02/22/11

Innocent Anthropology?

Gerald Sider is well known for his critical commentary on both the failure of anthropological practice and the simultaneous possibility that an anthropological eye has for noting the potential for progressive engagement through critique. The blog, Zero Anthropology, picks up a recent article by Sider and presents a critically supportive reading of Sider’s attack on naive anthropology.

My thanks to the new magazine, AnthroNow, for placing the article by Gerald M. Sider online in its current issue (vol. 1, no. 1, April 2009), titled: “Can Anthropology Ever Be Innocent“. This turned out to be quite a valuable and relevant article for me, in helping me to reconfigure what ethnography can mean, and what it might look like, in the shadow of the national security state and the so-called “long war against extremism” (which, of course, exculpates American state extremism). My sole function below is to produce a list of the sections I extracted that strike me in particular as most important to my own work, with occasional commentary. Sider’s words are in block quotes, and all bolding is mine unless otherwise noted.

Read the full post from Zero Anthropology Blog here.

12/22/10

Reading Eric R. Wolf -Envisioning Power (1999)

Eric R. Wolf is one of those anthropologists that I believe every aspiring (and active) anthropologist should read and be familiar with.  Wolf’s academic career spanned the last half of the 20th century into the early 21st.   He was an approachable, detailed, and caring teacher.  He was a consummate academic with an encyclopedic approach to detail.  He was also a theorist on a grand scale.

This commentary focuses on the last book he published prior to his death: Envisioning Power: Ideologies of Dominance and Power.    My focus is not a review or summary, but to highlight an approach to reading this text.  One of the things that I have discovered in teaching this and related books a propensity for readers to jump to criticism before they have achieved comprehension.  Wolf is particularly helpful as he provides guidance to his readers within his text.

There are many ways to read a text.  We can read it for entertainment, for information, for self-growth and learning, to undermine it, or to assimilate it as our own.  We can also misread a text, miss the point, or find ourselves unable to read it. Rarely, of course, do we exclusively rely on only one way of reading a text.  It is more likely that we employ some combination of all of them.  Consider the following quotes:

“For clarity’s sake, I shall refer to this group (the four tribes of Kwakiutl who inhabited the village of Tsaxis adjacent to Fort Rupert) as Kwakiult or Tsaxis Kwakiutl, and to the Kwakwala speakers in general as Kwakwaka’wakw.  Expunging ‘Kwakiutl’ from the literature altogether seems counterproductive” (Wolf 1999:69).

“Human sacrifice was in many ways central to Aztec political and ritual life, and any discussion of that life must come to grips with this phenomenon.  In engaging this issue, I intend neither to denigrate the Aztecs in order to justify their conquest by the Spaniards nor to defend them against accusations of cruelty and inhumanity. . . .  The anthropologist’s task should be neither to exalt nor to condone but to explain” (Wolf 1999:133-134).

“What the National Socialists wrought is, without doubt, a cause of moral outrage, but outrage is not enough.  It is vital that we gain an analytic purchase on what transpired, precisely because it embodied a possibility for humankind, and what was once humanly possible can happen again”  (Wolf 1999:197).

Each of the above quotes instructs you, the reader, on how to read the substantive material that follows in each of the case study chapters.  Eric Wolf recognizes that there are issues and debates that are important in each of these respective domains.  He affirms the concerns of contemporary Kwakwaka’wakw, he notes the controversy over Aztec cannibalism, and the moral outrage one should feel concerning the human genocide of the Nazis.  But, and this is important, he then asks the reader to set aside concern with these issues and instead to focus on the connections between power and ideas.

We could, for example, focus on the structure of Wolf as ‘text.’ We could highlight his use of an omniscient, authoritative voice –the voice of the expert.  We could micro analyze his source material to ferret out errors, misconceptions, oversights, or slips of minor fact or detail.  We might even identify his underlying assumptions or axiomatic principles, declare them flawed, and proceed to discount all that follows.  While this is all fair game in the contentious halls of the academe it will ultimately turn us away from the task at hand: that is, to identify the key points that the author asks us to understand.

So then what can we say about Wolf’s key points, his main concern?  What kernel of truth lies within his discussion of Kwakwaka’wakw, their understanding of the cosmos, and their social organization?

First, it is important to hold in one’s mind the following comments:

  • “. . . we must not fall into the trap of thinking of them as bearers of some primordial culture, frozen in a moment outside ordinary time” (Wolf 1999:74).
  • “To think of Kwakiutl as bearers of a changeless cultural pattern is particularly inappropriate, since their existential conditions have changed in major ways since the times of first contact on the coast in 1774, when a Spanish ship encountered Haida” (Wolf 1999:74).
  • “If Kwakwaka’wakw society and culture have varied over the course of historical time and have also shown the internal variability due to social differentiation at any one time, then it has also become less easy to speak of one cultural personality (Wolf 1999:81)

Here Wolf is reminding us that no people, no culture, no society exists either in isolation from other societies or in a static unchanging form.   By recognizing and affirming the reality of social change through time Wolf is according a form of respect to the Kwakwaka’wakw that social commentators from Boas to Levis-Straus failed to extend (see, Wolf 1999:74-81).  This is important both in terms of an implicit critique of much contemporary scholarship and as an important foundation to Wolf’s analysis later in the chapter.

