WHO OWNS ‘CULTURE’?
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Robert N. McCauley Department of Philosophy Emory University Atlanta, Georgia 30322 philrnm@emory.edu |
E. Thomas Lawson Department of Religion Western Michigan University
Kalamazoo, Michigan 49008 e.thomas.lawson@wmich.edu |
I. INTRODUCTION
No one owns 'culture'[i]: anyone with a viable theoretical proposal
can contend for the right to determine that concept's fate. Not everyone agrees with this view. Throughout its century-long struggle for
academic respectability, anthropology has regularly insisted on its unique
role as the proprietor of 'culture.'
Its variety of approaches and feuding factions notwithstanding, it is
this proprietary claim that unifies anthropology to an extent sometimes
unrecognized even by its own (post-modernist) practitioners. The history of anthropology has witnessed at
least three important moments in the case for autonomous cultural phenomena
based, first, on traditional ontological and methodological presumptions,
second, on the hermeneutic turn, and third, on postmodern analyses of
discourses and their influences.
Historically, anthropologists cite
two closely related bases for these proprietary presumptions. The first, which we shall not belabor here,
hearkens to inevitably vague discussions about culture's autonomy (with various
passes at making sense of the ontological foundations of that alleged
autonomy). Cultural anthropologists
have advanced such claims for a century, but Geertz' gloss on this topic is
representative both in what it endorses and in the vagueness of the grounds for
the endorsement. While advancing a host
of claims about culture's ontological status (for example, (1) that culture is
"ideational," (2) that it,
nonetheless, "does not exist in someone's head," (3) that it has the same status--whatever that
is--as a Beethoven quartet, and (4)
that it is "public"), Geertz insists that "the thing to ask . .
. is not what . . . [its] ontological status is." (Geertz 1973: 10-12.) Unfortunately for Geertz and cultural
anthropology generally, any convincing case for the autonomy of culture must
account for its relations to the things that constitute it. Moreover, because Geertz never relinquishes
anthropology's scientific aspirations, the issue of clarifying such ontological
questions will persistently arise.[ii] (McCauley, forthcoming)
Traditionally, the second basis for
anthropologists' alleged ownership of 'culture' concerns the methodological
consequences of their presumptions about cultural autonomy. Historically, anthropologists have
supposed (1) that both cultural wholes
and whole cultures exceed the sums of their parts, (2) that culture enjoys a dynamics of its own that could never be
reduced to the various decisions of its individual participants, and (3) that the anthropologist's job is to
analyze culture's structures and functions in terms of uniquely cultural
categories.
More recently, whether supplementing
or supplanting the historic argument, interpretive anthropologists have
emphasized the notion of 'culture' as publicly shared meanings that are not
subject to reductive explanation, but provide the very framework in which all
explanation, indeed, all human endeavor takes its shape. Explicating culture requires understanding,
in any particular case, the myriad details that enrich the hermeneutic
quest. While this move offers access to
'culture' to anyone with interpretive skills, legitimacy as a cultural
commentator also requires a fieldworker's familiarity with the particulars.
In the hands of most interpretive
anthropologists, the insistence on the critical character of the details of
cultural contexts for the understanding of any particular cultural phenomenon
has carried an additional implication.
Not only does the interpretation of specific cultural expressions
require attention to their cultural settings, all cultural phenomena are
fundamentally embedded in webs of significance so extensively and profoundly
intertwined that analytical treatment can neither suitably extract these
phenomena from their contexts nor formulate convincing generalizations about
them in isolation. The upshot of all of
this, which we have dubbed "hermeneutic exclusivism," is that the
central prominence accorded contexts and their details has thoroughly
discouraged theorizing about what seem to be widespread cross-cultural forms
(such as religion). The webs of meaning
in which we find ourselves suspended are, in fact, webs in which we find
ourselves so bound as to preclude the possibility of explaining human
behavior by means of general principles.
In the past fifteen years or so
versions of hermeneutic exclusivism have emerged that are even less friendly to
explanatory theorizing. Since, on the
hermeneutic view the study of culture is fundamentally interpretive, in recent
years cultural anthropology has increasingly taken its inspiration from
interpretive studies, instead of the sciences.
Thus, postmodernism, reflexive anthropology, cultural constructivism and
the like are less reactions to than apotheoses of the hermeneutic
turn in anthropology. They permit what
earlier hermeneutic exclusivists only dreamt that they could be.[iii] On these models of inquiry, all cultural
forms are, finally, texts--embodying forms of discourse--in need of
interpretation. But interpretation
itself is a never ending process.
"The constructivist view that culture is emergent, always alive and
in process is widely accepted today. . . . what all proponents have in common
is the view that the meaning of the text is not inherent in the text but
emerges from how people read or experience the text." (Bruner 1994: 407) Crucially, those
readings and experiences depend pivotally on the creativity, the resources,
and, most importantly, the circumstances of the reader.
The valuable contributions of
anthropologists of this stripe have been, first, to trace how various cultural
forms render some readers and their experiences invisible (let alone
more pernicious denials of their humanity) and, second, to highlight the
resulting impoverishment of cultural inquiries. Where they have gone wrong, though, like their more
conventionally hermeneutic predecessors, is in thinking that the creation and explication
of increasingly wondrous webs of meaning exhausts cultural inquiry. We have argued elsewhere that this is only
half of the story. (See Lawson and
McCauley 1990, forthcoming, and section II below.) The resulting neglect of and disinterest in formulating
systematic, empirically culpable theories on the part of postmodern cultural
anthropology has created a vaccuum that biological reductionists, such as
sociobiologists, have been only too glad to occupy in the name of science.
