is not a dogmatic
choice that has been taken once and for all, but rather a continuous commitment to choose in light of changing circumstances ultimately culminates in
the “ethos of transcendence,” which de Martino developed in the final years
and months of his life.
89
De Martino, Magia e civiltà, 9–10.
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chapter 7
The Ethos of Transcendence (1965–1977): Decision
and the Moral Imperative as Anticipatory Response
to Postmodernism
1
The Philosophical Afterlife of The End of the World: Enzo Paci’s
Existentialist Historicism and the Moral Imperative Grounded
in the Contemporaneity of History
Since de Martino passed away in 1965, after a short but serious illness, he was
never able to complete his ambitious project about the apocalypse that he
envisioned since the beginning of the 1960s. Instead, his results were collected
in the form of references, notes, and outlines, before being published by Angelo
Brelich, his colleague at the University of Rome, and Clara Gallini, one of his
last collaborators at the University of Cagliari. Initially, the posthumous publication of de Martino’s notes in the form of The End of the World in 1977 gave rise
to primarily critical voices that not only questioned the radical rupture with
the Southern Period, but also reprimanded him for a lack of clarity during his
final years. The best example of this tendency is Vittorio Lanternari’s “Between
Historicism and Ontology” (1978), in which he charged de Martino’s final work
of being marked by “ambiguities and internal contradictions.”1 Giovanni Jervis
(1933–2009), one of the most important Italian psychiatrists and close associate during these last years, likewise noted that the extensive research on
desks and in texts, rather than on the ground, were detrimental to his thinking due to the lack “of everyday cases, of forms of life, of the world of life, of
human concreteness.”2
More recently, however, the “crude (incondite) and medleyed (zibaldoniche)”3
pages of de Martino’s “fascinating laboratory of research”4 have slowly but
1 Vittorio Lanternari, “Ernesto de Martino fra storicismo e ontologismo,” Studi storici 19, no. 1
(1978): 191.
2 A personal email by Jervis is cited by his student. Massimo Marraffa, “Introduzione. Giovanni
Jervis: la ricerca della concretezza,” in Contro il sentito dire: psicoanalisi, psichiatria e politica,
by Giovanni Jervis, ed. Massimo Marraffa (Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2014), XXXIV.
3 Giuseppe Galasso, “Alcuni percorsi dello storicismo italiano del secolo XX,” in I percorsi dello
storicismo italiano nel secondo Novecento, ed. Maurizio Martirano and Edoardo Massimilla
(Napoli: Liguori, 2002), 298.
4 Marcello Massenzio, “Senso della storia e domesticità del mondo,” in Ernesto De Martino:
un’etnopsichiatria della crisi e del riscatto, ed. Roberto Beneduce, Simona Taliani, and
Giordana Charuty (Milano: Il saggiatore, 2015), 39.
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_009
This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the CC BY-NC-NDFlavio
4.0 license.
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steadily been recovered as a philosophical treasure trove with a broader scope
than he himself would have imagined.5 One of the most relevant aspects of
The End of the World, which has since been republished in Italian (2002), and
reedited in an entirely new version in French (2016),6 is de Martino’s intuition
that postmodernism can be seen as a portent of the apocalypse of Western
civilization. Specifically, his final reflections warn that the cultural-discursive
paradigm is nothing less than “a mask for a limitless abdication,”7 which brings
with it the risk of an “apocalypse without eschaton.” This “postmodern” sense
of an ending, according to de Martino was the apocalypse “without eschaton”
because it is a crisis that no longer gives way to a palingenetic opening towards
a new future but leads instead to inevitable collapse, destruction, and destabilization. In this sense, it can be regarded as the most radical consequence
of the modernization, secularization, and scientification that unfolded over
the previous centuries. Whereas earlier civilizations operated along the lines
of mythical and ritual conceptions of time, marked by cyclical temporality
according to which the end of the world inaugurated a new beginning, in the
Western world of the twentieth century a new type of apocalypse emerged
on the horizon. De Martino was profoundly aware of both the immeasurable
value and the tremendous risk involved in the Western telos. A culture that is
premised on autonomous human actions and choices without metahistorical
narratives knows no limits while simultaneously always being exposed to the
possibility of its ending. In order to clarify what can be described as productive
and unproductive forms of the apocalypse, de Martino introduces a distinction between the end of “the world,” and the end of “a world.”
There is nothing pathological about the end of “a” world. On the contrary,
it is a wholesome experience connected to the historicity of the human
condition. The world of childhood ends and that of adolescence starts;
the world of adolescence ends and that of maturity starts; the world of
maturity ends and that of old age starts. With the nuptials, in our society,
the newlyweds usually abandon their families and start a new life that
5 Galasso, Croce, Gramsci e altri storici; Andrea Binazzi, “Ernesto de Martino,” Belfagor 6 (1969):
678–93; Cases, “Introduzione.” However, it is noteworthy that the great historians of Italian
philosophy have failed to mention the work of de Martino. Eugenio Garin, Cronache di
filosofia italiana (Bari: Laterza, 1966); Antonio Santucci, Esistenzialismo e filosofia italiana
(Bologna: Il mulino, 1967).
6 Ernesto De Martino, La fin du monde: essai sur les apocalypses culturelles, ed. Giordana
Charuty, Daniel Fabre, and Marcello Massenzio (Paris: EHESS, 2016). This impression of de
Martino as a philosopher has further been reinforced by Roberto Pàstina’s publication of de
Martino’s most sophisticated notes in this realm, which appeared as Philosophical Writings in
2005. Ernesto De Martino, Scritti filosofici, ed. Roberto Pàstina (Bologna: Il mulino, 2005).
7 De Martino, La fine del mondo, 281.
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involves the birth of a new world. It is a mixed feeling of tenderness and
melancholy that clouds the happiness during the celebration of the new
bond and especially at the moment of the definitive detachment. When
the people we loved, who were lively and vital parts of our world, are
taken from us by death, […] it seems not only that they vanish with their
worlds, but also with ours. Sometimes, the strain is enormous to overcome the crisis of grief and to slowly start up again a new world without
them. [In other instances], an age of freedom ends and a period of servitude starts. As much as the loss of the world, in which we were free, may
be intolerable and we seek out death, the crisis is overcome (superata)
as long as only a little margin of recovery (ripresa) remains—such as the
little imperceptible margin that all those who were able to survive the
German extermination camps could preserve. Thus, the end of “a” world
is part of the order of human cultural history. It is the end of “the” world,
inasmuch as the actual experience of the ending of any possible world,
which constitutes the radical risk.8
In the final years of his life, as de Martino grappled with the apocalypse without eschaton, he sought solutions by growing his philosophy into new directions. He not only continued to draw on Croce’s historicism, but also on the
existentialist philosophy of Enzo Paci (1911–1976).9 The two thinkers knew
each other well and Paci wrote a review of de Martino’s The World of Magic
already shortly after its publication in 1948; inserting it within the fold of existentialist thinking.10 Later, they formed part of the core writers involved in
the early years of Alberto Mondadori’s Il Saggiatore publishing house, before
Paci came to be “de Martino’s most important interlocutor” during the 1960s.11
Unsurprisingly, when de Martino died in 1965, the philosopher was amongst
the first voices of commemoration to be heard on the radio.12 Just how deep de
Martino’s appreciation for existentialist thought had grown by that time is also
8
9
10
11
12
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 630.
Sasso, Ernesto de Martino fra religione e filosofia, 363. The most abundant reflections on
Paci are to be found throughout de Martino’s Philosophical Writings, but there are also
some references in The End of the World. De Martino, La fine del mondo, 444, 642ff.
Enzo Paci, Il nulla e il problema dell’uomo (Torino: Taylor, 1950).
Roberto Pàstina, “Introduzione,” in Scritti filosofici, ed. Roberto Pàstina (Bologna: Il
mulino, 2005), VIII.
The transmission took place in 1965, shortly after de Martino’s death. Enzo Paci was
the moderator and Carlo Levi, Diego Carpitella, and Giovanni Jervis the commentators.
It has recently been published: Enzo Paci et al., “Dibattito su Emesto de Martino,” in
Panorami e spedizioni. Le trasmissioni radiofoniche del 1953–54, by Ernesto De Martino, ed.
Luigi M. Lombardi Satriani and Letizia Bindi (Torino: Bollati Boringhieri, 2002), 131–73.
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demonstrated by Vittoria de Palma’s emotional account of her partner’s passing on the 6th of May, 1965 at the San Camillo hospital in Rome. There, so she
tells us, Ernesto asked for the journal Aut Aut on his deathbed, unable to read,
he lamented the lack of light in the hospital room shortly before expiring.13 Aut
Aut, invoking the existential question of “either/or,” is the most famous Italian
journal dedicated to existentialist philosophy and was founded by none other
than Enzo Paci in 1951.
