modernity
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# Modernity # | # Modernity # | ||
- | The idea of modernity is a pervasive, pernicious error. There is no such thing as modernity | + | When many people discuss social change, they tend to use a particular language which sounds neutral, but actually has a lot of baggage. One example of this is the "TED talk" given by Steven Pinker and [[1002: |
- | | + | In fact, they aren' |
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- | * Societies **cannot be ranked** on a single scale of modernity or progress. This is ethnocentric in the same way that evolutionary theories of culture are. | + | There is no such thing as modernity in the sense that some societies are objectively different or more advanced than other societies. Although a lot of people use this word--modern--and it may seem perfectly innocent, but if you look closely at how people use it, you can see that it hides an [[ethnocentrism_and_cultural_relativism|ethnocentric]] bias. If a contemporary society is different from the observer' |
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- | * **Modernity is like race.** Just as race does not exist biologically, | + | There are even many anthropologists who look to hunter-gatherers and other societies as "our contemporary ancestors" |
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+ | Even when anthropologists use the term modernity, they put it in "scare quotes" | ||
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+ | * Even though all societies do change over time, societies **do not** travel the same single road of progress, or go through the same steps over history. | ||
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+ | * Societies **cannot be ranked** on a single scale of modernity or progress. This is ethnocentric in the same way that evolutionary theories of culture are. | ||
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+ | * **Modernity is like race.** Just as race does not exist biologically, | ||
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+ | * Social change is never just a **from--to story**, e.g. *from* tradition *to* modernity, *from* gift system *to* capitalism, *from* rural *to* urban, *from* isolated *to* connected, or *from* cultural diversity *to* monoculture, | ||
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+ | * Social change is a **both--and story**, e.g. In contemporary societies, we see both gifts and commodities coexisting, and people simultaneously occupy many different kinds of systems at once which all depend on each other. | ||
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+ | ## Reference ## | ||
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+ | Chagnon, Napoleon A. 1983. Ya̦nomamö: | ||
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+ | ----- | ||
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+ | <WRAP box similar> | ||
- | * Social change is never just a **from-to story**, e.g. *from* tradition *to* modernity, *from* gift system *to* capitalism, *from* rural *to* urban, *from* isolated *to* connected, or *from* cultural diversity *to* monoculture, | ||
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- | * Social change is a **both-and story**, e.g. In contemporary societies, we see both gifts and commodities coexisting, and people simultaneously occupy many different kinds of systems at once which all depend on each other. | ||
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modernity.1465970419.txt.gz · Last modified: 2016/06/14 23:00 by Ryan Schram (admin)