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Cultural contexts for global forces

Cultural contexts for global forces

Ryan Schram
ANTH 2700: Key debates in anthropology
ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au
Social Sciences Building 410 (A02)
Week of April 12, 2021 (Week 6)

Slides available at http://anthro.rschram.org/2700/2021/6

Main reading: Englund and Leach (2000)

Flux and order: Two frames for human life

Anthropology has changed a lot from the early 20th century to now, but the changes reveal a deeper tension between two ways of seeing society and social forces:

Universalism and particularism

Both flux and order are part of the culture concept as an explanation of human diversity.

This is not the flux of historical change; This is an argument that seeks to show that people do not have a constant, universal essence, but are defined by their capacity to be molded by their social environment.

This is the critical edge of the culture concept. It challenges the dominant explanations of human behavior.

Continuity and change

Anthropology also seeks to discover a logos that would supercede the explanations based on individual biology and psychology.

Implied in the critical edge of the culture concept is the universal claim that all people are incomplete without the input of culture.

Arguably this is an essentialization of human difference that denies the contradictions that human societies produce in history.

(A lesser argument against the synchronic, holist logos is the claim that individuals have agency.)

Old and new

Things change. But so what? Why is it that in some societies, change is so important?

The emphasis on change is culturally conditioned in Western societies:

Narrative and metanarrative

Culture gives its members a set of narratives—metanarratives—that they apply to themselves as specific instances of a general type.

Modernity is a metanarrative

“Like sands through the hour glass, so are the days of our lives.”

If modernity is a meta-narrative, who are its stock characters?

Who is the hero?

Who is the villain?

What is a type of person?

Auhelawa: Yams are people too

References and further reading

Englund, Harri, and James Leach. 2000. “Ethnography and the Meta‐Narratives of Modernity.” Current Anthropology 41 (2): 225–48. https://doi.org/10.1086/ca.2000.41.issue-2.