Title: Neo-Evolutionism and Cultural Ecology
1Neo-Evolutionism and Cultural Ecology
- A major theoretical shift occurred in American
anthropology in the late 1940s and 1950s - antievolutionary perspective of the Boasian
school competes with the new and more
sophisticated evolutionary approaches of Julian
Steward and Leslie White - similarities between cultures could be explained
by parallel adaptations to similar natural
environments - not all societies passed through similar stages
of cultural development i.e. unilineal models of
evolution were too sweeping.
2Julian Haynes Steward 1902 - 1972
- central figure in the introduction of ecological
concepts into social and cultural anthropology - cultural ecology
- Multilinear Evolution
3Cultural Ecology
Cultural Ecology is the study of the processes
by which a society adapts to its environment.
Its principle problem is to determine whether
these adaptations initiate internal social
transformations of evolutionary change 1968
43 basic steps for a cultural ecological
investigation
- Analysis of the relationship between the material
culture and the natural resources - the behaviour patterns involved in the
exploitation of a particular area by means of a
particular technology must be analyzed e.g..
Solitary hunter or group - how behaviour patterns entailed in exploiting the
environment affect other aspects of culture
This three step approach identifies the cultural
core the constellation of features which are
most closely related to subsistence activities
and economic arrangements
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6Shoshone Women with large baskets for carrying
gear and collecting wild foods, flat baskets for
preparing seeds and nuts. In the Great Basin
Desert circa 1868.
7- Cultures that shared similar core features
belonged to the same culture type - Having identified these culture types Steward
then compared and sorted them into a hierarchy
arranged by complexity - Stewards original ranking was family,
multifamily and state-level societies - These categories were later refined by his
followers into band, tribe chiefdom and state.
8 Band ? Tribe ? Chiefdom ? Ag. State ?
Industrial State
Hallmarks of Difference
-Centralized
-Decentralized
Band -H/G -mobile
-kinship -egalitarian
Tribe -Hort./pastoralist -Complex kinship
-Headman -warfare
- Chiefdom
- Intermediate b/w tribe
- and bureaucratic govts.
- -1 (or gt1) descent group
- gains dominance
- -hierarchical ? social strata
- - 1,000s ? 10,000s
Ag. States -bureaucratic govt -dense
populations (urban) -food surpluses
-many economic roles
-writing systems
-public works (labor)
-10,000s ? Million(s)
Chief any individual who held leadership role
in a non-western, stateless society
9Multilinear evolution
- Cross-cultural parallels in social patterns could
be explained as adaptations to similar
environments - Steward proposed cultural parallels due to
adaptation rather than historical diffusion or
migration - i.e. Multilinear evolution focuses on the
evolution of specific cultures without assuming
that all cultures follow the same evolutionary
process - Avoids the twin traps of particularism and
historicism. - Particular societies are seen as the product of
unique historical trajectories, while
simultaneously recognizing that
similarly-organized social groups in similar
physical environments will often undergo similar
evolutionary processes
10Multilinear evolution
- compared the development patterns in 5
independent centers of ancient civilization
Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, Mesoamerica and the
Andes - these centers showed parallels of form, function
and sequence based on having developed in arid
and semi-arid environments in which the economic
basis was irrigation and flood-water agriculture - Agriculture produced f ood surpluses which
allowed for non-subsistence activities and
population growth - When population growth reached the limits of
agricultural productivity competition over
natural r esources intensified, warfare ensued,
and political leadership shifted from temple
priest to warrior king - As some communities prospered and others
suffered, empires were forged that instituted
string political controls over vast regions
11Leslie White (19001978)
central theorist in the resuscitation of
evolutionary theory in anthropology
12- For White, the predominant themes of cultural
evolution (as manifest in human history) were - increasing energy-capture per capita
- increasing complexity of material and social
culture - increasing predictability and security of life
- Hence, culture was, first and foremost, practical
and useful - And this pointed the way to its scientific
interpre-tation, which was utilitarian
Cultures could be compared objectively in terms
of energy-capture and complexity
13Materialism versus Idealism 2 opposite
philosophical approaches, underlying 2
corresponding opposed theoretical tendencies in
anthropological theory
- MATERIALISTS hold that the proper way to make
sense of human social and cultural phenomena is
to analyze them broadly as natural systems and in
terms of their material conditions - e.g. , how particular social and cultural systems
relate to their environment i.e. how they
transform it, extract energy from it, distribute
the captured energy among their members, and
dominate (encapsulate and absorb) one another - in this analysis, the members own mental
concepts and ideas are treated as dependent
variables that is, they are passive reflections
in human consciousness of material processes, and
not autonomous causal forces in their own right
14IDEALISM idealists hold that human cultures are
shaped primarily by processes of shared human
consciousness, ideation, and imagination
processes which cannot be reduced to purely
material causes
15Marvin Harris 1927-2001
1979 Cultural Materialism The Struggle for a
Science of Culture
- culture a system of energy-transfer between
nature and human populations (use of standard
energy measures calories, horse-power - cultures viewed as systems of energy transfer and
redistribution
- By focusing on observable, measurable phenomena,
cultural materialism presents an etic approach
16Cultural Materialism is based on two key
assumptions about societies. First, the various
parts of society are interrelated. When one part
of society changes, other parts must also change.