As for Paci, he was another one of those thinkers, who desired to integrate new philosophical influences—in his particular case existentialist
philosophy—with the historicist thinking of Benedetto Croce.14 Of course,
the relationship between these giants of Italian philosophy was anything but
harmonious. As Roberts puts it, existentialists like Paci criticized Croce for
neglecting individual subjectivity in favor of a positive and optimistic “faith
in the overarching rationality of history.”15 By contrast, Croce belittled the
existentialists for “dwelling on anxiety,” arguing that it leads to “morbid selfpreoccupation as opposed to […] responsible, history-making action.”16 This
being said, Croce was not immune to crisis and may not have been as serene
of a thinker as many commentators have made him out to be. Consider, for
instance, The History of Europe (1932), in which he explicitly acknowledged the
radical rupture brought about by modernity as it moved away from discerning
“life as idyllic […] and hedonistic” to embrace it in its “dramatic, […] active, and
creative” dimensions.17 In this context, we could again draw on the trope of the
earthquake in order to point to deeper layers of affinity between existentialists
and Croce. Rizi and Moss, for example, have sensitively argued that the hours
buried under the rubble, hearing the pleading cries of his dying father, only to
be rescued with severe injuries and to find out that he was orphaned at the age
of seventeen, left a lasting mark on Croce’s thinking.18 After emerging out of
the ruins of the hotel in Casamìcciola, where he was spending his family summer vacation, Benedetto surfaced as an individual marked by personal crisis,
consistent fascination with death, and depressive streaks.
13
14
15
16
17
18
De Martino, Vita di Gennaro Esposito, Napoletano, 29.
Amedeo Vigorelli, L’esistenzialismo Positivo Di Enzo Paci : Una Biografia Intellettuale (1929–
1950) (Milano: F. Angeli, 1987).
Roberts, Historicism and Fascism in Modern Italy, 74–76.
Roberts, Nothing but History, 100.
Croce, Storia d’Europa nel secolo decimonono, 20.
Myra E. Moss, Benedetto Croce Reconsidered: Truth and Error in Theories of Art, Literature,
and History (Hanover: University Press of New England, 1987), 6–7; Fabio Fernando Rizi,
Benedetto Croce and Italian Fascism (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003), 13–14.
Croce’s own account of the events are to be found in Benedetto Croce, Contributo alla
critica di me stesso (Napoli: Riccardo Ricciardi, 1918).
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From a socio-cultural perspective, as well, existentialism gradually became
a force to be reckoned with. While existentialist thinkers initially started out
marginalized on the edge of a philosophical spectrum, dominated by the towering figure of anti-fascist thought, they gained momentum after the Second
Word War.19 Paci was particularly popular because he succeeded at generating a dialogue between two opposed positions. On the one hand, he encouraged his readers to break out of the idealism of Croce by embracing some of
the sensibilities of existentialism, a tradition that prides itself of courageously
“looking into the face of the irrational, passion and hunger, the dangerous,
the precarious, the uncertain, the bad and horror, the nothing and death.”20
On the other hand, Paci drew on Croce to critique the German existentialism of
the likes of Martin Heidegger for its nihilistic orientation. He explicitly invited
his students to follow a Crocean spirit in order to “liberally found one’s own
finiteness and actualize one’s own essence,” for man “is himself to the extent
that he is faithful to himself: his existing (esistere) is his deciding (decidersi).”21
De Martino was deeply inspired by Paci’s approach to Crocean philosophy.
For him too, Croce was a “solid bastion,”22 which allowed him to “conquer new
intellectual territories,”23 and to “bring the manifold that is otherwise hard to
manage back to a unity, to reduce a plurality of languages into a discursive
unity.”24 In the notes to The End of the World, de Martino acknowledged that
it was “necessary to return to the old Croce, discerning the positive from the
negative to reinterpret the theme of the distinction of that which is the most
vital and true that it contains.”
Croce has taught us that the problem of being is the problem of the
distinct operative powers and that outside of this distinction there was
nothing else but disintegration. […] After Croce, it was without a doubt
necessary to descend once again into the morass of disintegration.
However, not to be swallowed up by it to glorify its threatening waters,
but to pull ourselves out from it and to give back new force to a theme
19
20
21
22
23
24
Rocco Rubini, The Other Renaissance: Italian Humanism between Hegel and Heidegger
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2015), 147–57; Romolo Runcini, “I cavalieri della
paura,” Passato e presente. Rivista di storia contemporanea 16/17 (1960): 2182–83.
Enzo Paci, Esistenzialismo e storicismo (Milano: Mondadori, 1950), 33.
Paci, Il nulla e il problema dell’uomo, 33.
Mancini, “Postface,” 477–78.
Carlo Ginzburg, “Genèses de La fin du monde de de Martino,” Gradhiva, no. 23 (2016): 201.
Carla Pasquinelli, “Quel nomade di de Martino,” La ricerca folklorica, no. 13 (April 1, 1986):
57–58.
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that should not be lost: Being and valorization, existence and transcendence, crisis of the beyond and risk of the nothing, this is the theme.25
One of the most important impulses for de Martino’s final contribution, a moralistic principle of decision-taking that he defined as the “ethos of transcendence,” likely came from Croce’s idea of the contemporaneity of history. For
the idealist philosopher, already in History: Its Theory and Practice (1917), the
contemporaneity of history manifested in an “interest in life,” for the “development of culture. Only an interest of the present life,” so Croce argued, “can
make us investigate a past fact.”26 Demonstrating his relentless fidelity to this
maxim, de Martino also repeatedly referenced Croce’s History As the Story of
Liberty (1938), arguing that every historical inquiry is always an exploration of
the historical situation for better understanding the present moment.27
From Croce, de Martino adopted the principle of the contemporaneity of
history, but also learned about the continued need to engage in the drama
of human history through commitment, decision, and action. In the abovementioned book, published shortly before the outbreak of WWII, Croce
discussed moral or ethical will at length. Describing it as a category that comprised the volition of a universal goal, he argued that it expresses itself in political liberty. As Myra Moss notes, “with his description of ethical will, Croce’s
inventory of the four fundamental activities of consciousness, their interrelations and representations became complete.” Even though “intuitions […]
remained autonomous and pure concepts or categories included them in the
concrete universality of their conceptual representations,” Croce also insisted
that “ethical volition, in turn, stimulates new intuitions, which, however, do
not explicitly include the former in their expressions.”28 This being said, for
the optimistic historicism of Croce, it was vital that the circle could be conceived as an ever-upward moving spiral. It is here that the moral will received
its distinctive importance as it was to ensure that humans lived in ever greater
degrees of political liberty. Liberty, so Moss summarizes, “had to be recognized,
fought for, and won.”29 Croce argued that “moral activity” (attività morale) was
not just one category amongst many others, but the “struggle against evil” (la
25
26
27
28
29
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 697–98.
Benedetto Croce, Teoria e storia della storiografia (Bari: Laterza, 1917), 14.
De Martino, Sud e Magia, 183; De Martino, La terra del rimorso, 17.
Myra E. Moss, “Benedetto Croce, Historian-Philosopher: Is History Autobiography?,”
Bollettino Filosofico 28 (2013): 256.
Moss, 256.
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lotta contro il male), whose task it is to oppose the “fragmentation of the spiritual unity” ( fragmentatione dell’unità spirituale).30
In the last ten years of his life, so Silvia Mancini noted, de Martino’s ontological conception of humanity, which dominated his earlier writings like The
World of Magic, was replaced with an ethical, formal, and spiritual model of
thinking.31 The overwhelming presence of terms such as “decision” (decisione),
“transcendence” (trascendimento), “courage” (corraggio), or “ethos” (ethos)
all point to this moralistic turn in de Martino’s mature thought. As Giuseppe
Galasso put it, despite the fact that “the existentialist thematic seems to
assume […] a greater resonance and that the danger of the existential dissolution seems to be amplified in terms of a collective drama,” it would be an
error to understand him as an “intellectual of crisis.”32 De Martino, in fact, was
answering what Roberts called Croce’s “call to action, a charge of responsibility,” as the “ever ‘richer’ evils” that “come to be as the world grows,” provoke
consistently a “new ethical response.”33
2
Impossible Nostalgia and the Anticipatory Analysis of the
Discursive Turn
As I have argued in chapter 5, the path that led our civilization along the socalled “cultural turn” must be understood as a less curvy road than commonly
assumed as there exists a clear continuity between cultural relativism and the
earlier insider-phenomenological approach. Of course, it would be wrong to
speak of a complete identity of the Geertzian cultural-discursive paradigm and
the German or Boasian conception of culture. For instance, it is well known
that while the early science of hermeneutics represented an apologetic attempt
at interpreting biblical texts,34 Geertzian interpretative anthropology moved
beyond these theological origins. This type of thinking “no longer presupposes
explicitly religious metaphors and concerns in its disquisitions.”35 Instead, so
30
31
32
33
34
35
Benedetto Croce, La storia come pensiero e come azione (Bari: Laterza, 1938), 50–52.