It is exactly because they have
failed to contest the notion that anthropologists own the concept 'culture'
that scholars of religion have, for far too long, felt shy around their
anthropological colleagues. By
conceding 'culture' to the anthropologists, they have placed themselves either
in the subservient position of passive recipients of anthropological reports or
in the unenviable position of trying to match the anthropologists at their own
game--by learning languages, performing fieldwork, and studying cultures'
histories.[iv] In light of the considerations we have
raised in the previous paragraphs, matching anthropologists includes skillfully
interpreting cultures at least and probably demonstrating ample sensitivity as
well both to the ability of cultural forms to oppress--frequently in ways that
are nearly invisible to most observers--and to the creative dimensions of
individual experience in cultural transactions. However valuable these endeavors are, when pursuing them
involves--as it so often does in their postmodern incarnations--eschewing overt
attention to theories about cultural systems such as religion, they trap
scholars of religion into conceding (1)
that they cannot fruitfully study religious materials at any high level of
abstraction either from their cultural settings, or from the wielding of power,
or from the intimacy of personal experience and (2) that, therefore, religion is not subject to any penetrating
cross-cultural analysis. These
concessions undercut the long tradition of studying religion
comparatively. In effect, then,
exclusively pursuing interpretive endeavors in the study of religion plays
right into the anthropologists' hand.
It dooms scholars of religion to the status of anthropologists'
half-prepared, junior colleagues (though such confusions about the character of
the study of religion is nothing new--see Lawson and McCauley 1993).
Against such claims for the
ownership of 'culture,' we hold that on its own cultural study of
this deeply interpretive sort (whether by anthropologists or their
imitators) hasn't enough theoretical capital to keep either the payments or the
property up. Since it is too late to
return 'culture' to the state of nature, we advise, at least, placing it in the
public domain. We aim to contest the
notion that anthropology either owns 'culture' or is capable of its purchase
solely with coin of the interpretive realm.
In a recent paper (Lawson and
McCauley 1993) we criticized both religious studies and anthropology for
assuming that concentrating on hermeneutics would insure both their
methodological soundness and moral correctness. We argued that cognitive approaches to the study of
religion are far more likely to achieve these goals. We also chastised scholars of religion for their confusions about
the status of their own enterprise and argued that an exclusively humanistic
program of religious studies relying only on interpretive techniques will
render some religious phenomena virtually invisible. An exclusively hermeneutic approach is blind to certain religious
phenomena that resist the hermeneuticists' textual metaphor. In actual practice accounts of religion as
"textual" are finally distorting.
(Ironically, the philosophical hermeneutics of Heidegger, Ricoeur,
Gadamer, and others from which these analyses, at least in part, take their
inspiration emphasize some of the forms and features of human praxis to which
the interpretive analyses of anthropologists and scholars of comparative
religion remain, all too often, inattentive.)
By contrast, in this paper we aim to
reassure scholars of religion that they can escape these traps. Specifically, we hold (1) that scholars' cross-cultural insights
about religion need not be suspect methodologically and (2) that religious systems can be studied
comparatively. The crucial point,
though, is that these outcomes require relaxing hermeneutic inclinations
to subordinate, let alone eliminate, explanatory theorizing.
In section II we consider some
implications for cultural anthropology of the current obsession with
interpretive approaches to its materials.
The anthropological search for meanings feeds on new information about
ethnographic details and cultural settings.
In such an atmosphere, fieldwork becomes an end in itself. Being there has become virtually
sufficient for professional credentials.
This professional focus places a premium on cultural diversity. Documenting the details of a culture that is
largely like some other offers little interest. New, surprising, unexpected details are the fruit from which
juicy new meanings are most easily squeezed.
But taste is a different
matter. Too often interpretive
anthropology neglects the theorizing necessary to distinguish the sweet fruits
from the bitter. Theories of culture and
culture's systems are pivotal for discriminating among the details, i.e., for
deciding which details matter.
The most important role of fieldwork is to develop anthropological
imagination and judgment--not merely to formulate new theories but to formulate
improved theories. An
anthropology that subordinates the formulation and evaluation of explanatory
theories to the quest for ever-deeper meaning inevitably impoverishes itself.
Section III focuses on further
implications of the hermeneutic approach to culture study. The most general implication reveals an
important and suggestive asymmetry between the story this version of
anthropology tells about itself and the stories the other social sciences tell
about themselves. If the position of
interpretive anthropologists' is right, at least when pushed to its logical
extreme, then it looks as if the other social sciences (economics, political
science, linguistics, etc.) have got things mostly wrong. The disproportionate emphasis on meanings
and their critical dependence on cultural context renders the cross-cultural
study of various cultural forms problematic.
We, then, briefly list in section IV
alternative approaches to 'culture'.
There is, perhaps, no more telling evidence against claims about the
ownership of culture than the fact that other disciplines have means for
investigating the human world that seem to have clear implications about what
is cultural. There are more ways to
gain insight about culture than interminably cataloguing the details of one
place after another.