This means that an institution, such as the
family cannot be looked at in isolation from the
economic, political, or religious institutions of
a society. When one part changes it has an
effect on other parts of the system.
17The second assumption of CM is that the
foundation of the sociocultural system is the
environment.
18Environment
- Like all living organisms, Humans must draw
energy from their environment. - The environment is limited in terms of the amount
of energy and raw material it contains. - The need to draw energy out of the environment
in order to satisfy the biological needs of its
people is the first and central task of any
society - Therefore, each society must ultimately exist
within the constraints imposed by its
environment.
19Basic Premise Cultural Materialism is "...based
on the simple premise that human social life is a
response to the practical problems of earthly
existence..."
that a society's mode of production (technology
and work patterns, especially in regard to food)
and mode of reproduction (population level and
growth) in interaction with the natural
environment has profound effects on sociocultural
stability and change.
20- A good deal of Harris' work, therefore, is
concerned with explaining cultural systems
(norms, ideologies, values, beliefs) and
widespread social institutions and practices
through the use of population, production, and
ecological variables. - Throughout his books, Marvin Harris uses cultural
materialist theories to explain a wide variety of
cultural phenomenon - food taboos,
- Christianity,
- male supremacy and
- warfare.
21Example the sacred cow phenomenon in the
Indian subcontinent
- a firmly-established culture complex of ideas
and practices linked to Hinduism, based on the
cultural premise of the sacred status of cattle
as symbols of holiness - cattle are kept and cows dominate the physical
landscape, even of densely populated urban
neighborhoods
22- cattle utilized as a source of milk, butter,
traction, and dung (fuel) but the meat is not
consumed (inefficient usage of resources, by
Western standards)
- Idealist interpretation a distinctive complex of
ideas which grew up and became institutionalized,
following an inner symbolic logic which
requires to be understood in (emic) cultural
terms - set of related ideas, developed by Brahmans
(priestly class), using the cow as a symbol for
an entire social ethic involving ideas of purity,
vegetarianism - the practices follow from the ideas
23- why for a Hindu is beef taboo, whereas in Canada
and the U.S.A. and most of the Western world is
it considered to be a very honorific and
delicious food - it is inadequate to say Hindus dont consume beef
because their religion prohibits it. - This is no explanation, you also have to ask, why
Hinduism has this kind of reverence for cattle
but Islam, Judaism, and Christianity do not
24- Materialist interpretation a cultural complex
adapted to a specific ecological setting
characterized by plow agriculture and vast
populations - require oxen (castrated male cattle) to draw
plows in chronic short supply
25- also, cows convert marginally useful resources
(garbage, odd patches of grass) into useful
resources (milk, butter, dung) - the ideology grew up to support the practice,
which was ecologically necessary to sustain the
vast population
26- Materialists place the stress on the analytical
priority of the material factors (functions)
over the ideological factors... - do not deny that an ideology of the sacred cow
emerged and flourished - but take the position that the ideology is the
dependent variable (the effect), while the
overall ecological adaptation is the independent
variable (the cause) - folk models usually reverse the sequence of
causation and hence folk models are rarely
adequate accounts of any situation
27Critique
- can we be so dismissive of the informants emic
viewpoint if culture is rooted in values and
meanings held by individuals? - What does it say about individual free will and
purpose - oversimplification via reduction
- Is it ethnocentric
- Postmodernists view science is itself a
culturally determined phenomenon that is affected
by class, race and other structural and
infrastructural variables - Do all food taboos have functional explanations
are such explanations intrinsically more
satisfying than symbolic ones
28 CLAUDELÉVI-STRAUSS 1908 -
29- He proposed that the proper study for
anthropologists is not how people categorize the
world (not the content of cultures) but the
underlying patterns of human thought that produce
those categories
- The way we segment things and impose structure on
inherently formless phenomena (like space and
time) reflect deeply held structure from our
minds - L-S believes that the underlying logical
processes that structure all human thought
operate within different cultural contexts - Consequently, cultural phenomena eg. Kinship,
myth, religon, are not identical but they are the
products of an underlying universal pattern of
thought. - His anthropology centres on the search to uncover
this pattern. - for Lévi-Strauss, the subject matter of
anthropology is Culture, not cultures
(although the fact that there are cultures is
useful as a method to investigate Culture)
30- compare dozens of variant versions of the same
basic narrative collected over a wide area e.g.
