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1 IDH 2004 Inhabiting Other Lives Spring Semester 2006 Placide Lecture January 18 “Who has the vantage point: actor or observer? insider or outsider?” Assigned Reading: Selections from Persian Letters, Montesquieu Introduction: Let’s begin by looking at the title of today’s lecture: “Who has the vantage point: actor or observer? Insider or outsider?” What does the question mean? What do you think? I asked my husband the question and he responded: “Who has the better position to observe…?” Whose position of observation has the advantage? Who is in a better position to observe and therefore solve a problem?” Hmmm…interesting answer…not too far from what I think might be the truth. Of course, Seymour (my husband) did not have a context for the question. That is, he was not thinking as I was, about approaching the study of social action or culture. Because we are talking about the study of social action let’s also make sure that we all understand what we mean by “actor” and “observer”. The actor is, of course, a member of the society/culture that is being studied. The observer is the individual conducting the study or attempting to learn about said culture. He may be a lay observer (ie one who is not a trained scientist;) or he may be a trained social scientist who employs a specific method based on his training. You were asked to read selections from Persian Letters. Who wrote the book? What do you know about the author? He was widely known as a political theorist of the Enlightenment period. His name was originally Charles-Louis de Secondat and he was born to a noble family near Bordeaux, France in 1689. He received a law degree in 1708 and upon the death of his uncle in 1716 he inherited the title “Baron de La Brede et de Montesquieu” and the office of President a Mortier in the Parliament of Bordeaux (a chiefly judicial and administrative body.) Persian Letters was 2 published anonymously in 1721 –just under 70 years before the French Revolution in 1789. Montesquieu strongly opposed all forms of despotism and favored democratic forms of government. For Montesquieu, the ideal was a form of government in which the legislative, judicial and executive powers are separate (checks and balances.) What is the book Persian Letters about? Who was writing the letters? To whom were they written and what were they about? In his preface, Montesquieu claims that the letters were written by Persian travelers who lived with him for some time in Paris and who shared the letters with him. In the letters a Persian – (Usbek) accompanied by a friend (Rica) leaves Persia travels throughout Europe for 9 years. During that time both write letters to wives and their Eunuchs and friends reporting their experiences and what they are observing about European (in particular, Parisian) life and culture. Interspersed throughout the letters, are comments comparing life in the seraglio with that observed in France. These comparisons range from gender relationships and sexual freedom to religion. In Letter 26 for example, Usbek writes to Roxanna ( the wife whom he most trusted and who we later discover betrayed that trust) criticizing the relative freedom experienced by women in Paris who are allowed to wear cosmetics and jewels and whose faces may be uncovered in the presence of men. Usbek tells Roxanna how lucky she is to be able instead to enjoy the “protection” in the seraglio the “care” of eunuchs there. Letter 75 comments on the apparent “ebb and flow of belief” observed in Christians who seem to Usbek to lack the zeal and commitment exhibited by Muslims. He thanks Almighty God at the end of the letter that he belongs to a religion that has priority over all human interests – implying that the same does not exist in Christianity. In Letter 24 Usbek arrives in Paris and notes a number of differences: 1) the way people seem to always be moving at a rapid pace.[He writes: “No people in the world make their bodies work harder for them than Frenchmen: they run; they fly.”(72)] The tendency to move at a rapid pace is in sharp contrast the much slower pace of travel in Persia. 2) the way people seem to ‘bump’ into each other unapologetically 3 But is the observer in Persian Letters really Usbek – the Persian? From whose vantage point is the ‘story’ being told? Who is the actor? Who is the observer? I am going to give you 4 options. In Persian Letters what do we have?: 1. 2. 3. 4. Persians writing about Parisians? Persians writing about Persians? Parisians writing about Persians? Parisians writing about Parisians? We will return to Persian Letters later and we will answer the question as well. Before we do I want us to think about the question posed by the title and to talk about the vantage point held by the actor versus that held by the observer. I think that in the title of this lecture we are really asking the following question: If you were going to study a particular culture, whose perspective would be more useful? That of the actor or that of the observer? I am going to approach the question taking from the social sciences that study human social behavior and culture (sociology and anthropology) different ideas held by practitioners about how such study ought to be approached. In both sociology and anthropology there has long existed a debate regarding this issue. On one side of the debate are the social scientists who favor the observer. For these individuals the only valid