II. THE
HAMS IN ANTHROPOLOGY
In his paper "The Stakes in
Anthropology" Ernest Gellner (1988) suggests that American anthropology
especially has become addicted to the search for meanings in cultural
materials. Gellner echoes Dan Sperber's
(1975) declarations that supplying interpretations of symbols' meanings
compounds rather than solves the anthropologist's problems about
symbolism. Meaning, in short, is the problem,
not the solution. Gellner, however,
recommends against the outright prohibition of further hermeneutical pursuits,
since interpretive methods, when used with moderation, play a legitimate role
in anthropological inquiry. Instead,
Gellner proposes establishing Hermeneutics Anonymous--an organization devoted
to encouraging sobriety in all matters meaningful. This would thwart the excesses of hermeneutic exclusivism.
All hermeneuticists see themselves
as inhabiting a world of "texts," in which they propose minimally, to
subordinate explanations to interpretions.
Perhaps not all hermeneuticists have kidded themselves into believing
that everything is a text, but they have unwittingly set the stage for such
extravagant post-modernist claims.
(McCauley forthcoming) Like
Gellner, we suspect that such extravagance may undermine the very possibility
of rational inquiry. At the very least,
we think that hermeneuticists and post-modernists, by subordinating explanation
to interpretation, overlook the productive interaction of interpretive and
explanatory endeavors. We hold that the
success of one necessarily depends upon the success of the other and,
therefore, that subordinating explanation, let alone rejecting it the way
hermeneutic exclusivists do, amounts to a fundamental misunderstanding of the
generation of knowledge. (Lawson and
McCauley 1990: chapter 1) We do not claim that searching for
theoretical explanations of cultural phenomena that appeal to systematically
related principles of general form is either the only or the premier ideal of
inquiry in this domain, but we do hold that it should be subordinated to no other.
A scientific study of culture
includes the search for its pervasive features, i.e., so-called cultural
universals, but, in fact, a cultural form or system need not be universal to be
interesting theoretically. Within an
evolutionary perspective on culture, cultural forms need not be universally
distributed throughout the relevant population (any more than some biological
trait needs to be universally distributed throughout a species). All cultures need not have capitalist
economies for capitalist economies to be proper objects for theoretical inquiry
and for economies generally to be socio-cultural systems capable of isolation
for analytical and explanatory purposes.
Typically, "universals" simply refers to widespread cultural
forms and systems, and on an evolutionary account that is all it need refer to.
From the standpoint of an
evolutionary framework "[i]t is precisely the point of an explanatory
theory to reduce diversity and to show in what manner it results from the
encounter between general mechanisms, on the one hand, and many diverse
circumstances on the other."
(Boyer 1994: 7) The critical achievement is to specify the
underlying mechanisms capable of generating the diversity of existing forms in
interaction with assorted environments.
In the biological case the central mechanisms concern the replication
and mutation of the genes--as this is shaped in the process of natural
selection. In the cultural case we
suspect that many, maybe most, of the pivotal mechanisms are psychological.
As in all science, such hypotheses
direct empirical investigations into increasingly rarefied territories where
they unearth anomalies that not only will not go away, but that constitute
straightforward counter-instances to cherished hypotheses and assumptions. One of the reasons that fieldwork is so
central to the training and credentialling of anthropologists is that fieldwork
is what turns such anomalies up.
Fieldwork is difficult and
demanding. Anthropologists often spend
years in settings that are inhospitable and sometimes downright dangerous. They must not only avoid offending their
hosts, they must develop sufficient rapport with them to obtain esoteric
information about their culture. While
coping with the unusual, they must also closely observe. Then, ideally at least, they must write
about these often intimate experiences as if they are detached,
"objective" observers.
(Geertz 1988: 10)
The presumption is that deep
cross-cultural understanding depends upon immersion in some
foreign setting. Cultural
anthropologists earn their credentials by showing that after considerable work
and effort they can render the exotic understandable. From learning a completely unfamiliar language to eating slugs
and bugs, the difficulties of fieldwork exact a considerable toll. In light of that toll it should surprise no
one that such immersion in an unfamiliar culture has become a necessary
condition for professional authority in cultural anthropology.
What might come as a surprise,
though, is that fieldwork has virtually also become a sufficient
condition for professional authority.
Attending closely to detail, admittedly integral to fieldwork, has
developed a life of it own. To a
considerable extent, the means have swallowed the end, the process has replaced
the product. The hallmark of talks by
young anthropologists anxious to demonstrate their competence is a slide show
with a running commentary about invariably small details in the pictures
that need not end up having any connections whatsoever. Reports of ethnographic details on the basis
of first hand experience have not only become a central foundation of
professional authority, they have also become the necessary accoutrement to any
discussion of cultural matters--whether or not those details are at all
relevant to the cultural system in question.
Traditional anthropology offers ample precedent. For example, what precisely is the
point of Evans-Pritchard's picture of "youth and boy" (plate vii in Nuer
Religion)? (See Geertz 1988.)
Interpretive anthropology has
reduced the study of culture (by studying cultures) into the study of cultures
simpliciter. An imbalance favoring
interpretation over explanation has in the practice of the hermeneutic
exclusivists evolved into an imbalance favoring ethnographic reporting over
theorizing. Increasingly, cultural
anthropology, even versions with overtly scientific aspirations, has tended to
sacrifice the formulation of general theoretical proposals to the celebration
of the details, the exaltation of the idiographic, and the veneration of the
context. This encourages high-spirited
symbolic anthropology, flush with resources for divining ever deeper layers of
meaning in cultural materials.