Mancini, “Postface,” 536–42. A similar observation is to be found in Gambardella who calls
him a “philosopher of ethics.” Fabiana Gambardella, “Book Review: Ernesto de Martino.
La fine del mondo.,” Scienza e Filosofia, no. 8 (2012): 298.
Galasso, Croce, Gramsci e altri storici, 310.
Roberts, Historicism and Fascism in Modern Italy, 204.
Burkhard Gladigow, “Friedrich Schleiermarcher (1768–1834),” in Klassiker der Religionswissenschaft: von Friedrich Schleiermacher bis Mircea Eliade, ed. Axel Michaels (München:
Beck, 1997), 17–28.
Lawson and McCauley, “Crisis of Conscience, Riddle of Identity,” 213.
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it has been argued, “it has provided historians of religions with a new guiding
metaphor, namely, ‘The Text.’”36 Nonetheless, it must be noted that the centrality of the term “Text,” intentionally capitalized in the account of Lawson
and McCauley, points to an important parallel between the object of study
of the insider-phenomenological and the cultural-discursive scholars. Indeed,
amongst latter, the text is oftentimes imbued with an almost religious dimension that strongly resembles the fascination with religious experience of the
former current. Geertz, for example, not only identified culture with texts to
be read, but also emphasized the essentially religious nature of culture. While
religion was admittedly only one part of his cultural system, Geertz “took a
keen interest in religion.”37 Every time he was setting out for his ethnographic
explorations—whether this be in Indonesia or in Morocco—Geertz identified
religious symbols and beliefs as the marking trait of his studies of their cultures. Unsurprisingly, the books resulting from these ethnographic encounters
carry such titles as The Religion of Java (1960) or Islam Observed (1968).
Furthermore, it is hardly a coincidence that Geertz offered one of his most
concise definitions of culture in an essay entitled “Religion as a Cultural
System.” It is here that he spoke of culture as a “pattern of meanings embodied
in symbols, a system of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms by
means of which men communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge
about and attitudes toward life.”38 Masuzawa, commenting on this very passage, has noted that one of Geertz’s “implicit but obvious assumption here is
that the term ‘culture,’ understood as a system of meaning, is more or less interchangeable with ‘a tradition,’ ‘a religious tradition,’ or simply, ‘a religion.’”39
Similarly, Marc Augé has pointed to the fact that such a conception of culture has much in common with the Romantic-nostalgic versions explored in
earlier chapters of this study, as it seems to be “postulating a radical difference between societies characterized by ‘meaning,’ ‘code,’ ‘territoriality,’ and
exchange, on the one hand, and societies (such as our own) of abstraction,
of ‘axiomatics,’ of incommunicability, and accumulation, on the other.”40 The
implicit nexus between culture, religion, and language has also been pointed
out by Andrei Znamenski, who noted that amongst American anthropologists, the German model of autonomous cultures led to a consistent focus on
36
37
38
39
40
Lawson and McCauley, 213.
Pals, Eight Theories of Religion, 341.
Geertz, “Religion As a Cultural System,” 89.
Tomoko Masuzawa, “Culture,” in Critical Terms for Religious Studies, ed. Mark C. Taylor
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 80.
Marc Augé, The Anthropological Circle: Symbol, Function, History, trans. Martin Thom
(New York: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 83.
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“language and spirituality or, in other words, on the factors that made cultures
distinct.”41 Finally, Talal Asad also noted that Geertz’s program for religion and
culture brought with it the danger of opening up a “logical space for defining
the essence of religion,” by speaking of “two separate levels.”42
Upon final analysis, the creation of this extrinsic, stable, and independent
realm of symbols allowed thinkers of the discursive turn to find “support for
their convictions about the immunity of features of religious experience.”43
The turn to “discourse” and “text” brings with it a connotation that resembles
strongly that of the “holy” and the “numinous,” which we encountered in the
insider-phenomenological approach. Like the realm of the sui generis sacred,
the realm of the text is cut off from socio-political reality, autonomous, privileged over the historical world, and regarded to be the ultimate source of
meaning. The radical alterity, which the insider-phenomenological approach
located in cultures, religions, states of consciousness, and so forth, appears
to have been transported into the domain of the text within the culturaldiscursive paradigm.
Now, if the cultural-discursive paradigm’s nostalgia for alterity is ultimately
analogous to that of thinkers like Otto or Eliade, then why does de Martino
argue that it inaugurates a radically new type of ending, an apocalypse without
eschaton? The answer is simple: The irredeemable end of the world is marked
by a combination of two traits, in which the second one is a postmodern invention whose outlines were only adumbrated by the time of de Martino’s death.
On the one hand, the aforementioned persistent nostalgia for alterity, which
can be regarded as a constant throughout much of the twentieth century; on
the other hand, a profound doubt in the very possibility of such a true encounter with this alterity.
This doubt in the possibility of encountering alterity is primarily a result of
the linguistic turn, which organically grew in parallel with the preoccupation
41
42
43
Znamenski, The Beauty of the Primitive, 60. Similar comments have been made by Georg
Iggers, who, in his analysis of the famous essay on “The Balinese Cockfight,” demonstrated
that Geertz not only saw culture as a semiotic system but that this system is also remarkably “integrated and stable, forming a whole.” Iggers reminds his readers that “Geertz does
not see the culture within the framework of social processes taking place in Balinese society; nor does he consider social divisions and social conflicts.” Iggers, Historiography in the
Twentieth Century, 125.
Talal Asad, “The Construction of Religion as an Anthropological Category,” in Genealogies
of Religion: Discipline and Reasons of Power in Christianity and Islam, by Talal Asad
(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993), 47.
Lawson and McCauley, “Crisis of Conscience, Riddle of Identity,” 213.
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with culture.44 Geertz’s landmark study, The Interpretation of Culture, consists
of essays written primarily in the 1960s and proposes not only a relativistic
conception of cultures, but also a symbolic approach, which might be best
articulated in the famous definition of culture as “webs of significance [man]
himself has spun.”45 In his theoretically most revolutionary work, Geertz argued
that “the culture of people is an ensemble of texts,” which should be studied
by means of a semiotic and interpretative approach.46 This method, which
he called “thick description,” would “aid us in gaining access to the conceptual world in which our subjects live so that we can, in some extended sense
of the term, converse with them.”47 As Hinrich Seeba has recently argued,
Geertz’s textualization of culture is therefore also linked to more radical forms
of “fictional symbolizations of reality,” which came to prominence in the literary turn.48
In discussing the linguistic turn, it is not only commonplace to mention
continental influences like Michel Foucault49 and Mikhail Bakhtin,50 but also
another American book that belongs to its canon, namely Hayden White’s
Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in Nineteenth-Century Europe (1973).
White’s work, like Geertz’s Interpretation of Cultures, published in 1973, demonstrates how the cultural-discursive paradigm had almost universal appeal
in the humanities. In fact, unlike Geertz, Said, Fabian, or the Subaltern Studies
Group, White was a historian by profession. White made two arguments to
explain why language is relevant to the humanities. First, he believed that science does not have a direct and unmediated access to objective reality. Instead,
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
Gabrielle M. Spiegel, ed., Practicing History: New Directions in Historical Writing after the
Linguistic Turn (London: Routledge, 2005).
Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward and Interpretive Theory of Culture,” 5.
Clifford Geertz, “Deep Play: Notes on the Balinese Cockfight,” in The Interpretation of
Cultures: Selected Essays (New York: Basic Books, 1973), 452.
Geertz, “Thick Description: Toward and Interpretive Theory of Culture,” 24.
Hinrich C. Seeba, “New Historicism und Kulturanthropologie: Ansätze eines deutschamerikanischen Dialogs,” in Historismus am Ende des 20. Jahrhunderts: eine internationale
Diskussion, ed. Gunter Scholtz (Berlin: Akademie-Verlag, 1997), 54.
