9999 Boyer Consili Ence Anthropology
9999 Boyer Consili Ence Anthropology
9999 Boyer Consili Ence Anthropology
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from studious irrelevancy to consilient knowledge: modes of scholarship and cultural anthropology 1
Pascal Boyer
Why is most cultural anthropology largely irrelevant? The voice of that particular eld in broader academic discussions is almost inaudible, its scholars are no longer among the recognizable and important public intellectuals of the day, and its contribution to public debates is close to nonexistent. This last feature is all the more troubling, as the subject matter of cultural anthropology would seem to place it at the center of crucial social debates. Although I will substantiate this rather harsh diagnosis, the point of this chapter is less to offer a jeremiad than to propose an etiology and perhaps a cure for the current predicament of cultural anthropology. My diagnosis is that this is a largely self-inected condition. Cultural anthropology has no place in public discourse because most cultural anthropologists have talked and written themselves out of public debate, mostly because they pursued fetishistic interests or advocated methodological postures that are of no possible relevance or interest to culture at large. This is beginning to change. However, that change is to a large degree happening not in the mainstream of cultural anthropology but rather at its margins. I should start by acknowledging that there is a large amount of respectable and, indeed, excellent research conducted in the eldthat is hardly the question. What is a stake is that a certain intellectual style, mostly of a rather recent vintage in cultural anthropology but much older in other elds, has stymied the creative energy and social import of cultural anthropology. Equally obviously, not all anthropology is affected by this recent plague of irrelevancy. First of all, the elds of biological anthropology and archaeology seem to be in rude health. I also mention that the traditional concerns of cultural anthropology are currently being given a new lease of life and often a much more lively public relevance by evolutionary biologists and economists, suggesting that there may be such a eld as the science of culture or at least some incipient moves toward such an integrated discipline.
1. Parts of this essay reprise material from an article published in Journal of Cognition and Culture 3(4): 344358. Thanks to EJ Brill Publishers for permission to reprint these passages.
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Racism
Marr.
Immig.
Fundam.
Ethnic
Historian
Economist
Political Scientist
Anthropologist
figure 1 Results of Lexis-Nexis search, Source: Major world newspapers from January 1, 2007 to June 30, 2009. Source criteria: joint occurrences (e.g., racism and historian) within a 50-word neighborhood, roughly a paragraph. See more detailed table in Appendix.
nects with public debates about such issues. Perhaps the strident relativism of cultural anthropology (each culture to its own, values are culture bound, cultural concepts are untranslatable, etc.) seems increasingly irrelevant in a world where people with different norms just have to live together, and, therefore, confront norms and concepts without any respect for the sacred boundaries of each culture. Perhaps the elds recent addiction to academic fads has made cultural anthropology even less relevant. Disquisitions about culture as text, postcolonialism, or even more arcane issues of reexivity may not seem of much help to people who wonder how children will be raised in non-traditional families, under what conditions mass immigration can result in peaceful co-existence, what tools we have to resolve entrenched religious hatred, and other such matters for serious public debate. Mission creep is the process, much feared by the military and some politicians, whereby a limited tactical goal turns into an impossibly ambitious political adventure. Cultural anthropology has, in the last 50 years or so suffered from the opposite problem, a quite dramatic form of mission-shrink. Compared to its original agenda, and even to what is routinely claimed to be its mission in textbooks, cultural anthropology has gradually narrowed its focus to a few obscure problems. Consider the agenda. Most anthropology textbooks seem to reiterate what has been the ofcial mission of anthropology for the last century: to provide an understanding of human nature through the most challenging and characteristic of the species features, namely, the production of vastly different norms, concepts, and social structures. The language may have changed a bit, but the overall goal is still expressed in these terms. As a recent textbook puts it:
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Anthropologists research, observe, analyze and apply what they learn toward an understanding of the many variations of the human condition. A grounding in past human adaptations, both biological and cultural, contributes to our understanding of adaptations today. (Lenkeit 2007) The same ambition is expressed at the outset of Anthropology for Dummies: Why isnt everyone the same? Why do people worldwide have differences in skin and hair color and ways of greeting one another? Why doesnt everyone speak the same language? (C. M. Smith 2008) Now the interesting thing about this agenda is that virtually nobody in cultural anthropology works on such questionsindeed, most cultural anthropologists nd this kind of scholarly ambition either quaint or presumptuous. Instead of addressing issues of human nature and cultural diversity, they have more or less renounced the nature part of the equation. Rather than address big issues, most cultural anthropologists seems content with narrowly circumscribed, often geographically limited, investigations. This mission shrink is all the more deplorable as it happened right at the time when other elds started to provide a wealth of ndings and methods that, when combined with cultural anthropological scholarship, could renew our perspective on human cultures. Rather than welcoming these advances, it seems that cultural anthropology has severed links with the other elds that could feed this program, including its sister elds of biological anthropology and archaeology, and it has persistently ignored spectacular developments in psychology, economics, linguistics, and cognitive science.