One desideratum for distinguishing
top notch work from the also-ran is whether or not the details turn out to be
surprising. If details are good, exotic
details are better. They only seal the
anthropologist's reputation as a skilled interpreter of culture. Like a good travel guide, the anthropologist
renders the apparently baroque and bizarre understandable.
Ever since the discovery that some
cultures do not possess the Western notion of modesty, the shock value
associated with documenting cultural diversity has hardly diminished. Most anthropologists, though, are not so
benighted by post-modernist excess as to have lost all sight of
scientific possibilities. Fortunately,
their interest in the unusual does not merely reflect a penchant for
showmanship but their persisting but, all too often, suppressed concern with
science as well. Exotic details are
exotic because they challenge explicitly formulated hypotheses about general
features of culture or, perhaps even more significantly, because they defy
tacit presumptions we all bring to our reflections on alien cultures. But exotic details are even more interesting
when they prove just as susceptible to some theory's analysis as do far more
familiar cultural phenomena. These
days, though, professional fame does not ordinarily accrue to the researcher
who suggests that the apparently fantastic is actually commonplace--that it is
nothing but a further manifestation of cultural dynamics some theory has
rendered familiar in contexts closer to home.
Emerging from the bush only to report that some little known group is a
lot more like us than meets the eye is not fashionable.
Roger Keesing offered grounds for
hesitation about becoming entranced with bizarre details, noting that
"[a]nthropologists, with their predilections for the exotic and their
predispositions toward, even vested interests in, depicting cultures as
radically different from ours and from one another, are prone to choose
readings that fit these expectations and interests." (1987:
162) Keesing cautioned against
reading too much into other peoples' conventions for talking about their
experiences and mental lives. He argued
that the more theoretically significant discovery would be to learn that broad
cultural diversity rests on fairly mundane processes. Keesing cited, for example, Lakoff and Johnson (1980) who account
for pervasive structuring of experience in terms of relatively simple
metaphoric comparisons, many of which arise from basic bodily experiences that
all human beings share (for example, construing anger in terms of contained
heat--typically, the heat of a fluid in a container).
The
cognitive approach to religious materials that we have pursued employs the same
sort of abstemiousness concerning symbols and their interpretations. Not only do such cognitive analyses explain
some aspects of cultural diversity and creativity in terms of the perfectly
ordinary, but they also delineate features of the underlying cognitive
mechanisms responsible for the phenomena in question. In Rethinking Religion, for example, we have shown how
participants' representations of religious rituals piggyback on quite common
cognitive means for the representation of actions generally. We also specify a relatively small
collection of principles that capture the representational capacities
employed. (1990: chapter 5)
Pascal Boyer's The Naturalness of Religious Ideas (1994) provides
further (and numerous) arguments and illustrations of how thoroughly normal
patterns of cognitive development can bear most of the explanatory
responsibility for the retention, recurrence, and perpetuation of the various
unusual, "counter-intuitive" commitments characteristic of religious
systems.
Scientific progress always involves
an on-going interaction between theorizing and attending to observational
detail. The trick is in knowing what
details count. When identifying the
most prominent achievements in the history of science, the focus reliably falls
on the development of particular theories and the startling observational
findings and experimental results they provoked. We know that neither the ages nor the colors nor the atmospheric
contents nor the thermal properties of the planets have anything to do with
either the explanation or prediction of their relative motions, because of the
success of the theory Issac Newton formulated that identifies the important
variables.
Excessive
interest in detail for its own sake has caused anthropology to lose its
moorings, because it has led it to neglect theorizing. Neglecting theory is deadly from a
scientific standpoint, because it is precisely the confrontation of
competing theories that determines which details matter. Consequently, the theories with which
scientists operate, whether consciously or not, determine which details will
receive attention.
Sir Arthur Eddington undertook his
famous expedition at considerable expense far from the shores of Great Britian,
because the concern to rationally adjudicate the conflict between two of the
most important physical theories in human history, viz., classical mechanics
and special relativity, required the observation of a very specific celestial
event which was only possible at very specific points on the globe at very
specific times. The conflict between
these two theories made the apparent positions of stars in the sky close to
the sun during its eclipse important details for deciding which of the
two better organized a vast array of physical phenomena that extend far
beyond the specific events observed by Eddington. It is not as if in the first decades of this century scientists
did not already know a great deal about the sun and its eclipses, about light
and its propogation, and about stars, gravitation and a host of other related
celestial and physical phenomena! All
of that knowledge, though, did not include the details that were critical
for advancing knowledge at this juncture.
Second generation fieldworkers would
not have much to do, if the first generation had all the right theories and,
therefore, had focused on all of the right details. Not coincidentally, the hallmark of second generation fieldwork
is revisionism. Revisionists approach
the previously studied culture with alternative hypotheses in virtue of which
they ascertain that their predecessors either organized the details incorrectly,
focused on the wrong details, missed critical details (that the new hypotheses
authenticate), or some combination of these three.
A
further problem with the veneration of context and the resulting neglect of
explicit theory is that the theoretical perspectives informing these revisionists'
judgments are not usually the objects of direct reflection and, thus, are often
not even consciously entertained.
Without open recognition of the underlying theoretical competition at
stake, these disagreements look like unmotivated or (worse) ideologically-motivated
squabbles about the facts. Absent the
self-conscious comparison of theories, second generation fieldworkers are
simply vying for the professional limelight.