Wolf also discusses two aspects of the data collected:  it’s reliance upon the chiefly class and its minimalist approach to women:

  • “Since controlling and enacting myths and rituals were largely the prerogatives of chiefs and nobles, what these texts reveal to us is primarily the discourse of chiefs and nobility, and to a minimal degree the doings of commoners”  (Wolf 1999:73).   It is important to point out, as Wolf does, that this lack was not due to neglect but rather it was due “to the difficulty of obtaining information on commoners.  When Boas urged Hunt to collect data on the names and rights of common people, because ‘they are just as important as those of people of high blood,’  Hunt replied that this was ‘hard to get for they shame to talk about themselves’”(Wolf 1999:73).
  • “The texts are also minimally informative about the lives of Kwakiutl women. . . . these texts note gender differentiation in activities but leave them unexplored. . . . But what women did and thought was not explored in their own terms, and their informal roles received no attention” (Wolf 1999:73).

One could also add to this a silence on the participation of Kwakwaka’wakw in the growing industrial economy.  Though glimpses of this life can be found in the archives of the colonial state.  Later historical anthropologists, such as Rolf Knight, have sketched out in more detail the involvement of indigenous people in the industrial economy, but for the most part this is an area that has been ignored.  The fact that Wolf attempts to place the Kwakwaka’wakw into history and explores their active participation, resistance, and  accommodation to a new economic order sets Wolf’s work apart from all but a small fraternity of social commentators.

11/13/10

Gerald Sider

I first met Gerald Sider in person at a UofT symposium (delightfully held in the then headquarters of the Communist Party of Canada) in the late 1980s.  But I first read his amazing book about Newfoundland (Anthropology and History, Culture and Class: A Newfoundland Illustration) while an undergraduate at Simon Fraser University some years before that. The combined experience led me to head south to New York to study with Gerald at the City University of New York where I completed my doctorate.

The following overview of Gerald’s work comes from a piece I wrote for the Rutledge biographical dictionary of Anthropologists.

Gerald Sider focuses on the critique, elaboration, and explication of key concepts such as culture and class and their implications for peoples’ everyday life struggles.    Linking field research with political activism and theorizing, Sider challenges anthropologists to conceptualize their commitments to those studied in ways that engenders a creative antagonism between those who ‘just want to get on with it’ and solve the world’s problems and others who remain locked in the ethereal worlds of text, theory, and reflection.  Sider is able to span  both domains and sidestep a binary either/or thereby creating a new way forward for anthropology.

Sider’s work is notable for the way he picks up a concept, elaborates upon it via close ethnographic description, and ultimately stretches it beyond its normal configuration.  Whether he is critiquing the notion of resistance, the everyday, or exploring the implications of hegemony for fisherfolk in Newfoundland, his underlying concern revolves around issues of power within a capitalist social formation.

In Becoming History, for example, the concept of hegemony is a central link between production and of culture and appropriation of labour.  Here hegemony is taken up and twisted in a way that reveals the ways in which a people actively participate in their own oppression while simultaneously creating a space of resistance.   In doing this  Sider avoids the pitfalls of a mechanical materialism. He carefully explicates the interconnections between the production of culture, the making of class, and the historical movements of appropriation that have resulted in the Newfoundland we know today.

Living Indian Histories artfully combines the sensibilities of experimental post-modernism  –locating the researcher within the narrative flow—without undermining the impact of his political economic historical anthropology.  Underlying his writing is a concern with making anthropology relevant, not for those in places of power, but relevant in ways that can contribute to a better world for all (exemplified by his co-editorship, with K. Dombrowski, of Nebraska Press’  Fourth World Rising series). Ultimately, Sider’s  work is premised upon an optimism of the will which takes issue with the nihilism of late 20th century anthropology.

Key Publications

Living Indian Histories: The Lumbee and Tuscarora People in North Carolina (Second, revised edition of Lumbee Indian Histories: Race, Ethnicity and Indian Identity in the Southern United States. New York: Cambridge University Press 1993) University of North Carolina Press. 2003

Becoming History, Becoming Tomorrow: Making and breaking everyday life in rural Newfoundland.    (Second, revised edition of Culture and Class in Anthropology and History New York: Cambridge  1986). Peterborough, Ont.  Broadview Press Encore Editions. 2003.

edited with Gavin Smith.  Between History and Histories: The production of silences and commemorations. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 1997.

“Cleansing History: Lawrence, Massachusetts, the strike for four loaves of bread and no roses, and the anthropology of working class consciousness” Radical History Review 65, March 1996. (with responses by David Montgomery, Paul Buhle, Christine Stansell, Ardis Cameron, and reply).

Recent Books

Skin for Skin: Death and Life for Inuit and Innu. Duke University Press. 2014.

Race Becomes Tomorrow: North Carolina and the Shadow of Civil Rights. Duke University Press. 2015.