Foucault is famous for having called attention to knowledge as power, to systems of domination and resistance, and to the role played by discourse. Michel Foucault, Les mots et les
choses: une archéologie des sciences humaines (Paris: Gallimard, 1966); Michel Foucault,
L’archéologie du savoir (Paris: Gallimard, 1969); Michel Foucault, Surveiller et punir (Paris:
Gallimard, 1975).
Bakhtin is famous for inspiring literary readings of ethnography as a multivocal conversation and dialogue. Mikhail M. Bakhtin, Rabelais and His World, trans. Helene Iswolsky
(Cambridge: MIT Press, 1965); Mikhail M. Bakhtin, The Dialogic Imagination: Four Essays,
ed. Michael Holquist and Vadim Liapunov, trans. Vadim Liapunov and Kenneth Brostrom
(Austin: University of Texas Press, 1981).
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our conception of the world is always embedded within structures of language
that shape reality. As a consequence, so one proponent of this approach put
it, “all the human sciences” become “interpretive by [their] very nature.”51
Second, since language is structuring our interaction with reality, the neutrality of the researcher is just as illusory as the objectivity of reality. This brings us
to the most radical form of thinking induced by the linguistic turn, namely the
blurring of boundaries between science and literature, history and poetry, reality and fiction. These ideas are not only prominent in White’s writings but also
find expressions in the works of other French and American literary theorists
during the 1960s and 70s, such as Roland Barthes,52 Paul de Man, Paul Veyne,53
Michel de Certeau,54 and Jacques Derrida. The latter’s famous axiom, which
states that “there is nothing outside of the text” (“il n’y a pas de hors texte”)
might just be the most concise way to sum up the literary turn’s convictions.55
De Martino saw the first indications of this type of thinking already during the final years of his life. He invoked the term “language” (linguaggio) to
warn that communication can become impossible because it is premised on
an “encoded language (linguaggio cifrato) of which we have lost the key.”56 In
other passages contained in his posthumously published work, de Martino
explicitly cautioned that language can incite the collapse of the world and our
relationship to it:
The apocalypse of the crisis is born from the progressive limiting of the
horizons of the mundane workable (operabile) and provides testimony of
a fall, a collapse, an estrangement (estraniazione), a chaoticization (caoticizzazione), an annihilation, or even an explosion of the real world. It is
also a isolating (isolarsi), a closing (chiudersi), an intimizing (intimizzarsi)
of the self. The language (linguaggio), in the broadest sense of an acoustic
or visual sign of the relationship “I-world,” tends to follow this collapse.
Actually, language becomes itself collapsing (crollante) with the terminal perspective of silence and incommunicability (incomunicabilità)
51
52
53
54
55
56
Robert Darnton, “Preface to the Revised Edition of The Great Cat Massacre,” in The Great
Cat Massacre: And Other Episodes in French Cultural History, by Robert Darnton (1984;
repr., New York: Basic Books, 2009), xvii.
Roland Barthes, “Le Discours de l’histoire,” Information (International Social Science
Council) 6, no. 4 (August 1, 1967): 63–75.
Paul Veyne, Comment on écrit l’histoire (Paris: Seuil, 1971).
Michel de Certeau, L’écriture de l’histoire (Paris: Gallimard, 1975).
Jacques Derrida, Of Grammatology (1967; repr., Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University
Press, 1976), 158.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 73.
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and no longer an intersubjective invocation. The sickness of the objects,
the absurd consciousness, the lack of sense in the world, nausea, and so
forth.57
Because this new crisis was born in a society that had full awareness of its own
ability and responsibility, its autonomy and independence, its freedom and
potential, it was not only an apocalypse without eschaton but also a crisis that
was largely self-destructive (autodistruttiva). De Martino found evidence for
this type of self-sabotaging throughout twentieth-century culture and dedicated his final years to study the sense of an ending in various contexts of his
own world.
The “crisis” in the figurative arts, music, poetry, philosophy, and the
ethical-political life of the West is a crisis to the extent that the rupture
with a theological plan of history and with the sense which derived
from it—the plan of providence, the plan of evolution, the dialectic plan of the idea—becomes no longer a stimulus for a new effort of
descent into chaos and of anabasis towards order, but a fall into the hells
without return.58
In order to bridge this chapter’s anachronistic chasm, the inevitable gap
between de Martino’s analysis of the apocalypse in the early 1960s and the
rise of postmodernism in the decades that follow, it might be useful to recall
a distinction introduced by Jonathan Boyarin, a contemporary scholar of
Jewish thought. Boyarin describes a strikingly similar difference between “the
‘historical’ ancient apocalypses,” which “fundamentally include an aspect of
judgment leading to reward and punishment,” on the one hand, and an “apocalypse without apocalypse,” on the other. More pertinently, Boyarin follows de
Martino by associating this second type of crisis with “the postmodern turn,”
by describing it as “the ultimate evacuation of any hope in meaning.”59 Even
though de Martino does not yet use the term postmodern, his description of
the apocalypse without eschaton reads strikingly similar. Let us look at another
example from his posthumously published notes:
57
58
59
De Martino, 335.
De Martino, 471.
Jonathan Boyarin, “At Last, All the Goyim,” in Postmodern Apocalypse: Theory and Cultural
Practice at the End, ed. Richard Dellamora (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania
Press, 1995), 43.
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In the religious life of humanity, the topic of the end of the world
appears in various eschatological contexts, that is to say as a periodic
cosmic palingenesis or as definitive redemption (riscatto) of the inherent evils of mundane existence. […] In contrast to this religious reshaping (riplasmazione), the present cultural circumstance experiences the
theme of the end outside of every religious horizon of salvation; as naked
and desperate catastrophe of the mundane, the domestic, the territorialized (appaesato), the meaningful (significante), and the workable (operabile). [It does so] with a diabolic flavor for describing the dismantling
(disfarsi) of that which is set up (configurato), the de-territorialization
(spaesarsi) of the territorialized (appaesato), the loss of meaning of the
meaningful (significante), the inoperability (inoperabilità) of the workable (operabile).60
As is well known, the literary turn received its most dominant expression in
post-structuralist theory, which can be interpreted as a direct response to the
binary oppositions that dominated the first half of the twentieth century.
Indeed, the French theory of thinkers like Michel Foucault, Jacques Derrida,
Jean-François Lyotard, Jean Baudrillard, or Gilles Deleuze emphasized aspects
of play, hybridity, and ambiguity that have found no place in understandings of
reality of the early twentieth century. Amongst the historians of religion, it was
Russell T. McCutcheon, who tried to define postmodernism and its relationship to language in similar terms:
Although one would be hard-pressed to offer one definitive definition
of postmodernism, we can at least suggest that it is a way of looking at
the world which emphasizes playfulness and differences over rules and
sameness; it stresses the metaphoric and slippery nature of language over
the modernist, objective, factual understandings of how communication
proceeds; it addresses the manner in which meaning is not something
possessed by a word, an action, or an object as much as it is the product
of a series of relations which comprise the word or the object.61
Equipped with this understanding of the literary turn that marked postmodern
thought, it is now possible to offer a more definitive rationale for de Martino’s
fears of the end. While both paradigms are marked by fragmentation and separation, the proponents of the insider-phenomenological approach remain
60
61
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 468.
McCutcheon, The Insider/Outsider Problem in the Study of Religion, 9.
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convinced that they will find some sort of unity and an overarching model for
reality, whereas the adherents of the cultural-discursive model have given up
that belief and simply choose to embrace the chaos.62 To say it in the words of
Wolfgang Kämmerer, “while back then the relativization generally provoked
worries and caused a loss of orientation (Orientierungslosigkeit) even amongst
the explicit supporters of historical thinking, today many advocates of postmodernity downright celebrate relativization.”63 Evidence for this impossibility of ever fulfilling one’s nostalgia and longing can also be found in later
manifestations of the cultural-discursive paradigm, such as the Writing Culture
Movement. Consider, for example, the following lines from the Prologue of
Clifford’s Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century (1997).
These essays are written under the sign of ambivalence, a permanently
fraught hope. They discover, over and over, that the good news and the
bad news presuppose each other. It is impossible to think of transnational possibilities without recognizing the violent disruptions that
attend ‘modernization,’ with its expanding markets, armies, technologies, and media. Whatever improvements or alternatives may emerge do
so against this grim backdrop. Moreover, unlike Marx, who saw that the
possible good of socialism depended historically on the necessary evil of
capitalism, I see no future resolution to the tension—no revolution or
dialectical negation of the negation.64
De Martino, passing away more than three decades before these words were
written, anticipated the cognitive impossibility inherent in the culturaldiscursive paradigm with remarkable prescience. For him, the threat of the
apocalypse was the result of a failure of communication, a logical consequence of “incommunicability” (incomunicabilità). As Carlo Ginzburg has
recently noted, for de Martino, “the collapse of the world echoes the collapse
of language.”65 Similarly, Paolo Virno, who apprises de Martino as “one of the
few original philosophers twentieth-century Italy,”66 concluded that his con-
62
63
64
65
66
Harvey, The Condition of Postmodernity, 44.