method of study is that which is done by the (objective) outsider. They therefore advocate complete objectivity in the study of social phenomena. On the other side are those who favor the actor. For these individuals a methodology that relies on accounts and explanations provided by the (subjective) insider is more useful. They therefore advocate subjectivity in the study of social phenomena. Those who advocate objectivity: 1. believe that social laws exist and that these laws must be discovered by observation, experimentation and comparison Those who advocate subjectivity: 4 2. focus on understanding. They believe we can understand social facts because we are subjects of society and as such we constitute society. A. Observer/Outsider (Objectivity) Let’s begin with the ideas of those who favor the observer in the study of social phenomena. Arguments in favor of the observer are largely based on the belief that for sociology to be a discipline of any true value, its methodology must bear characteristics that resemble those of natural science research and deal with observable, empirical facts. Now why might that be important? Is it that sociologists/anthropologists were merely suffering from an inferior complex? What is it that sociologists want to do? [Answer: study human society/culture to learn, understand and predict social action.] So they need to be able to trust their results. One important individual in the history of sociology is French sociologist, Emile Durkheim. Durkheim was interested in establishing sociology as a discipline that was separate from philosophy and psychology. He argued that society existed, that there were such things as “social facts” and that these social facts were to be seen as “things”. In so doing Durkheim was laying the foundation for a sociological method ( ie a method of studying social phenomena) that is entirely “scientific”. In his discussion on this proposed method, Durkheim insisted that one of the main features had to be ‘objectivity’. For Durkheim there was such a thing as ‘the absolute conception of knowledge’ or ‘the conception of reality as it is independently of our thought”. His focus was therefore on the “observable and the measurable.” (Smelser: 1976) Empiricism was therefore of paramount importance in the sociological method. Definition of empiricism: Empiricism is generally understood in sociological research to “emphasize the collection of facts and observations, 5 at the expense of conceptual reflection and theoretical inquiry.” (Oxford Dictionary of Sociology) For Durkheim it was also important to avoid, as far as possible, any hint of human subjectivity. To do that, said Durkheim, the researcher had to abandon all “prenotions” or pre-conceived ideas, and engage in “the rigorous pursuit of a sociological method” that aims to attain “an absolute explanation of a determinate and realistically conceived world of ‘social facts’.” (1982: 11-12) So the social scientist must: 1. Must remain detached from the object of study 2. Abandon all preconceived notions (no bias allowed) 3. Observe the object of study (society/culture) 4. Collect facts (ie information about what he is observing) 5. Compare and analyze 6. Make conclusions about what he has seen (without necessarily including the insider’s explanation/interpretation) How does that sound? Is it reasonable? For Durkheim and others who deny that it is necessary to consider human subjectivity in sociological research, who has the vantage point? The obvious answer is: the observer. The observer is believed to have the vantage point because: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. As outsider she/he is more likely to be objective She/he may notice ‘facts’ about which the insider may not be aware She/he relies entirely on “the observation of facts”, not interpretation provided by insiders The trained observer will employ a method of study that is “scientific” – ie that emphasizes empiricism Even lay individuals tend to assume that the vantage point of the observer is more trustworthy. Actor/Insider (Subjectivity) 6 Let’s turn now to the other side: those who favor the vantage point of the actor and subjectivity. I will use as an example German sociologist Max Weber. Weber is a strong advocate of the vantage point of the actor. His reliance on the account provided by the actor is evident in his very definition of sociology which reads thus: “. . . a science concerning itself with the interpretive understanding of social action and thereby with a causal explanation of its course and consequences.” Because Weber’s ultimate goal is to attempt the “interpretive understanding of social action,” he relies heavily on the subjective interpretation of actor/insider. Weber believes that “objectively valid meanings” are a matter of faith alone [in other words, we can only hope to find these but our hopes are not likely to be realized] (Bendix 1984). He believes that scholars deal instead with “subjectively experienced meanings.” So Weber is preoccupied with subjective meaning and causal relations. He wants to know not just what people do by why they do what they do. And for Weber the only way to find that meaning is to take into account the interpretive understanding that is provided by the actor. Let’s take your Honors education as an example. An observer who is curious about the reason why bright students choose to become members of an Honors College might assume that everyone of you in this room is