The stakes in anthropology are too rare to settle for mere hams.
If fieldwork and the knowledge of
cultural details it fosters become the ends of anthropological research, then
it will be the end of anthropological research. From the standpoint of a social science, celebrating
contextual details is just not enough.
Such details may provide the means for assessing existing theories;
however, their nearly uninhibited celebration has eclipsed two fundamental
tasks critical to advancing the understanding of culture.
We have already touched upon the
first. As a result of this overwhelming
focus on the idiographic, anthropologists too often hold their theoretical
presumptions unreflectively, which is to say, although they bring biases to
their fieldwork experience, they have little understanding of their genesis,
rationale, or organization (if any exists).
Theories organize inquiry; explicit theories organize inquiry
explicitly. The problem is that, all
things being equal, it is better to hold positions reflectively rather than
unreflectively in order both to decrease the sort of squabbling described above
and to increase the efficiency, the productivity, and the civility of
anthropological discussion.
Second, and perhaps even more
importantly, this proclivity of anthropology has also obscured the obligation
of scientists to speculate, i.e., to formulate new theories. Scientists do not study the details of the
world merely to assess existing claims about it. If that were the only point, such study would have ceased long
ago. For as Kuhn (1970), Feyerabend
(1975), and other philosophers of science have noted, every theory, from its
inception, faces counter-instances.
Science does not progress in any simple-minded way. Theories are more resilient than metal ducks
in a shooting gallery. They do not flop
over from the glancing hits of occasional counter-instances. Social science, in particular, requires the
informed judgments of experienced inquirers--looking behind the appearances,
sifting through the facts, marshalling their practical knowledge, considering
and ranking alternatives by both judging and weighing divergent evidence,
explanatory power, relative scope, suggestiveness, simplicity, and more. (Thagard 1993) This is why fieldwork experience is so often helpful.
We have nothing against gathering
information from the field, and we fully recognize that theoretical proposals
about cultural systems must answer to the ethnographic facts. But we also subscribe to the well worn
hermeneutical insight that experience and conceptual schemes (and observation
and theories) are interdependent. The
point, in short, is that what facts matter and where researchers look for them
is a function of an on-going negotiation between the theoretician and the
ethnographer operating as equal partners.
Finally, the most important motive
for fieldwork is not its ability to arm the ethnographer with counter-instances
with which to club prominent theories nor even its ability to corroborate
preferred theories but rather its role in educating the anthropological
imagination. The progress of science turns
not on the proliferation of mere speculation but on the proliferation of
informed speculation.
Researchers' familiarity with the facts and their considered judgment
are what inform speculations. Those speculations
typically take the form of inferences to the best explanation (Peirce's
"abductive inference"). From
these origins more sophisticated theories take shape. The continuing goal is not only to formulate new theories but to
formulate better theories on the basis of the comparative insights that
fieldwork provokes.
Fieldworkers
provide thick and intricate descriptions firmly rooted in first-hand knowledge
of the details of different ways of life.
The hope is that these analyses will divulge patterns of sufficiently
general significance to aid understanding in other cultural settings. The danger of analyses so firmly rooted in
particular circumstances is precisely that they resist generalization. Hence, as Geertz (1988) has noted,
anthropologists face a rhetorical dilemma, if not a logical one. They must display their intimate knowledge
of the ethnographic details while demonstrating that the analyses that emerge
from that intimate knowledge do not hang on it essentially.
Another limitation of this approach
is that the details go on forever.
Most limitations on and uniformity in the details of ethnographic
reports are overwhelmingly a function of common general assumptions that
virtually all anthropologists operate with (largely unconsciously) about what
matters in a culture (kinship, social roles, rituals, myths, legitimacy,
traditions, and more). We should
emphasize straightaway that we do not begrudge them these assumptions! On the contrary, they are the ultimate sources
of most telling ethnographic comparisons.
The problem is that fieldworkers who are not explicitly aware of these
theoretical assumptions and their implications have no clear guidelines for
determining which details count and when they can stop collecting them. The satisfactoriness of a description is
always judged relative to a theory.
Thus, for example, because we have proposed a theory of religious ritual
(1990) that employs some assumptions at odds with those many cultural
anthropologists prefer, we have found that, despite the myriad details of their
ethnographic reports, they frequently do not contain much critical information
that is relevant to the questions we are asking.
Although anthropology holds novices'
feet to the fieldwork fires, the discipline seems considerably less vigilant
about practitioners' subsequent works once they have been initiated. Comparative ethnographic studies have been
known to report on groups with which the authors have had no direct
encounters. Geertz, for example, notes
that Ruth Benedict had no first-hand experience with two of the three groups
she discussed in Patterns of Culture.
(1988: 112) Her reputation secured, Benedict was
professionally free to pursue comparative ethnography.
The crucial point is that we have
just been sketching a case for why this is perfectly acceptable--if the
inquiry is overtly theoretical (as opposed to intimately ethnographic
only). Once you know what a science of
culture should do, you don't have to visit every place under the sun. Armed with a theory about patterns of
culture or about the dynamics of some specific cultural system, the
investigator has a clear view of the facts that matter. Objections to such projects that argue that
their discussions of specific cases fail to meet the standards for description
touted in ethnographic circles obsessed with context and preoccupied with
details are not compelling. Where a
theory has a grip, the details that matter are those that contribute to the
elaboration and evaluation of it and its competitors.