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is available (and searchable) on CD-ROM, this particular form of knowledge cannot be used as a criterion for admission.
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Biophysics
Evolutionary biology Cladistics Ecology Natural history ERUDITION SCIENCE Optimality theory
Generative grammars
Linguistic classification ERUDITION figure 2. The overlap between the science and erudition modes in two disciplines: linguistics and biology. Various research programs illustrate either one or both of the modes of scholarship.
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121 From Studious Irrelevancy to Consilient Knowledge Science mode Model of genomic imprinting Physics of plate tectonics Erudition mode Comparative morphology of varieties of seacucumbers Geological formations of england
In the sciences
Compared European
nationalisms
In the humanities
General organization of
narratives How ecology constrains state formation Why visual arts only use certain kinds of symmetry How literacy affects the contents of cultural knowledge
figure 3. The science/erudition distinction is orthogonal to the traditional Sciences, Social sciences, and humanities dimensions. Examples of specic research projects that instantiate all six cells in the matrix.
of Benjamins and Bourdieus accounts of culture, technology, and late capitalism. Steel drums and strong rum prop up the local habitus of globalized self-empowerment. What is the common thread in these disparate examples? They all seem to offer a new connection between elements that were previously known to everyone in the eld and indeed, in many cases, to any educated reader. For instance, all literary scholars presumably know their Shakespeare and educated folk know a little about the conquest of America. But they (supposedly) had never considered Ophelia as American. In the same way, most historians know about the political organization of the Raj and its fondness for state pageantry. They are also cognizant of the comedians paradox from Diderot or some other source. The authors hope is in the fact that the connection between the twobetween state ceremonial and precarious theatrical mimesisis new. In the same way, most cultural anthropologists have some notion of the Caribbean as a place of contrasting inuences and original cultural mixes. They also know a little about the various ways in which homosexuality is construed in different places, as well as cultural variation in fathers duties or roles. The innovative point is to put all these together, creating salient associations, especially by
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throwing in Bourdieu and Benjamintwo rather dour, bookish, and strait-laced dead Europeans who would seem far removed from your typical Trinidadian gay dad. One could multiply the examples, but it may be of more help to compare the features of this with the other two modes: 1. In salient-connections elds, there is no agreed corpus of knowledge. Indeed, there is no knowledge in the sense of accumulated and organized information, but rather a juxtaposition of different views on different topics. 2. There are no manuals, no agreed techniques or methods. Indeed, each contribution constitutes (ideally) a new paradigm or method, each author is an island. 3. The history of the eld, its self-denition, as well as the reframing of past theories, are crucial. A lot of scholarly activity in salient connections-based elds consists in citing various masters, commenting on their texts, nding some connection between what they said and the issue at hand. In cultural anthropological studies, authors like Walter Benjamin or Pierre Bourdieu or the entire Frankfurt school are part of this Pantheon (a very ephemeral one, with a high turnover rate). The masters are generally invoked as validating authority. That is, the particular fact that one is describing (the gay Caribbean father, etc.) is presented as