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Download Lecture 2 The Anthropological Perspective
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The Anthropological Perspective Anthropology has had a tradition of sending observers out into far away places to bring back accounts of the lives of the peoples living there. More recently anthropology has begun to realise the importance of doing fieldwork at home as well as abroad. The tradition of sending observers abroad -that started in late nineteenth century- grew into a specialised method of living and studying human issues. This tradition (see Anthropological Ideas II) helped anthropology to become used to asking questions about the customs, categories and conventions normally taken for granted. Once this is achieved it is possible to apply that thinking elsewhere, closer to home. This chapter is going to try to introduce you to the ideas and experience of anthropology and in doing so to enhance your observation and response to your own surroundings. We could argue that home is the place where other people come to find you and which represents you. At home your physical surroundings have been adapted to you and your needs, it is a place filled with your possessions and probably conforming (more or less) to your expectation of what is suitable. Your home is a cultural artefact, and it helps to constitute you as a social and cultural being. Categories and meanings We should note the distinction between "house" and "home"; the physical surroundings on the one hand and on the other the conceptual category which distinguishes this house from others, however similar, because it is yours. We often talk about what something means to us, meaning how strongly we feel about it. We notice here that the "meaning" of the elements of the Berber house is more like a pattern of symbolic associations - a language. It is of course noticeable that Bourdieu is not describing a particular Berber house, but a generic one, about which he seems able to speak with authority. We have to assume that he has acquired this authority either by observing so many houses and seeing that they are all the same in these respects, or that he has asked someone (a Berber? A number of Berbers?) who can be expected to know what the standard pattern is. We will have to return at a later date to this question of how anthropologists are enabled to make authoritative descriptions. Now your account of your own physical surroundings will begin to look rather particular, even idiosyncratic, compared to Bourdieu's generic Berber one. Can you turn your account into a more generic one? To do so you will of course have to decide on what group you belong to, which "tribe" you represent. This takes us to an important conclusion. We are representatives of our own culture. We can't help it. But how does this happen? What if we are eccentrics? What aspects of 'our own' culture, do we represent? In order to address this question, think about how some elements of a Berber house might vary and be discounted as not mattering. Even if we were not to know all elements of culture, even if some elements are perceived as 'not mattering', it is still possible to say what "ought" to be the arrangement. We have a knowledge of how things are 'arranged' within a culture. Some of these arrangements can be learned by looking, as Bourdieu does, at the structures of the existing arrangements, such as the home and the house. It is not possible to say, a 'culture' is 'like this or like that' by just looking at house arrangements. For example, it is not fair to say, Berber culture is hierarchical. Describing a culture cannot be reduced to general statements like this. This is a simplistic view, of something that, as Bourdieu illustrates, is very complex. It is possible to say, however, that within the Berber culture, certain aspects of gender, status and personal position, revolve around hierarchical considerations. We can argue that one of the aspects of Berber culture is that the house is 'defined from the outside, from the point of view of men, as the place from which men come out'. A house, however, is in a subordinate position' to what the world outside signifies. The final topic of this module, considers an issue I mentioned earlier. What gives 'authority' to the narratives (books and ethnographies) that anthropologists produce? One of the answers is 'fieldwork' (the kind of relations with people that anthropologists manage to create during their research - Topic 1) and 'interpretation' (the kind of relations you can abstract from observation the Berber house in topic 2). Another answer is: the writing 'style' or how we describe our interpretations and our fieldwork experience. Do you remember how Malinowski starts by describing his fieldwork..('Imagine yourself suddenly set down surrounded by all your gear, alone on a tropical beach close to a native village, while the launch or dinghy which has brought you sails away out of sight' (Malinowski 1922:4)). He actually manages to create an 'ambience', to take the reader away from 'western shores' to what is described as an exotic location. In this last section, then, we will briefly consider the issue of narrative or writing styles when describing another culture. We will use the very famous, and very amusing: The Innocent Anthropologist by Nigel Barley. In the book, Barley describes his first experience of fieldwork. It is a book entertainingly written, but it is not on the list purely for your amusement. Nigel Barley allows us to see into the relationship between the ethnographer, and his subjects, between his hopes and aims and the reality of fieldwork. He did it within the traditional expectations of anthropology and in the "traditional" context of a particular people in West Africa, but he reveals much of the sordid detail - what went wrong, what was misunderstood - which was hidden from readers of traditional ethnographies such as Malinowski's- until the controversial publication of Malinowski's Diary (see Anthropological Ideas II). He also reveals that different 'narrative styles' have different effects, and can contribute to representing social reality in different ways. In very subtle ways, mostly through humour, he manages to give a description and an interpretation of the society he studied Read the first two chapters of Barley's account in the field, and compare it with the first reading you did (Malinowski's description). What differences do you notice? Why is the narration, the style, so seemingly different but also have a similar feeling? If you read the entire book (highly recommended), do you think you could find new ways of interpreting how people live and organise themselves?