the origin of the sexes the origin of initiation - look for basic structures, typically expressed as
oppositions upstream/downstream sky/earth
dark/light - relate particular oppositions to wider and
universal ones (e.g. nature/culture)
31Linguistic Analogy
- The important aspects of linguistics for LS were
- The shift of linguistic focus from conscious
behaviour to unconscious structure - Most speakers of a language cannot articulate the
underlying rules that structure their use of
phonemes and create meaningful communication yet
all are able to use language to communicate - The idea of binary contrasts which was
fundamental to structuralism - words are built upon contrasts (binary
oppositions) between phonemes rather than simply
being groups of sounds. e.g. the minimal pair
bat, pat - The new focus on the relations between terms
rather than on terms.
32- LS argued that women are a commodity that could
be exchanged, and kinship systems are about the
exchange of women - LS argued that one of the most important
distinctions a human makes is between self and
others. - Defining the categories of potential spouses and
prohibited mates. - This natural binary distinction leads to the
formation of the incest taboo, which necessitates
choosing spouses from outside your family - In this way the binary distinction between kin
and non-kin is resolved by the reciprocal
exchange of women and formation of kin networks
in primitive societies.
33- Primary Opposition is Nature versus Culture
- Culture appropriates matter from nature and
reorganizes it - Culture Nature Raw Cooked
- binary oppositions are reflected in various
cultural institutions
34Critique
- theories are often very abstract and untestable.
- methods imprecise and dependent upon the observer
- As it is primarily concerned with the structure
of the human psyche, it does not address
historical aspects or change in culture - a psychic unity of all human minds does not
account for individual human action historically.
- lack of concern with human individuality.
35- Symbolic or Interpretive Anthropology
- 1960s 1970s general reevaluation of cultural
anthropology as a scientific enterprise - From function to meaning
- from materialist theories to idealist theories
- shift toward issues of culture and interpretation
and away from grand theories - increased emphasis on the way in which individual
actions creatively shape culture
36- Most symbolicists would agree on these two
points - culture is, fundamentally, a symbolic system and
so analysis of cultural symbols provides the
natural point of entrée into a cultural universe - If culture is symbolic then it follows that it is
used to create and convey meanings since that is
the purpose of symbols. - If meanings are the end products of culture then
understanding culture requires understanding the
meanings of its creators and users
37- Victor Turner
- Scottish social anthropologist, 19201983
- 1950-54 fieldwork among the Ndembu of Zambia
- but central career interest symbolic
anthropology - mainly concerned with cultural symbols or (in
his term) ritual symbols
- objects which have more or less generally shared
meanings within a culture - Milk Tree for Ndembu
- Cross for Christians
38A milk tree' growing in the compound of a Senior
Chief in southern Zambia. Regarded as feminine by
the inhabitants of the compound, the milk tree
twines as a palpable dependent on its deciduous
masculine' host.
Many Bantu peoples strongly associated this tree
with womanhood because of the thick white,
milk-like sap which the live wood exudes when
cut.