By now, we assume it is clear that
we are criticizing a specific vision of cultural anthropology that we
regard as impoverished. In effect, we
are suggesting that even the projects of scientifically-minded cultural
anthropologists have largely been co-opted by the agendas of post-modernists
and thick describers. This dominant
vision of cultural anthropology neglects the formulation and improvement of
theory in favor of preoccupations with the collection of ethnographic detail
and the specification of cultural settings.
Entranced by the never-ending search for deeper and deeper meanings,
interpretive anthropology has largely devolved into a cultural freak show. Its emphasis on documenting apparent
cultural diversity (how can we know it is genuine diversity without the
guidance of a successful theory that provides criteria for distinguishing
cultural types?) has been so single-minded that interpretive anthropology and
its postmodern descendants have largely abandoned their epistemic obligations
to formulate better theories.
III. THE
PRIMA DONNA OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES
We suggested in the previous section
that no one owns the concept of 'culture' and that the most progressive
explanatory theories of cultural phenomena available should determine that
concept's fate. Just like the concept
of heredity in biology, accounts of contributing mechanisms and systems will
constrain the fate of the concept 'culture.'
That anthropology has tried to reserve 'culture' for itself is troubling
enough. That interpretive visionaries
have picked up on this claim is even more bothersome. In this section we shall further explore the consequences of
those visionaries' views.
Insisting that cultural phenomena
can only be understood as embedded in webs of meanings carries an interesting
implication for the place of anthropology among the social sciences. Pushed to its extreme--which is exactly
where some of these visionaries (especially some of the cultural constructivists)
have pushed it,[v]--this insistence
on the preeminence of the idiographic sets anthropology apart from and ahead of
the other social sciences. Plowing
through its part, anthropology of this sort hopes to hog the social scientific
stage, not merely oblivious to the other members of the company but actively
trying to shove them into the wings.
The central argument runs as
follows. The key to
understanding any cultural phenomenon is to ascertain its meaning(s). The particulars of their contexts determine
the meanings of cultural items. Hence,
every cultural matter is inextricably tied to the particulars of its
context. Therefore, regarding
particular cultural phenomena merely as tokens of cultural types is importantly
misleading and abstracting general cultural forms for the purposes of
cross-cultural theorizing is intrinsically wrong-headed.
We have argued at length both in the
previous section and elsewhere (1990:
chapter 1) against this argument's first premise. Our current goal is not to repeat or develop
those arguments, but rather to provide an additional argument by highlighting
what is a not-too-often-recognized and a not-too-palatable (let alone popular)
consequence of this view. The view of
research on socio-cultural phenomena embodied in the argument's conclusions condemns
precisely what all of the other social sciences aim to do. In short, if these anthropologists are
right, then virtually all the other social sciences are wrong.
Economics, political science,
linguistics, and sociology (more generally) all suppose (1) that some social and cultural systems
(economies, political systems, languages, etc.) are isolable as theoretical
objects independently of contextual variability, (2) that the assorted examples of such
systems across a wide expanse of cultural settings share various features that
are pivotal to their explanation, and
(3) that this fact alone is sufficient to justify their analytical
abstraction from their specific cultural contexts. Psychology makes the same presumptions about human psyches. Each of these inquiries is committed to the
view that the forces operating within these systems are sufficiently robust
across cultures (or across individuals in the case of psychology) that many
features of these systems can be described and explained in relative
isolation.
Presumably, it is clear by now that here
we side unequivocally with these other social sciences. Pushed to its logical extreme, the
interpretivists' position implies that the other social sciences are
wrong-headed, if not impossible. (McCauley
forthcoming) It would prohibit all
general proposals about the dynamics of markets, the distribution of power, and
the formal features of languages (let alone the structures of religious
systems--which interest us). If the
distinctiveness of everything cultural turns on webs of culturally specific
meaning[vi]
in which those things figure, then attempts to isolate and generalize about
such systems must prove fundamentally mistaken.
As we have just hinted, this
position has direct implications for the study of religion and explains why
contemporary anthropologists are often skeptical about the possibility of
developing theories about specifically religious phenomena. (Boyer 1994: 37) Ironically, prior to hermeneutics' heyday, anthropologists--as
the overseers of 'culture'--had quite different motives for resisting theories
of specific cultural systems such as religion.
Instead of rejecting such theorizing outright, they feared that the
success of such theories would shut down their show. Their worry was that the triumph of such explanatory
theories--about religious ritual, for example, in isolation from larger
concerns about other ritualized cultural forms--would render their peculiarly cultural
analyses superfluous.[vii] (We hold that this worry was and is
ungrounded. It underestimates the value
of any even moderately successful proposal that gains some explanatory
purchase. The ignorance about
socio-cultural matters is considerable enough to tolerate multiple theoretical
approaches at many different levels of specificity.)
A further motive, with which we are sympathetic,
was some anthropologists' concern to demonstrate that there was nothing unique
about either religious systems or religious experience. We have nothing against such deflationary
approaches--so long as they provide their own explanations of the phenomena in
question and provide explanations of why the religious appears to
be so different from other cultural forms on some fronts. We conceive of our own position as one that
offers a (comparatively) deflationary account of religious ritual, but one that
aspires to explain the appearances rather than deny them.