Kämmerer, Friedrich Meinecke und das Problem des Historismus, 300.
James Clifford, Routes: Travel and Translation in the Late Twentieth Century (Cambridge:
Harvard University Press, 1997), 10.
Ginzburg, “Genèses de La fin du monde de de Martino,” 207.
Paolo Virno, “Natural-Historical Diagrams: The ‘new Global’ Movement and the Biological
Invariant,” in The Italian Difference: Between Nihilism and Biopolitics, ed. Lorenzo Chiesa
and Alberto Toscano (Melbourne: Re.press, 2009), 140.
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ception of the apocalypse was ultimately linguistic and semantic in nature as
one of its primary symptoms is “a progressive indetermination of speech.”67
If de Martino was critical of the cultural turn, denouncing its abdication
of our cultural homeland for a cultural alterity, he was much more severe in
his condemnation of the linguistic turn. In order to actualize de Martino’s distinctive reading of these two turns, it might be useful to recall the typology of
modern nostalgia introduced by Svetlana Boym, who distinguishes between
“restorative” and “reflective” nostalgia. If the former is profoundly rooted in
a conviction of promoting “truth and tradition”—rather than nostalgia—the
latter “dwells on the ambivalences of human longing and belonging and does
not shy away from the contradictions of modernity.”68 Dennis Walder, in his
Postcolonial Nostalgias, similarly notes that “restorative nostalgia focuses on
nostos, and tries in spite of history to reconstruct the lost home, or homeland;
whereas reflective nostalgia thrives on algia, the longing itself, but ‘wistfully,
ironically, desperately’.”69 This new type of nostalgia had dramatic consequences for our understanding of culture. In the French context, where the
linguistic turn emerged with its greatest vigor, the German Kultur was no
longer the locus of revitalizing escape into cultural alterity, but rather the
relentless variation of permutating messages and endless discursive communication. Culture became signification without meaning, structure without
content, language without history. Put differently, the key irregularity between
the ontological and the cultural-discursive paradigms is one of self-awareness:
Whereas the first hangs on to some model of ontological reality, albeit constructed by a constant struggle, the second paradigm distances itself from that
realism by positioning itself on the level of the “linguistic event,” as a deeper
reality is not accessible anyway.70
If the “restorative” nostalgia of historicism gave birth to a whole series of—
oftentimes problematic—palingenetic currents of thought that I summarized
as the insider-phenomenological approach, the “impossible nostalgia” of the
cultural-discursive paradigm has abandoned any hope for a new totalizing narrative. Thus, the crisis of 1965 was qualitatively different from that of 1918 as de
Martino came to realize that the sense of belonging to a particular “village” or
“country” (paese) was no longer an option. Put differently, the impossible nostalgia of postmodernism was so destructive because it committed two errors
67
68
69
70
Virno, 140.
Svetlana Boym, The Future of Nostalgia (New York: Basic Books, 2001), xviii.
Dennis Walder, Postcolonial Nostalgias: Writing, Representation and Memory (London:
Routledge, 2011), 11.
Smith, Relating Religion, 274.
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simultaneously: First, it abdicated our culture out of a nostalgic longing for
another ethnos; second, it gave up any hope at the recovery of this cultural
alterity that could reinvigorate our own culture. What was so radically new
about the apocalypse without eschaton is a type of double bind: A longing for
renewal of cultural energy that was ultimately irredeemable.
3
The Ethos of Transcendence of Life in Value as an Anticipatory
Critique of the Discursive Turn
3.1
Finding Value in Concreteness, Practice, and Morality Instead of
Meaning, Interpretation, and Play
De Martino’s response to this most abysmal of all crises is the “transcendental ethos of transcendence of life in value” (ethos trascendentale del trascendimento della vita nel valore). As its name already indicates, his final writings
form the silhouette of a type of moral philosophy, whose intention is to transcend the crisis of meaninglessness by creating new values. In light of recent
interpretations of his work, it is imperative to repeat that the Italian thinker,
despite his growing sensibility for language, perspective, and the voice of the
ethnographer, stood far away from the cultural-discursive model of thinking,
particularly its tendency to associate reality and texts. In an article entitled
“Sleepiness, Hunger, and Death Under the Stars” (1952), de Martino wrote
about the dramatic scenes during his ethnographic encounters in the Italian
South in direct juxtaposition to what it means to work on texts: “All of our persuasions have been broadly confirmed and deepened in the course of our journey, acquiring, through the human contacts that resulted, this concreteness
(concretezza), which no written text could ever provide us.”71 In a similar vein,
Roberto Alciati recently suggested that “eating, drinking, or possessing clothes
and a house cannot be if we do not presuppose a transcendence.” “Unlike in the
traditional Kantian meaning,” so Alciati continues, “the Demartinian transcendental is not a gnoseological characteristic—that is the essential condition
of possibility that allows for the attaining of necessary a priori knowledge—
but rather a primordial impulse that allows the human being to detach itself
from nature.”72
Similarly, while pundits like Gallini are right in noting that the tarantula
must be understood as a cultural or mythical-ritual symbol, rather than simply
71
72
De Martino, “Sonno, fame, e morte sotto le stelle,” 12.
Alciati, Roberto. “La religione civile di Ernesto de Martino.” Studi e materiali di storia delle
religioni 85, no. 1 (2019): 285–317. p. 298.
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a biological organism, de Martino would have hardly agreed that the festivals
associated with the spider-symbolism should be seen as texts. The Land of
Remorse, for instance, is not concerned with the realm of the symbolism of the
spider, but rather with the destiny of the people living through these ritualistic practices of possession and exorcism. This becomes particularly obvious in
moments when he focuses on specific destinies of particular young women,
such as the case of Maria of Nardò,73 whose father had died when she was a
teenager. Raised in poverty by her aunt and uncle, she fell in love with a boy
that the family did not approve of. Maria’s life was a drama, which received a
mythical and ritual expression in the following years when she was “bitten” by a
tarantula spider and felt an impulse to dance. After having been married off to
another man, the drama of her personal life received an outlet in her identity
as a tarantata. She was re-bitten by the spider on a yearly basis, repeated the
dance craze, which—accompanied by traditional tarantella music—would
culminate in a public “performance” at the local Church. There, she would not
only slowly be exorcised from the possessing spider spirit, but also celebrate a
sacred marriage to St. Paul, a sort of patron saint of the spider-bitten women.
This treatment of tarantism points to a key difference between the culturaldiscursive paradigm and de Martino’s approach that would only grow more
prominent in the last years of his life, namely the move away from language
into the realm of practice and action.
Fabrizio Ferrari’s claim that, for de Martino, “meaning” and “value” are the
same,74 must be critically re-evaluated. Although it is true that he identified
the apocalyptic lack of meaning in semantic terms, de Martino’s response is
never linguistic in nature. In other words, the “value” that de Martino pursues,
does not reveal itself in some sort of “semanticity,” or linguistic meaning, but
must rather be generated in a realm that is ultimately unaffected by language.
“There exists,” so the Italian thinker put it in The End of the World, “a transcendental principle that renders use (utilizzazione) and other valorizations
(valorizzazioni) intelligible.” “This principle,” so he elaborated, “is the transcendental ethos of transcendence of life in value,” “activity,” “ethos, duty-to-bein-the-world (dover-essere-nel-mondo) for value,” “the valorizing (valorizzante)
activity that makes ( fa) the world, establishes it, and sustains it.”75
73
74
75
De Martino, La terra del rimorso, 75ff.
Fabrizio M. Ferrari, Ernesto De Martino on Religion, 103.
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 434. Ferrari’s bias for a linguistic conception of de Martino’s
work is so pervasive that he not only translates valore with “meaning,” but also uses the
terms “signifying” for valorizzante and “define” for fa.
