Title: American Anthropology as Foreign Policy
1American Anthropology as Foreign Policy
- John Borneman
- Cornell University
Presented by David Woo English 363-002 Film Dr.
Peter Britos 5 December 2005
2Branchings of Disciplines
3Cultural Studies
- Text-based movement taking politicized culture as
object of study - Philology originally focused on cultural studies
- English returning to CS from more traditional
objects of language and high culture literary
products. - Anthropologists focused heavily on CS in past 80
years
4Anthropology Currently
- Interested in texts, literary criticism, high
culture literary products but interest not
oriented toward reincorporation of language and
high culture literary products - English and cultural studies programs dominate
disciplinary high ground right to name, define,
explain subject in debates and definitions of
cultural - The poor anthropologists are miffed assuming
their line of work holds CS prerogatives
however, literary and CS territories never
anthropologys
5Foreign and Domestic Policy
- English engaged in modeling domestic policy
- Anthropology differs by focusing on modeling
foreign policy - This dialectic rather simplistic but necessary in
order to show ideological and political functions
over time - Anthropologys role in constituting international
order continually revised by processes of group
formation - Borneman concerned about state of Anthropology
definition and powers exercised thereof
6Domestic Policy English Literature and Language
7Toby Maguire and father monologue from literature
in Seabiscuit (depression era)
8Development of English Dept
- English depts. developed post US Civil War
- American universities instead taught Greek/Roman
classics, rhetoric, and oratory instead to teach
the boys the golden passages in Shakespeare and
the poets - Goal of literature studies then to produce
gentlemen, impart enjoyment of lit and
pedagogical values of taste - Literary studies a novel concept
9Canon and Divisions
- Canonical texts model proposed at last quarter of
19th C - Focus of canon to democratize and civilize rather
than socialize the elite class - Extreme divisions post Civil War
- North v. South
- Industrial laborers v. privileged elites
- New immigrants v. more established Americans
- Employers v. employees
- City v. country
10Class Disputes
- Literatures institutionalization happened during
ideological arguments and class realignments away
from public view - Some argued teaching of English language for
constructive benefits of overcoming social
divisions and creating national unity - Others argued literary education should remain
an instrument of political education, a means
of keeping the lower orders in check
11Even feminist texts such as Charlotte Brontes
Jane Eyre are problematized for racist,
imperialist, colonialist, and even anti-feminist
ideology
12Class Disputes
- While postwar reforms promoted democracy,
humanities education in English depts. remained
nondemocratic canon used to distinguish elite
and vulgar - Canon created and reaffirmed exclusions
- Ex. Black, women, gay
- Even White American authors, such as Emerson
until 1909 - Fiction and novel
13American English Depts. as Political Fields
- Models for domestic social relations proposed,
debated, and ultimately institutionalized in
academy between - Native and alien
- Rich and poor
- Law and order
- Labor and capital
- Correct speech and slang
- Relevance and irrelevance
14Politics and Education
- Americas rise as world power with large middle
class in 20th C defined the West by excluding
non-West - US higher education mediated between
corporate/state executives and society
different from Europe - Current multiculturalism due to reactions
- Changing American demography
- Collective power and sources of cultural capital
- Stratification patterns
15Repositioning Anthropology to Its History
16Subject of Study
- Anthropology as four fields but this approach
disputed - Biology
- Archaeology
- Ethnology
- Linguistics
17Domestic Anthropology
- America/Canadas salvage operation Recovery of
Indian Culture - Contributions to discourses of race, poverty,
cultural integrity, immigration, urbanization,
organization of labor - however, these contributions part of a
supranational discourse often written by
foreign-born anthropologists and provoked by the
geographic movements of peoples and world
economic crises
18In-Group/Out-Group
- Anthropologys work more to map global categories
of Otherness, rather than map national social
structure, thus Anthro form of foreign policy - Foreign v. Native
- Anthropology subfields
- Linguistics language and migration
- Archaeology prehistory or quest for spatial
origins - Biological racial difference and origin
- Ethnology/Sociocultural contemporary habits and
diffusion from originary primitive state
19Americas Foreign
- Indian foreigner constructed in White
Americas construct of national image, at least
through 1870 - Through expropriation of native lands and
liquidation of natives - Foreign space mapping predates anthropology
- Americas statement as being isolationist/neutral
(re Thomas Jefferson) internationally, yet
activist foreign policies (re treatment of
Indians in isolationist period)
20Political Economy
21Early Indian Treatment
- Indians viewed as sovereign nations under US
trust relationship but a century of war and
hostility follows these decrees - Obviated in civilizing of Indians including
unethical expropriation of lands - 1796 mid 19th C
22Mid 19th C
- Europes sovereign territorial states contrasted
with Indians lack of territorial organization
caused a US Justice to call Indians a domestic
dependent nation rather than foreign state in
1831 - Sovereign in some areas, States wards in others
- Sovereign status contested
- OIA moved from War Department to Dept. of
Interior in 1849, but still affected by military
23Citizenship
- 1924 all Indians became US citizens
- Before then, Indians married whites, performed
military service, and fell under treaties to
obtain citizen status - Indian identity continued, and with limited
sovereignty - Late 19th C saw pacification of Indians, and
they remained separated, demarcating foreign
24Post WWII
- US becomes global superpower and conducts
anthropology researching in South Seas and Africa - Modernization Theory became the US global
strategy in relations to Third World, including
Indians - Identity politics questions who Indians are,
imposing measurements of blood quantum - Affected who got the benefits, ex. fishing and
water rights, land claims, education policy
25Race
26Categorizing
- Proto-race categories employed
- Pilgrim, Teutonic, Aryan, Saxon, American
Citizen - Countered Tribe or Indian
27Assimilation
- Assimilation/Acculturation goal of Government
- Resisted by many minority groups dealing with
identity recovery worldwide - What to define Indian Otherness as posed
problem because of challenges to its inherent
limits, and to the definition of White Self
28Alterity
- Anthropologys object to define Indians
alterity/Otherness - Post Civil War America became more aware of
heterogeneity with inclusion of many
ethnicity/class/immigrant/ex-slave categories
29Cultural Differences and Political Boundaries
30BIA
- Bureau of Indian Affairs
- Agents studied, controlled, interacted with
Indians to prevent final extinction due to
racial inferiority (re Rabbit Proof Fence)
311887 Dawes Act
- Provision that assumed capitalism/private
ownership of property, by stripping communal
practices, would educate, Christianize, and
civilize Indians
32American Imperial Policies
- Cooperation of Dept. of Interior, State, and Navy
in Micronesia findings to democratize region and
peoples
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