39A fresh cut in the milk tree showing the milky
white sap that gives the tree its common name
40Novicesdaubedwith clay
41Last day ofmukanda initiates don new clothes
and dance in public for first time as men
42A fresh, bright scarlet cut on a blood tree' in
Kangaba, Mali marked that wood as masculine
43Clifford Geertz 1926-
- 1950 Meets Margaret Mead and decides enrolls in
anthropology at Harvard - 1952-54 to Java as part of a research team with
the explicit goal of improving economic growth - 1973 The Interpretation of Cultures
44Thick Description Toward and Interpretive Theory
of Culture
The concept of culture I espouseis essentially
a semiotic one. Believing, with Max Weber, that
man is an animal suspended in webs of
significance he himself has spun, I take cultures
to be those webs, and the analysis of it to be
therefore not an experimental science in search
of law, but an interpretive one in search of
meaning. (Geertz 19735)
45Geertz Interpretive Anthropology PREMISE man
is an animal suspended in webs of significance he
himself has spun and our name for those webs is
culture CONCLUSION the analysis of it
therefore is not an experimental science in
search of law but an interpretive one in search
of meaning
46THICK DESCRIPTION
A wink or a twitch
47between what Ryle calls the "thin description"
of what the rehearser (parodist, winker, twitcher
. . .) is doing (rapidly contracting his right
eyelids) and The "thick description" of what he
is doing ("practicing a burlesque of a friend
faking a wink to deceive an innocent into
thinking a conspiracy is in motion") lies the
object of ethnography a stratified hierarchy of
meaningful structures in terms of which twitches,
winks, fake-winks, parodies, rehearsals of
parodies are produced, perceived, and interpreted
- Unraveling and identifying those context and
meanings requires thick description. - Geertz argues that this is precisely what
ethnographic writing does
48...ethnography is thick description. What the
ethnographer is in fact faced with except when
(as of course, he must do) he is pursuing the
more automatized routines of data collection is
a multiplicity of complex conceptual structures,
many of them superimposed upon or knotted into
one another, which are at once strange,
irregular, and inexplicit, and which he must
contrive somehow first to grasp and then to
render...
49Deep Play The Balinese Cockfight
50- It is not just cocks that are fighting but men
- Cocks are masculine symbols
- The word cock is used metaphorically to mean
bachelor, lady-killer, tough guy etc
51- The Balinese cockfight, is fundamentally a
dramatization of status concerns. - nothing really happens at a cockfight.
52- The conflicts, alliances, wins and losses are all
symbolic of things that happen elsewhere. - In the cockfight all action is symbolic.
- The real causes lie elsewhere, presumably in
material circumstances.
53Questions
- If cultural knowledge is inherently interpretive,
how can we invalidate the truth of an
interpretation since there are potentially as
many true interpretations as there are members of
a culture? - I.e. If ethnography is interpretation how can we
know that interpretation is correct. - Most of us cannot go to Bali or northern Morocco
and check the interpretation - if all such claims are equally valid, then the
most anthropology can hope for is to create a
rich documentary of multiple interpretations,
none denied and none privileged. - This means that it cannot be a science since it
cannot generalize from truth statements or tests
the statements against empirical data the nature
of culture precludes this
54- Geertz triggered a profound rethinking of the
anthropological enterprise - forced anthropologists to become aware of the
cultural contexts they interpret and the
ethnographic texts they create. - He is also touched off a major debate in about
the fundamental nature of anthropology - These Issues arose against a backdrop of a
changing world and world view - As independence movements transformed former
colonial subjects into new national citizens,
intergroup conflicts intensified as power was
reconfigured and new governments exerted their
control
55THE DECOLONIZATION DISCOURSE
- For the first time, Anthropology directly
criticized as the handmaid of colonialism... - assisting in the pacification of peoples
- use of ethnographic information about them in
their own subjugation - providing justifications for the colonial system
561978 Orientalism
- scathing analysis of Western scholarship on the
Middle East - this scholarship an ideological tool of
domination - the West creates a simplistic stereotype of the
Orient and subsequent scholarship studies not the
Orient but rather reaffirms the stereotype - the other presented as timeless, changeless,
essentialized (in contrast to Westerners concept
of themselves as individuals in particular
historical contexts) - the power relationship between the constructing
subject and constructed object ignored
Edward Saïd
57- ORIENTALISM
- ignores the variability of Middle Eastern society
and substitutes a single mentality to stand for
the Orient - evidence selected to fit the schema and contrary
evidence ignored - the construction of an Other, not like
ourselves, but fundamentally different - The oriental of Western scholarship is
constructed as exotic, driven by hidebound
Tradition, thinks differently from ourselves,
is envious of the West, but at the same time
incapable of shuffling off the (sometimes rather
charming) superstitions which make his society
backward - Subtext he needs our help to attain his full
potential
58- Postmodernism
- literally means after modernity
- An extremely diffuse concept
- Provided a major focus of debate and commentary
- Postmodernists challenge modernist assertions
- believe that objective neutral knowledge of
another culture, or any aspect of the world is
impossible
59Postmodernist view of Fieldwork
- Fieldwork is crucial in the creation of
ethnographic texts. - anthropologists can never be unbiased observers
of all that goes on in culture - Fieldworkers must of necessity be in specific
places at specific times. - As a result they see some things and not others
- The particular circumstances of fieldwork, the
political context in which it occurs, the
investigators preferences and predilections, and
the people met by chance or design all condition
the understanding of society that results.