here, because you are interested in receiving a broader education. Since Honors is not required for any major in the university, and since you come here every Wednesday and go to your small group room every Monday the observer might assume that you are all here because you possess a passion for learning –for the sake of learning. But it may really be the case that some of you are here because of your parents. Some, because of the doors you anticipate your Honors education may open for you later. Some to have the courses on your transcript and perhaps enhance your chances for graduate school…. And some, because of priority registration! For Weber, the individual plays a big role in the interpretation of his own behavior. Since man contributes to the making of his world, it is imperative that his (man’s) interpretation is sought in the study of social action. Since you are the Honors student, you are the only one who is likely to be able to lead the researcher to the real reason why you are in the College. 7 A similar perspective by modern sociologists. Here are a couple of examples: Reinhard Bendix(1984) writes that when scholars study men in society, they are interpreting people who are themselves able to interpret what they are doing. Anthony Giddens – “Social life. . .is produced by its component actors …” (1993: 85-86) Giddens believes that social theory has treated agents (actors) as much less knowledgeable than they really are. He asserts that “lay actors are social theorists, whose theories help to constitute the activities and institutions that are the object of study of specialized social observers or social scientists. 1984: 32-33) For the above individuals, the role of the actor is of paramount importance because the object of our study is also a subject who is able to fully participate in our research. So now how does this sound? Is this position not also reasonable? Weaknesses/Problems in both approaches: Observer (Objectivity) 1. In sociology what is the object of study? Who conducts the research? Unlike natural phenomena, social science research is complicated by the fact that the object of study is a participant in the creation of his reality. Sociologist, Stephen Lukes writes that Durkheim’s goal to achieve complete objectivity is unrealistic. (Some might say: IMPOSSIBLE.) Lukes’s objections are based primarily on his view that the social scientist’s data are not the “hard data” or “brute facts” that would be required for “the absolute conception of knowledge”. 2. Complete objectivity is unlikely. Anthropologist Clifford Geertz agrees. He strongly advocates reliance of the actor’s account. Additionally, he rejects the idea that the scientific observer can be completely objective and that he must remain detached from the object of study. He maintains that in 8 his interaction with the object of study, the researcher becomes part of the picture. What do you think? Do you think it is possible to achieve complete objectivity in the study of social phenomena? Why? 3. It is difficult for the observer to get to true meaning. Do you believe that one might study another culture without considering the actors and their understanding of their own culture, and arrive at any real understanding of the object of study? Usbek experiences this problem and describes this in Letter 48. (Use the ‘wink’ as in Geertz’s thick description.) – What did I just do? How do you know? It may have been an involuntary twitch; Layers of possible meaning. And Nacirema example Actor (Subjectivity) 1. Social actors often perform an action without necessarily being conscious of its meaning. And the social scientist must take that fact into consideration. Max Weber himself says that emphasizing subjective meaning, will lead to problems that must be considered by the social scientist. Though every attempt at interpretation is aimed at clarity and certainty, no matter how clear the interpretation appears to be from the point of view of meaning – it cannot be taken to be a causally valid interpretation but rather only a plausible hypothesis. (1978: 8) He gives a number of reasons. The actor is not always aware of the motives which drive the real force of his action. Therefore we cannot be certain that we really know the motives behind human action. Weber does not even pretend that it is possible to get at actually existing meaning. 9 Do you agree that we are not constantly analyzing our actions? How many times, for example, have you greeted someone with a handshake and asked yourself why the greeting is performed in that manner? On the other hand if you were asked to provide an explanation, you might say: “It’s the polite thing to do.” Or “It’s the way I was raised.” Or “It’s just done.” (as my mother used to tell me.) We sort of take some things for granted, don’t we? How about fashion? Why can’t (or shouldn’t one wear white after labor day?) How many of you actually abide by that rule? Have you ever questioned why it exists? 