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Armed with this philosophical commitment to the ethos of transcendence,
de Martino elaborated an alternative to both the restorative nostalgia of the
insider-phenomenological tradition and the impossible nostalgia of the postmodernists. In response to the first, he remained steadfast in his belief that any
relativist “critique” of our own culture necessarily requires a profound rootedness within our own cultural identity and its ethnocentric biases. Instead
of postmodernism’s despair and pessimism in light of the impossibility of
true communication, de Martino attributed a much more positive function
to this burden of the anthropologist. In the posthumously published notes,
we read:
Without this quest for the challenge of the culturally foreign, without this pungent experience of the scandal raised by the encounter
with ciphered humanities, and—most of all—without this guilt and
this remorse towards the “separated brother” and the incoherent (irrelata) dispersion of cultures on our planet, the humanistic ethos of the
ethnographic encounter is struck at its roots. It comes to lack the very
fundamental condition that inaugurates the most striking task of anthropological research, namely the delicate and laborious interrogation and
self-interrogation about the character and the reasons, about the origin,
the structure, and the function of the cultural behavior of others.76
Borrowing a distinction introduced by Gianni Vattimo, we could contrast the
“weak thought” of postmodernism with the “strong thought” of de Martino by
basing it primarily on their differing attitudes towards reality and our interaction with it.77 The Italian philosopher was reluctant to translate the binaries
that dominated modernity into hybrids that play themselves out on a textual
level. His anthropology did not stand under the banner of something that is
symbolic or hermeneutic, but everything that is engaged, political, and practical. It is striking that while anthropologists of the cultural-discursive paradigm
move away from politics in response to the guilt of the ethnographic encounter,
de Martino continued to be propelled towards political engagement. Thinkers
like Geertz see their scholarship as a play of interpreting cultures, with his
landmark study promoting a semiotic view of culture, a textual conception
of reality, and a hermeneuticist and interpretative outlook on the epistemological orientation of anthropology. The ethos of transcendence, by contrast,
involved a transition from language and culture to morality and values.
76
77
De Martino, 392.
Gianni Vattimo and Pier Aldo Rovatti, Il pensiero debole (Milano: Feltrinelli, 1983).
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Even more radically, while every culture (ethnos) has its own particular
model of morality (ethos), de Martino believed that the ethical imperative cultivated by Western civilization stands out amongst the rest. Accordingly, it is
only in the modern West that humanity has gained full awareness of its own
historicity and its fundamental role as the creator of reality. In The End of the
World, de Martino spoke of his culture as the “moral and civil leader (primato)”
and gave it the responsibility of “cultural leadership.”78 In his ethnocentric
self-confidence and his emphasis on ethics, de Martino also stands in radical
contradistinction to the paradigms of thinking about religion studied in this
book. Wasserstrom, for example, notes how historians of religion were reluctant to focus attention on issues of morality. For Scholem, Corbin, and Eliade,
he argues, “the ontical effectively replaced the ethical at the center of intellectual concern.”79 Similar comments have been made by Preus, who writes that
the proponents of the insider-phenomenological approach, “in reaction to the
eighteenth-century habit of reducing (‘true’) religion to morality, […] fixed a
theological notion of ‘the sacred’ that has been very durable and popular until
now: essential religion (which strongly implies ‘authentic’ religion), rooted in
an apprehension of ‘the holy,’ is utterly prior to either conceptual or moral formulation and elaboration.”80
A different variety of the withdrawal from the territory of ethics can be
found in the cultural-discursive paradigm. In this orientation, the recognition that the ethnographic encounter is coextensive with power, domination,
and pollution is culminating in a belief that anthropology can never be ethically neutral. As Gavin Flood noted, in the cultural-discursive paradigm, “the
question of method […] merges into the broader philosophical questions of
the values inherent within Western culture, of ethical relativism and universalism, and into political questions of dominance and occlusion, especially
as articulated in feminist and postcolonial critiques.”81 If cultural relativism
is an undeniable accomplishment inasmuch as the ethnographic encounter
teaches us that our culture is not the only culture out there, it is problematic
because it frequently turns into a philosophical position that can be summed
up under the heading “anything goes.” This type of position, so the philosopher
and social anthropologist Ernest Gellner reminds us, claims that “knowledge
or morality outside culture is […] a chimera.”82
78
79
80
81
82
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 397.
Steven M. Wasserstrom, Religion after Religion (Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1999), 225.
Preus, Explaining Religion, 200.
Flood, Beyond Phenomenology, 195.
Ernest Gellner, Postmodernism, Reason and Religion (London: Routledge, 1992), 73.
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3.2
The Ethos of Transcendence as Dialectical Process: Between Loyalty
to the Past and New Valorization in the Present
As “history to be made,” de Martino’s science operated both retrospectively and
prospectively. Oriented towards our past, science means loyalty and stands for
the fact that we can never forget where we belong, as this situational background will impact our perception of the present—whether we want it to or
not. In its futural dimension, by contrast, science is the invitation to take a
position, to decide, to break with the past, and to make history in the present.
It is in this initiative to break with what is given that de Martino’s reflections on
ethics might actually reveal surprising affinities with one of the greatest exponents of the cultural-discursive paradigm, namely Jacques Derrida. Late in his
career, Derrida became increasingly interested in ethical decision-taking as a
process that decisively transcends predetermined knowledge. A few months
before his death, in an interview with L’Humanité, a French daily newspaper
with close links to the French Communist Party, Derrida explained:
[…] if one understands ethics as a system of rules, of moral norms, then
I am not proposing a morality. What I am interested in, in fact, are the
aporias of ethics, its limits. […] All of this implies a thinking of decision: responsible decision has to endure the experience of the undecidable rather than just crossing over or going over it. If I know what
I must do, I do not make a decision, I apply a knowledge, I unfold a program. For there to be a decision, I must not know what to do. […] The
moment of decision, the ethical moment, if you will, is independent
from knowledge. It is when “I do not know the right rule” that the ethical
question arises.83
In terms that remind us of de Martino’s imperative to “take sides” (prendere
partito), Derrida highlighted the importance of the “un-ethical moment of
ethics, the moment in which I do not know what to do, when no norms are
available to me, when I do not have to have norms available, but when I have
to act, take on my responsibilities, take sides (prendre parti).”84 This being said,
de Martino’s thinking towards the end of his life, infused with a modernist and
ethnocentric ethos that is foreign to Derrida’s work, maintained a dialectical
dynamic between the need to transcend and the maintaining of loyalty to our
cultural homeland, which is always already available.
83
84
Jérôme-Alexandre Niesberg, “‘Jacques Derrida, penseur de l’évènement,’” interview in
L’Humanité, January 28, 2004, www.humanit.fr.
Niesberg.
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The “world” is always given in its communal totality to be reclaimed in the
specificity and the singularity of a valorization. It is always removed in
habitual patterns and within this more or less anonymous and socialized
experience, it is traced as an intimate and personal figure that emerges
out of the one’s own valorizing initiative. But the given, the habitual, the
obviousness of the world are possible as immediate faithfulness to initiatives of past generations […]. They are the ground and the homeland
upon which the personal task of today is rising. […] It is only through
this anonymous domesticity of the world that it is possible to prepare
oneself for its recovery, always reinventing itself in “my” original, singular
choices. The individual can “start over” a certain aspect of the world—
and he always restarts it as if he were the first man to begin, to be a man
for the first time ever—only if all other aspects function momentarily as
background. This background, in turn, implicitly includes human meaning, a work of humanization incurred in the obvious domesticity of the
environment, a fundamental testimony of togetherness, of quiet workable collectivity extending in space and time.85
De Martino illuminates the dialectics of the ethos of transcendence—made up
of an oscillation between faithfulness to the past one inherits, on the one hand,
and the fresh valorization in the present moment, on the other—through his
reflections on walking, which is part of what he described as the “domestication” (domesticazione) of the body. On the one hand, “walking in an upright
position […] does not require concentration of conscious attention” because
“we are accompanied and sustained by this history and by the efforts, by the
research, by the inventions, and by the learning that it entails.”86 On the other
hand, walking is an individual practice that needs to be actualized in the present every time we start moving.
In simply walking, the human body is not given but continuously and
completely put into question (messo in causa) and reclaimed (ripreso)
85
86
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 648. For another translation see: Alfonso M. Di Nola, “How
Critical Was de Martino’s ‘Critical Ethnocentrism’ in Southern Italy?,” in Italy’s “Southern
Question”: Orientalism in One Country, ed. Jane Schneider (Oxford: Berg, 1998), 162. The
idea of the dialectic is central to the argument of Amalia Signorelli, one of the few outspoken critics of the association between de Martino and postmodern thought. She notes
that “while, amongst the contemporary neo-relativists, the encounter with the others is
theorized in situational and semiotic-communicative terms, in de Martino the encounter
is always existential and at the same time dialectic.”
De Martino, Scritti filosofici, 127–28.