So, whether on traditional grounds
of the primacy of cultural analysis and deflationary views of religious
phenomena or on more recent grounds concerning entangled webs of meaning,
anthropologists have remained antagonistic to the theoretical isolation of
specific cultural forms for the purposes of cross-cultural explanation.
The current version of the argument
jeopardizes the possibility of theorizing about religion in the same way that
it threatens the projects of the other social sciences. If all religious materials are only properly
understood in all of their cultural connectedness, then religion stands little
chance of independent theoretical analysis as a recognizable cultural form.
In Rethinking Religion we
unwaveringly insisted that religious systems and religious ritual systems, in
particular, enjoy sufficient distinctiveness and robustness across a variety of
cultural settings to serve as the objects of independent theoretical
analyses. We have contended that such
analyses of religious systems will involve explanations carried out in the same
sort of relative isolation from the variable details of context that
pertains in any other science.
Not surprisingly, most
anthropologists seem to think that no compelling reasons exist for
distinguishing religious ritual from rituals of other types. By contrast, we maintain that religious
ritual systems can be usefully isolated across cultures for the purposes
of explanatory theorizing and prediction.
Note, our view does not preclude the possibility that religious rituals
are largely continuous with other sorts of ritualized behaviors.[viii] Indeed, we argue that on some theoretically
important fronts religious rituals are continuous with all forms of
action. (Lawson and McCauley: chapter 5)
The important point, though, is that absent a theory of
ritual-in-general that matches our theory's precision, systematicity,
generality, and empirical tractability, we see no reason to defer to
anthropologists' unsystematic intuitions here.
Such issues are not decided a
priori. Finally, whether theories
of religious systems (and theories of any sort) deserve social scientists'
respect turns on those theories' relative productivity and empirical
success. In scientific contexts
explanatory and predictive success are the final measures of all things. Why should anthropology not embrace a theory
that brings some cross cultural order to at least one recognizable
subset of ritual materials? Reluctance
on this front is a function of that same exaggerated reverence for detail that
we have been challenging throughout this paper.
Our suggestion, then, is that the
study of religion will prove most appropriately and most productively situated
among the social sciences (understood broadly to include the psychological and
cognitive sciences). The specific
theoretical strategies we are exploring take their cues from work in the
cognitive sciences. Although this is
pioneering research concerning religious ritual systems, analyses of other
cultural systems along cognitive lines have arisen in both linguistics (Lakoff
1987 and Langacker 1987) and anthropology (Sperber 1975 and Boyer 1993 and
1994). The study of religion, like the
studies of language, economy, and power can stand as an identifiable
sub-discipline within the overall social scientific enterprise. Successful theorizing in each of these
sub-disciplines contributes to our knowledge of culture.
The concept of 'culture' is as
notoriously vague as cultures themselves are notoriously difficult to
study. Such problems are not news in
science. 'Culture' is no worse off than
the concepts 'mind' or 'species' or 'chemical bond.' The way scientists always proceed with such problems is to
study their empirically tractable features and sub-systems. Not only does anthropology not own the
concept of culture, the lesson of the physical, biological, and psychological
sciences suggests that its development will likely depend upon progress in
those social sciences concerned with culture's "constituents," i.e.,
the various theoretically isolable systems that make up culture.
IV. CODA
Probably no consideration more
clearly reveals the emptiness of cultural anthropology's proprietary claims
than the fact that other disciplines have developed means for investigating the
world that bear directly on how we conceive of culture. Neither anthropological suppositions nor
anthropological methods are necessary for either collecting empirical
evidence or drawing conclusions about the character of culture. These other types of biological,
psychological, social, and cultural inquiry have revealed new ways to approach
the topics of culture and cultural forms from angles unlike those typically
employed in cultural anthropology.
(See, for example, Lumsden and Wilson 1981 or Tooby and Cosmides 1989.) Specifically, they include drawing some
empirically informed conclusions about cultural matters without documenting
every little detail about each and every spot on God's green earth.
Three areas of research come
immediately to mind--concerning non-human primates, early childhood
development, and various sorts of social and cognitive impairments. The first two involve phenomena that enjoy
some continuity with the behavior of enculturated, adult homo sapiens--the
first, evolutionary and the second, developmental. They provide perspective on both organisms' intrinsic capacities
that require little (if any) cultural input and possible biological origins of
cultural forms. The third area of
research exploits a well worn strategy in the biological sciences, viz., to gain
understanding about normal functioning by studying pathologies. Injuries and breakdowns offer both impetus
to study and useful information about a mechanism's routine functioning. These three areas of research not only arise
from sciences we have touted elsewhere, but the sorts of evidence involved
spring from studies that are far more precise and controlled than most of the
data available by means of conventional research in cultural anthropology.
Space limitations require that we
but briefly list an example of each.
When Sue Savage-Rumbaugh and her collaborators (1986) found that the
pygmy chimpanzee, Kanzi, both comprehended a fair amount of spoken English and
appropriately responded (by means of sign language) on the basis of mere
exposure to other animals' training sessions, we learned that the spontaneous
acquisition of symbols, let alone their use, was not confined to human
beings.
Frank Keil's research (1979 and
1989) on young children's appreciation of basic ontological distinctions
strongly suggests that their representation of many concepts is subject to
little, if any, cultural variability.
Presumably, mastery of these distinctions is so pivotal to getting on in
the world that their acquisition is either rooted in our biology or necessitated
by circumstance.