60Postmodernist view of ethnography
- Writing ethnography is the primary means by which
anthropologists convey their interpretations of
other cultures - Traditionally written as if the anthropologist
was a neutral, omniscient observer - Postmodernists claim that because the collection
of anthropological data is subjective, it is not
possible to analyze the data objectively. - Postmodernists question the validity of the
authors interpretations over competing
alternatives - And examine the literary techniques used in the
writing of ethnographies
61- Throughout the history of anthropology
anthropologists have claimed to be authorities on
other cultures - this claim fortified with emphasizing the
mystique of fieldwork and by explaining other
cultures to their audiences through written
descriptions. - The hermeneutic and deconstructionist approaches
led many anthropologists to ask a variety of
questions about the relationship between the
ethnographic texts and the fieldwork experience
upon which those texts are based. - the filtering of exotic otherness through the
constructions of social theory is exposed as a
literary excursion disguised as scientific
reportage
62- Ethnographies have traditionally followed some
basic literary conventions - rather than saying I am writing my
interpretation of what the natives were doing
authors claim to represent the native point of
view. - But the anthropologist chooses who speaks for the
society and in his or her translation of the
native language decides what words are presented
to the audience. - Writers also claim to describe completely other
cultures or societies, even though
anthropologists actually know only the part of a
culture that they personally experience
63- Ethnographic authority was characteristic of the
Modern it was the official narrative
explaining the significance of the antecedent
cultures out of which the National-State cultures
of the Modern era were composed - Its tools monographs, museums, and research
institutes. example, at major museums like the
American Museum of Natural History, authoritative
accounts of Polynesian cultures are determined by
the curator - The whole represented by a few artifacts
selected by the curator, usually with an eye to
the predominantly Western aesthetics of the
audience...
James Clifford
64Postmodernity in Anthropology therefore has
focused on 1. an examination of the power
relations according to which the Other has been
constructed 2. examinations of the rhetorical
devices and preoccupations of ethnographers
themselves
65REFLEXIVITY
- With what to replace objectivity?
- Consensus solution reflexivity not the
unintentional mirroring of the authors culture
in a descriptive work about the Other, but a
self-aware reflexivity - detailed disclosure of the terms and conditions
of the fieldwork - discussion of interpersonal relationships with
informants that led to acquisition of the
knowledge reported - self-analysis of authors motives, agendas, and
self-doubts - the knowledge presented situated in terms of how
the ethnographer collected it
- reflexive ethnographies tend to read more like
diaries or autobiographies than the conventional
ethnographic genre
66- Renato Rosaldo, Ilongot headhunting, 18831974
- Ilongot explanation of headhunting
- He says that rage, born of grief, impels him to
kill his fellow human beings. He claims he needs
a place to carry his anger The act of severing
and tossing away the victims head enables him,
he says, to vent and, he hopes, to throw away the
anger of his bereavement... To him grief, rage,
and headhunting go together in a self-evident
manner.
October 1981 Michelle loses footing on steep
trail, falls to her death...
LUZON, PHILIPPINES
67Immediately on finding her body I became
enraged. How could she abandon me? How could she
have been so stupid as to fall. I tried to cry. I
sobbed, but rage blocked the tears... This anger
in a number of forms, has swept over me on a
number of occasions since then, lasting hours and
even days at a time...
In other words, his own subjective experience
(and not any amount of reasoning) enabled him to
grasp the connection between grief and rage...
and only by alluding to the personal account of
Michelle Rosaldos death could he communicate it
to the reader
68- Critiques of Postmodernism
- Taken to its logical extreme postmodernism comes
close to turning anthropology into a sub field of
literature. - If all writing is nothing more than
interpretations of interpretations then
ethnography is fiction - And no conclusions can ultimately be reached
about anything - anthropology is a representational genre rather
than a clearly bounded scientific domain
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