illustrating the general principle laid down by Benjamin or some other luminary. (Incidentally, these authors are never shown to have been wrong. Indeed, their work is never discussed as having any connection to empirical fact that could make them right or wrong. Benjamins or Bourdieus conceptions of culture are not judged in terms of how much they explain). Also, there is a great deal of emphasis on the self-denition of the eld, the ideas various practitioners have about what they do and what they ought to do, compared to what others do. Indeed, most important works are supposed to be not just contributions to the eld, but also reections on the eld itself. For instance, a study of German postExpressionist 1960s cinema will be praised, not just because it tells us a lot that we want to know about that specic genre, but also because it re-frames our views of the connections between cinema or society. A study of recent rock songs is good because it establishes a new approach to popular culture. 4. Books are more important than articles. This, in part, reects the fact that each contribution should ideally re-frame a eld as a whole, introduce a new way of looking at issues, and so on, something that cannot be done in a short article. 5. There is no specic developmental curve. Some authors produce interesting connections in their rst piece of work, others are seasoned specialists of the erudition mode who, at some point, decide to let their hair down, as it were, and let salient connections govern their next project. 6. There is no agreement whatsoever on who is a competent performer in this mode, apart from the (generally dead) masters like Bakhtin or Benjamin or Raymond Williams for cultural studies, Derrida or de Man for literary criticism. A consequence is that there are tightly coalitional cliques and exceedingly bitter feuds about who should get what jobs, who is allowed to publish and where, and so on. In the last three decades or so, some elds have dramatically evolved from almost pure erudition mode to the salient-connections mode. Literary criticism is a case in point. In
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the past, one could not really expatiate on Shakespeares plays without thorough knowledge of the First Folio and Quartos and other such recondite source criticism. This kind of erudition is still practiced, but it is not the major criterion of a relevant contribution to Elizabethan studies (Garber 2004). Saying something new about the plays is what matters. One could say that the specialists have (perhaps excessively) taken to heart Forsters dictum. They only connect. There are various accounts of why this happened to literary studies, whether this is a Good Thing or not, and if not, whether it is all the fault of that awful Leavis or of the dreaded French structuralists (Kermode 1983). I am not enough of an erudite to adjudicate between these normative interpretations of history. I can only comment that polemical narratives generally get in the way of a proper explanation. Neither jeremiad (No-one knows the Canon anymore!) nor triumphalist epic (We have overcome! The Canon is dead) is of great help here.
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news with undisturbed placidity (Gellner 1959). There is a rich comic vein here, also mined by David Lodge, several of whose characters reect on the difculty of teaching that the margin is the text or that the Canon is dead to students who do not read much text and had barely noticed that there was a Canon (Lodge 1988). A more serious problem, obviously, is that such scholarship does not in general solve any questions, contribute to a more precise or accurate description of the world, or even show us the limitations of our knowledge (nor does it aim to do any of these things). Salient connections are a sometime thing, not durable and useable information. They leave the world as they found it, to coin a phrase. So what is to be done?