In the course of developing an
account of the unique features of what they contend is "cultural
learning," Tomasello, Kruger, and Ratner (1993) examine evidence
concerning autism. They predict that
because most autistic persons do not conceive of others as what they call
"reflective agents," they will often be incapable of acquiring
various sorts of cultural knowledge.
Although the criteria for diagnosing autism are by no means
uncontroversial, Tomasello and his colleagues note that approximately half of
the persons so diagnosed prove incapable of acquiring language.
It is, in addition to developmental
psychology, various subdisciplines of the cognitive sciences that we (and
Boyer) have mined for the study of religious systems, including theoretical and
cognitive linguistics and social and cognitive psychology. (See too Baranowski 1994.) The mutual penetration of mind and culture
encourages disciplinary cross-talk.
Some cultural anthropologists have begun to consult the cognitive
sciences as a means of exploring the influences of culture on mind. Shore (forthcoming), for example, considers
culturally specific schemas that organize multiple areas of participants'
experience. By contrast our major
interest has been in the influence of mind on culture. We have focussed on what the cognitive
sciences reveal both about the study of the mind generally and about the
constraints the particularly human version of mentality exerts on cultural
forms.
Thus, the cognitive sciences provide
both methodological and substantive inspiration. For example, on the methodological front, we enlisted a host of
strategic resources theoretical linguistics employs for theorizing about
cultural competencies--exploiting an analogy between the competencies of native
speakers with their natural languages and of ritual participants with their
religious ritual systems. (See McCauley
and Lawson 1993.)
Substantively, research in the
relevant fields suggests cognitive constraints on and contributions to those
cultural competencies. Findings in the
cognitive sciences concerning concept representation, memory dynamics, social
attribution, and conceptions of agency--to name only some of the most prominent
considerations--offer valuable hints about why cultural forms such as
religious beliefs and religious rituals take the shapes that they do and about how
they operate and persist as cultural systems.
Moreover, these cognitive
considerations typically apply regardless of the meanings attributed to
these cultural forms. While acknowledging the role of interpretation in
advancing our knowledge of culture, such theoretical approaches as we are
recommending generate systematic insights about cultural forms without
preoccupation with their meanings. The
point is not to silence the interpretivists but to reclaim a role for
scientific theorizing in the study of culture--releasing it from any
proprietary claims and leaving it in the hands of the most productive and
penetrating explanatory schemes available.
Finally, no one owns culture, because in science our best explanatory
schemes face relentless pressure to improve.
Endnotes
* We wish to
thank the American Academy of Religion for their support of this research in
the form of an AAR Collaborative Research Grant. We are also grateful to Pascal Boyer, Marshall Gregory, and
Charles Nuckolls for helpful comments and encouragement.
[i].. In this paper we will follow the
American philosopher's convention of referring to concepts by enclosing the
corresponding terms for the concepts in single quotes. Thus, 'culture' refers to the concept of
culture.
[ii].. We are pragmatists about ontology. Claims for the autonomy of culture fare
neither better nor worse than the relative explanatory success of
theories that confine themselves to quintessentially cultural concepts and
those--addressing the same phenomena--that do not. To the extent such theories address the intellectual and
practical problems that provoked such inquiries in the first place, their
ontological posits merit our allegiance.
[iii].. It follows, incidentally, that the
post-modernist trappings surrounding this movement are largely incidental. All of the pivotal philosophical commitments
were already present in anthropology's hermeneutic turn twenty-five years ago.
[iv].. We should clarify from the outset that we
enthusiastically endorse being more informed rather than less about anything
anyone seeks to study.
[v].. Consider, for example, the claim that
emotions are not merely culturally constrained but are culturally constituted: "The point then is not how much
culture matters. For culture does not
constitute emotions by degree. The
point is how culture matters.
For culture is the assemblage of those discourses within which the
emotions come to be."
(McCarthy 1992, p. 4, some emphasis added)
[vi].. Whatever that is. Recall Gellner's claim that meaning is the problem
not the solution in the study of culture.
[vii].. See Humphreys and Laidlaw (1994) for but
the most recent expression of this view.
[viii].. The problem, though, is that no one has
provided an even remotely convincing theory that offers a unified account of
these phenomena. Humphrey and Laidlaw
(1994) advance an account of the ritualization of action that is frequently
suggestive. They concede fairly openly,
though, that their approach makes good sense of "liturgy-centered"
rituals only, forcing them to treat "performance-centered" rituals as
peripheral cases at best. (This already
disqualifies their discussion as an example of a theory of ritual-in-general--a
disqualification which they straightforwardly acknowledge.)
Even as an account of liturgical
rituals, Humphrey and Laidlaw's position faces some nagging problems. The most important, to our minds, concerns
their insistence that nothing constrains the ordering of ritual segments in
liturgical rituals. As evidence they
note that the ordering of ritual segments in the Jain puja has undergone
virtually unlimited variation over time.
But this is not even a sufficient
defense of the claim's plausibility, let alone its truth. First, evidence concerning but one set of
rituals from one cultural system hardly counts as compelling in the face of
what seem to be hundreds of counter-instances from other cultures. Second, even in the case of the puja,
from the fact that it displays variations in the ordering of ritual segments
over time, it does not follow that in any given performance the order is not
constrained. No doubt, over time, word
order has undergone variation in (probably) all natural languages. It does not follow that at any given time
word order is not heavily constrained.