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for the purpose of this particular utilization that is the moving over the
ground by letting the arms and hands swing freely for other useful (utilizzatrici) valorizations. Now, this very particular putting into question
and reclaiming, putting in effort (impegnarsi) and leaving oneself available (lasciarsi disponibile) realizes itself in the upright position in walking. It constitutes a transcending (trascendimento) of the body. When one
walks, one invokes a technique and readjusts it to the circumstance. The
fact that walking is mostly executed “without thinking about it”—with
the mind directed elsewhere […]—does not mean that we are not gradually presentifying our walking-style. It only means that for us, the dutyto-be-there (doverci essere) has become a duty (dovere) so elementary, a
transcending (trascendimento) of the body so easy, a discovery so inaugural, to make it possible to be there for other transcendences (trascendimenti) and for other discoveries even while we are walking […]. For
example, while we walk, we can also follow the thread of a poetic phantasm or of a thought. Walking is a labor based on value, a labor that—like
any other work for value—liberates us from the givenness of the body,
putting it into question and reclaiming it, and makes us emerge by virtue
of this recovery (ripresa).87
Walking is thus both an “obvious” practice, grounded in a long implicit history
that serves as cultural background and a history which is nonetheless always
“picked up every time when humans walk.”88 Appropriately, de Martino also
invoked the earthquake trope in these philosophical notes in the years before
his death. Discussing the “characteristic gait” of shepherds and farmers, horse
riders and men of arms, Maori women and prison inmates, he also remembered his own experiences with his greatest philosophical teacher, Benedetto
Croce: “Amongst the personal styles of walking, every one of us remembers
the old Croce, with his slow and solemn stride, slightly dragging the leg he
fractured in the earthquake of Casamìcciola.”89 While the earthquake posed
a great risk for Croce, he survived it and moved beyond it. Not only that, it is
precisely because he transcended the catastrophe that he is marked by it for
the rest of his life. Although the experience is over, its reverberation has left its
imprints on a physical level.
Further, just as the initial crisis reverberated in Croce’s physical existence
with every step he took, the risk of the crisis of the presence remained a
87
88
89
De Martino, 127–28.
De Martino, 127–28.
De Martino, 130.
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continued threat. In this sense, the earthquake and its continued resonance
in Croce’s gait is comparable to the cultural development, which moved from
the crisis of the shaman in the world of magic—birth moment of the self—
through Christianity, the Renaissance, the Age of Enlightenment and so forth.
Ultimately, this procession leads into the time of de Martino, during which he
regarded the promotion of the ethos of transcendence as the most important
goal. However, even then, the presence is not in a safe haven from the crisis
of loss as the original vulnus is existentially embedded within the fabric of
the human psyche and culture. And so, the project of protecting the presence
remains a contemporary mission. If the presence is “the first vital human good,”
de Martino observes in “Religious Phenomenology and Absolute Historicism,”
it can nonetheless “run the risk of being lost in certain historical conditions.”90
Based on more personal notes from late in his life, we can infer that de Martino
also sought to relate religion to the ethos of transcendence. Using the example
of a cripple walking on a crutch, he applied his dialectical thinking in such way
so as to argue that religion is both something to be overcome and yet something universally necessary.
If religious life is a technical system that protects from the risk of losing
the capacity to be in any possible civil history and that opens up anew
(ridischiude) the various workings (vario operare) that a crisis without
horizon would compromise, [then] religious freedom proves to be firmly
established in the society in which modern civilization articulates itself.
Who would break the crutches of a cripple with the argument that a normal walk does not require crutches? What we need to do is to reduce, as
much as possible, the accidents and diseases for which the number of
cripples is so high that the request for and use of crutches becomes inevitable. In other words, the challenge could be to replace the means that
are the crutches with a more effective orthopedic technique.91
The analogy of religion as a crutch that can be gradually replaced with a combination between social prophylaxes and a more sophisticated orthopedic
treatment, shows that de Martino, during the 1960s, understood the ethos of
transcendence as a post-religious response to the apocalypse. In The End of the
World, we also encounter a more positive appreciation of our original “homeland” as the warmth of the maternal mother, which is a basic condition that
90
91
De Martino, “Fenomenologia religiosa e storicismo assoluto,” 1995, 59.
De Martino, Vita di Gennaro Esposito, Napoletano, 25.
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we will never forget. Yet even here, this most primordial homeland represents
a state of being that can and should be transcended as we grow up.
The warmth of the maternal mother was the first homeland we experienced and the world appeared for the first time within the confines
marked by this contact. Beyond these confines, the possession of our
body started to define itself and the affectionate operability of the maternal body extended itself. We conquered our mouth by sucking milk as our
lips of nursing children were the first school of being-in-the-world. Then
the feeling of the body in the world started to constitute itself through
the caresses of a hand that measured its surface, through the reassuring breath, the kissing mouth, the smiling face, the coddling voice of
the mother. From then on, our body was destined to become obviously
ours and to preserve itself in this obviousness (ovvietà) to the extent in
which it safeguarded (custodiva) the treasure buried by these elementary
somatic and cosmogonic memories. From then on, [it also] continued to
participate in the diverse and always renewed transcending (transcendere) to which the human destiny incessantly calls us.92
92
De Martino, La fine del mondo, 618.
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Conclusion: Let the Earth Shake (Again) or Why
Rebirth Must Lead to a New Crisis
In this book, we followed de Martino’s life through the tumultuous history of
the twentieth century. In so doing, we not only got to know him as a broad
thinker with a sheer unbounded curiosity, but we also learned about the ways
scholars of religion responded to crisis within Italy and beyond. The first
three chapters of this study were concerned with the global crises of the two
world wars, the birth of cultural pessimism, and the totalitarian movements
intended to bring about political rebirth to a dying continent. Juxtaposing his
work to that of Mircea Eliade’s politics of nostalgia and Claude Lévi-Strauss’
structural anthropology, we saw that de Martino was sympathetic to both of
these projects while simultaneously transcending them by articulating dialectical visions of civil religion as cultural palingenesis and of shamanic magic
as de-historification. The following chapters further reinforced our impression
of de Martino as a uniquely innovative thinker. By interpreting his role in the
empowerment of the subaltern masses in the Italian South as an expression
of the first stirrings of post-colonial anthropology during the 1950s, the study
revisited the rise of the cultural-discursive approach in religious studies from an
Italian perspective, arguing that de Martino anticipated not only Lévi-Strauss’
Tristes Tropiques, but also the work of Clifford Geertz. His ethnographic excursions to the Italian South, where he compassionately narrated the destinies
of disenfranchised peasants and widowed women, revealed a sensitive, guiltridden, and self-reflexive anthropologist in search of a more respectful type of
science, in which the “other” can make his or her voice heard.
At the same time, the final chapters of this book also made it unmistakably
clear that de Martino was not simply an anticipator of the cultural-discursive
paradigm. On the contrary, his work was more powerful because it anticipated
a trenchant critique of post-modern thought. De Martino disparaged the
cultural-discursive paradigm as an expression of what he would call the “apocalypse without eschaton,” the most profound crisis that Western civilization
ever faced. Unlike the crisis of the first half of the century, the predicament
was no longer one of rupture—of two radically opposed forms of truth—but
rather one of utter abdication, a crisis of meaninglessness. The ethnocentric
principle of the loyalty to the cultural homeland and the moralistic imperative
of the ethos of transcendence laid the foundations for a confident science of
© Flavio A. Geisshuesler, 2021 | doi:10.1163/9789004457720_010
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religion that represents an alternative path to the one chosen by the proponents of the cultural-discursive paradigm.
Finally, for readers offended by what seems to be an almost contemptuous
ethnocentrism, we should never forget that the ethos of transcendence—the
principle allowing Western humanity to walk along its own development—
is best envisioned as a dynamic process of thought and action that spirals
upward in a circular movement. On the one hand, de Martino envisioned it
as a principle that moves civilization forward and upward, an idea that is both
grounded in and carries forward the telos of Western civilization. On the other
hand, since this very telos is primed for a transcending and surpassing action,
it can never be a linear and forward-facing arrow. The ethos, by encouraging
choice, development, and change causes permutations. The ethos of transcendence, thus, carries the danger of crisis within its very core. Ultimately, crisis
and decision are codependent as they mutually reinforce each other. Inspired
by its original Greek meaning, de Martino recognized that krisis requires a
“decision” (from krinein “decide,” “separate”). At the same time, as the Latin
etymology of this latter term indicates, any “decision” provokes a “cutting off”
(from de- “off” + caedere “cut”), thus inevitably leading to a new type of crisis.
In this sense, de Martino paradoxically suggested that science’s most effective
means to transcend a crisis is by invoking a new one. Unlike post-colonial, poststructuralist, and post-modern thinkers—whose approach tends to hover in a
realm of discourse, hybridity, and third-ness—de Martino took a firm stance
in arguing that critical thinking requires a strong cognitive and moral model
of truth based on judgment. This decisive stance, so the Italian philosopher
argued, represents both a step forward in civilizational development and the
inception of a new—potentially productive—crisis.