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1. The transmission of cultural representations, concepts, and norms, can be seen as bounded variations within limits set by human cognitive capacities (Sperber and Hirschfeld 2004). Cognitive scientists and evolutionary anthropologists have found that early developed cognitive principles form a background of expectations that make possible the acquisition of particular cultural norms and concepts (Boyer and Barrett 2005) in such domains as folk-biology (Atran 1990, 1998), kinship and ethnic categories (Hirschfeld 1994, 1996), racial categories (Kurzban et al. 2001), religious beliefs (Atran 2002), and social interaction (Cosmides and Tooby 1992; Fiske 1992; Tooby and Cosmides 1996). 2. Economic theory provides us with the most precise way of describing opportunities and predicting choices, and, of course, extends beyond strictly economic issues (Gintis 2000a). Behavioral and experimental economics in particular have shown how to go beyond strict rationality assumptions (Smith 2003), and how to include in economic models such factors as reputation (Kurzban et al. 2007), punitive feelings (Fehr et al. 2006; Price et al. 2002), and intuitive standards of fairness (McCabe and Smith 2001). These models account for the spread of culturally specic modes of cooperation (Gintis 2000b, this volume). We cannot provide good accounts of human culture without placing it in its evolutionary context. A persistent misunderstanding in the social sciences is the notion that evolutionary models are about closed behavioral programs, inflexibly developed whatever the external circumstances ( Tooby and Cosmides 1992). If this were the case, evolution would indeed be irrelevant to any behavior for which there is variation among individuals, including human cultures as well as most behaviors of complex organisms. However, evolution in humans and other species results in highly context-sensitive decision-making systems, such that features of local history fix the parameters for peoples preferences. This kind of evolutionary model provides a good account of such disparate cultural phenomena as reproductive strategies, including teen pregnancies (Ellis et al. 2003; Quinlan 2003); different reactions and similar sensitivity to cheating in social exchange, among foragers and industrial societies (Sugiyama et al. 2002); local features of race categories (Kurzban et al. 2001; Sidanius and Veniegas 2000); and many more (Buss and Kenrick 1998; Barkow et al. 1992).
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The integrated view of human culturewhat some may call a vertical integration in the eldwill allow cultural anthropology to return to the highly ambitious set of questions it should have addressed all along. Here is a tentative list: Are there natural limits to family arrangements and what are they? Can these limits shift with new reproductive techniques and economic change? Can people have an intuitive understanding of large societies? Or are our intuitive understandings of the social and political world limited to the small groups we evolved in? Why are despised social categories essentialized? Why is it so easy to construct social stigma? What logic drives ethnic violence? Ethnic conicts are more violent and seem less rational than traditional warfare. They sometimes involve whole populations as victims and perpetrators. What psychological processes fuel this violence? Why are there gender differences in politics? What explains womens exclusion from group decision-making in most societies, and their reduced participation in many other societies? How are moral concepts acquired? How do locally signicant parameters affect general concepts of right and wrong? What drives peoples economic intuitions? Does participation in market economies create an understanding of market processes? What explains individual religious attitudes? Why are some individuals more committed to the existence of supernatural agents than others are? Why is there religious fundamentalism and extremism? Why should people want to oppress or kill others in the name of a supernatural agency? Obviously, the list is not meant to be exhaustive, but it is indicative, at least, of the potential scope and diversity of a vertically integrated approach to cultural anthropology. The list should also suggest why an integrated program is a Good Thing: because it nally allows cultural anthropology to talk about things that matter. As I argued at the beginning of this chapter, cultural anthropology is simply not heard in the public forum, and the simplest explanation is that it is not talkingor rather, not talking about anything of great importance. This should change soon.
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appendix
Table 1. Results of Lexis-Nexis Search. Source: major world newspapers, over three two-year periods. Source criteria: joint occurrences (e.g., the words racism and historian) within the same 50-word neighborhood, roughly the size of a newspaper article paragraph. Figures for 20072009 include occurences to July 1, 2009 only.
20032005 20052007 20072009
Racism
925 384 154 214 627 299 87 90 206 467 46 16 24 30 25 2 41 24 7 4 282 111 72 61
909 506 191 232 595 300 85 94 263 702 98 25 16 24 27 1 46 31 16 2 324 133 90 69
922 440 174 169 489 216 43 82 192 503 64 19 11 11 14 0 32 39 10 0 269 121 60 42
Marriage
Immigration
Gay marriage
Fundamentalism
Ethnic
References
Atran, S. A. 1990. Cognitive foundations of natural history. Towards an anthropology of science. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. Atran, S. A. 1998. Folk biology and the anthropology of science: Cognitive universals and cultural particulars. Behavioral and Brain Sciences 21(4): 547609. Atran, S. A. 2002. In gods we trust. The evolutionary landscape of religion. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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