In 1965, as he was refining his philosophy as moral impulse of transcendence to offer a saving push towards intersubjective values to a civilization
that was staring into the abyss of the apocalypse, de Martino fell gravely ill.
In the final days before dying of lung cancer in a hospital in the Italian capital of Rome, he offered his last official testimony on religion. In an interview
with Cesare Cases, de Martino experimented with a new form of symbolism that corresponds to his ethical imperative, calling the quest for a “secular symbolism” the Leitmotiv of his work. According to such a model, crisis
and decision are ultimately both “an end” inasmuch as they signify a “separation,” and a “new beginning” in the sense that they are motors that work
against stasis and stagnation by encouraging movement, development, and
growth. At the same time, however, de Martino humbly closed his interview
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Conclusion
with an acknowledgment of a deeper fear of “the end,” the existential fear that
haunts a human being in the face of his or her own mortality. It is in such
statements that it becomes clear that de Martino’s science, despite its ethnocentric, modernist, and teleological presuppositions remained a profoundly
humble endeavor.
In my opinion, the integration and the reintegration of humans into society don’t stop being problematic and continue to require a symbolic solution. You know that I think that even in a socialist society, birth, marriage,
death need to be adequately solemnified. I feel horror at the idea that all
is reduced to an act of bureaucracy in front of an office window. And it
is here that the dissatisfaction with the rationalization of these relationships reopens the path to religious temptation. Take death, ultimate and
definite crisis of the presence of the individual, [as example]. How can
you eliminate its dramatic character? Yes, of course, here too the limit
can be moved, maybe there comes the day on which the heart gets tired
of beating and you could send it, what do I know, to Einaudi, where they
will arrange for it to be recharged so that you recover your efficiency. But
the limit can only be moved, never abolished. And, you see, if someone
knows he has cancer and that he is going to die, well, in that moment he
may know that god does not exist as much as he wants [ha un bel sapere].
The temptation is great … and this, my dear, was not written in Marx.1
1 Cesare Cases, “Un colloquio con Ernesto de Martino,” Quaderni piacentini, 1965, 24.
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Index
alterity 16, 59, 61, 97–99, 115, 121, 134–136,
141, 144, 154, 160–161
anti-fascism 4, 48–49, 58, 150
apocalypse 3, 5, 12–13, 20, 49, 64, 81, 87,
122–124, 136, 146–148, 154, 156–157, 159,
161–162, 168, 170–171
apocalypse without eschaton 81, 124,
147–148, 154, 157, 161, 170
Boas, Franz 134–137, 142, 152
Boccassino, Renato 46, 92
civil religion 6, 22, 32, 42–43 n. 107, 46, 49,
99, 170
communism 4, 41 n. 98, 52, 98–99 n. 36, 102,
117, 132
crisis 2–8, 10, 12–14, 16, 18–21, 42, 44, 49,
51, 54–59, 62, 64–66, 71–72, 74–75, 77,
84–85, 87, 90–91, 93, 98, 100, 102–103,
107, 122–124, 128, 136–137, 144, 147–149,
151–152, 156–157, 160–161, 167–168,
170–172
crisis of the presence 6, 44, 54–56, 59,
64, 91, 167, 172
critical ethnocentrism 6, 101, 105–106, 110,
141, 143
Croce, Benedetto 31 n. 49, 47–48, 50, 52–53,
65, 93–95, 97, 148–152, 167–168
cultural-discursive paradigm 5, 7, 105, 107,
110, 116, 120–121, 124–126, 134, 136–139,
144, 147, 152–155, 159–165, 170–171
cultural homeland 6, 121, 144, 160, 165, 170
decision 95, 112, 151–152, 165, 171
de-historification 6, 60, 66, 69, 71, 75–76,
82, 84–87, 90–91, 170
Derrida, Jacques 103, 125, 156, 158, 165
dialectic 7, 32–33, 43, 84, 86, 90–91, 143, 145,
157, 159, 165–166, 168, 170
drama 2–3, 12, 54, 56, 65–66, 69, 90, 94–95,
109–110, 116, 123, 138, 149, 151–152,
160–162, 172
earthquake 1–2, 95, 101, 123–124, 149,
167–168
efficacy 73–74, 107
Eliade, Mircea 4–6, 11, 28 n. 34, 32–33 n. 57,
47, 61–62, 66–72, 74–78, 82, 86–87,
89–91, 96, 139, 154, 164, 170
ethics 51, 151–152, 161, 164–165, 170–171
ethos of transcendence 6, 145, 151, 161–163,
166, 168, 170–171
existentialism 62, 96, 148–150, 152
Fabian, Johannes 110, 155
fascism 7, 9–10, 22, 43, 46, 48–50, 58, 95,
98–99, 140
folklore 3, 64, 113, 130–131, 133, 140, 143
Freud, Sigmund 57, 61, 88, 122, 142
Geertz, Clifford 4–6, 103, 109, 116, 119,
125, 135–136, 138–139, 144, 152–155,
163, 170
Gramsci, Antonio 103, 126–128, 130–133
healing 49, 72–75, 77, 88
heroic historicism 85, 91
historicism 21, 52–53, 76–77, 82, 87, 91, 93,
96–97, 136, 140, 148–149, 151, 160
illo tempore 70–71, 77, 83
impossible nostalgia 160, 162
insider-phenomenological approach 5–6,
61–63, 72, 77, 86, 91, 104–105, 134,
137–138, 152–154, 158, 160, 162, 164
Italian South 4, 6, 74, 96–102, 106, 109, 111,
116, 126–127, 129 n. 27, 133, 161, 170
Lévi-Strauss, Claude 4–6, 61–64, 66, 72–75,
77–81, 83–84, 88–91, 106–110, 112–113,
141–142, 144, 170
Macchioro, Vittorio 10–13, 21, 45–48, 57, 67
magic 6, 45–46, 54–56, 59–62, 65–66, 71–74,
82, 85–86, 90–91, 95, 97–98, 101, 113, 115,
126, 144, 168, 170
Marx, Karl 81–82, 84, 128, 142, 159, 172
Marxism 3, 64, 96, 100, 126–128, 132, 138
mezzogiorno, See Italian South
modernity 3, 6–7, 10, 13–22, 33, 40–42, 44,
51, 55–57, 59–62, 66, 77, 88, 90–91,
104–105, 112–113, 115, 122–123, 125–126,
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201
Index
132, 137, 140, 149, 160, 163–164, 168,
170–171
myth 9, 19, 22, 33, 41–42, 57, 70, 77–78, 82,
89
ritual repetition of myth 70–71, 75, 86,
122
Omodeo, Adolfo 10, 52–53 n. 51, 94, 99
othering, See alterity
Otto, Rudolf 5, 13, 32, 43, 137, 139, 154
outsider-explanatory approach 5–6, 61–62,
77, 80, 89, 91, 104–105, 107, 138
Paci, Enzo 148–150
palingenesis 3, 5–6, 9, 12, 32–33, 43–44, 49,
65, 133, 136, 158, 170
parapsychology 45–46, 54, 68
Pettazzoni, Raffaele 9–10, 46, 53 n. 51, 67,
78 n. 47, 92, 114, 133
politics of nostalgia 6, 61, 170
post-colonialism 6–7, 17, 103, 107, 120, 125,
170–171
postmodernism 7, 103, 105, 125–126, 147, 154,
157–158, 160, 163, 166 n. 84
progressive folklore 130–131
rebirth, See palingenesis
ritual
3, 10, 45, 65, 70, 72, 74–76, 82, 86–87,
89–90, 107, 110, 116, 147, 161
Sabbatucci, Dario 114
Said, Edward 107, 110, 125, 155
scientification 14, 55, 147
secularization 14–15, 42, 55, 126, 147
shamanism 46, 57, 72–75, 77, 85–86, 88,
90–91, 112–113, 168, 170
Shirokogoroff, Sergeĭ Mikhaĭlovich
Shirokogoroff 112
Smith, Jonathan Z. 115
socialism 4, 41 n. 98, 48–52, 98, 117 n. 108,
132, 159, 172
songs 72–74, 101, 127, 131
Spengler, Oswald 3, 8, 19–21, 50, 59
symbolism 40, 42, 49, 52, 70, 73–74, 90, 116,
135, 139, 153, 155, 161, 163, 171–172
symbols 73
tarantella 74, 97, 133, 162
telos of Western civilization
142–144, 147, 171–172
Villa Laterza circle
137–138,
47–48
Writing Culture Movement
119–120, 159
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