2. Even when actors are aware of the motives behind their actions, they do not always tell the truth. Let’s try to find a practical example. You are a bright student, a rising senior in high school and you are considering universities to which you might apply. As far as you know, FIU is a young institution, that has not yet made a name for itself, yet you have heard that a number of smart students from your high school chose FIU. Also, a couple of admissions recruiters have mailed you information, called your house and you have been offered a scholarship. So you decide to do your own research. You might construct an interview with questions designed to glean information including demographic (age, ethnic/national background, gender), socio-economic status (family income, location [residence], parents’ educational level) and questions that specifically relate to the research topic “Why do bright students choose to attend FIU?” : how many schools did you consider? How many of these offered you admission? Why did you choose FIU? Etc. Whom would you interview? Honors College students Other smart students with gpa over say 3.5? Any one else? I am hoping that you would also want to hear from: High school guidance counselors/cap advisors FIU admissions recruiters Bright students who were offered admission to FIU but chose to go elsewhere (if you can find them) FIU faculty And – Honors College staff involved in the recruitment process What problems might you encounter as you conduct your research? 10 How do you know, for example that the answers you receive are really the truth as the respondents see it? Say there are respondents who chose FIU for the simple reason that FIU offered them the most money in scholarships, but for some reason 60% of these respondents are disinclined to answer truthfully and instead give you the answer they think you expect…or the answer that sounds more reasonable: say - because FIU has an excellent international relations or business program? And...say you chose to ask me as an Honors College staff member who has been involved in the recruitment of smart student to FIU, why do smart students attend this institution. Well, I might say that I tell them about the wonderful Honors College, that I speak about FIU’s ranking according to the Carnegie Foundation’s new criteria as Research Intensive 1, that FIU is one of the fastest growing young institutions in the nation, that FIU has outstanding faculty who are engaged in groundbreaking research….but I may just be telling you what I have been told to tell you. Since I work here, there may be many things I know about the university that might deter a smart (or any) student from attending. But my answers (especially since I have no idea what will be done with the results of your research) could cost me my job. So which perspective do you think is correct? If you were going to study a particular culture whose perspective would be more useful? If you choose the observer how likely is it that you will really achieve understanding of human action that you seek? If choose the actor how will you deal with questions of validity? What’s the solution? Which do you choose? I propose that a balance between the actor and observer seems to be reasonable. Generally in sociological research the actor as insider does provide information to the observing scientist…so that the latter must find ways of balancing subjectivity with objectivity. Weber states that all sociological research must take into consideration processes and phenomena that are devoid of subjective meaning (ie that are objective), since the motives of which the actor is conscious may well conceal other motives or repressions which really drive his action. In such cases even honest self-analysis on the part of the actor has only relative 11 value. Therefore it is the responsibility of the sociologist to become aware of the motivational situation, describe and analyze it. In fact, that is exactly the argument posited by sociologists Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann. They write that society exists as both objective and subjective reality. They speak of a process of socialization that “never ends” and that is “perennially threatened by ‘subjective reality’ forcing society to develop ways of safeguarding a degree of symmetry between objective and subjective reality.” - that is, society is forced to find ways of balancing the two. Another sociologist Reinhard Bendix writes about a circularity that exists as a result of the necessary interplay between objectivity and subjectivity. Persian Letters Now what does all of this have to do with Persian Letters? How does Persian Letters relate to the question about the actor’s vs. the observer’s perspective? In the book Usbek and Rica are lay observers who are interested in understanding the culture they are observing. At times they appear to misinterpret what they see. Eg – In Letter 24 – the Pope is a perceived as a “magician” who controls the mind of the prince and others… Certainly Usbek possesses one vantage point…that of the lay observer who is an outsider. The questions that Usbek asks of Parisians illustrate one of the advantages of being the observer/outsider. She/he is likely to ask questions about social action that is taken for granted by the actor. While the insider might be able to inform the outsider about the meaning of a process of action, as Weber pointed out, he (the actor) is not always conscious of such meaning. The actor may ‘take for granted’ as it were an action and not even question its meaning unless asked to do so. So the observer may actually point the actor in the direction of interpretive understanding of his own culture. Indeed Bendix’s discussion about the circularity of social research is referring exactly to this phenomenon in which the object of study changes because the people who are being studied are capable of considering scholarly analyses of their actions. He writes as an example of primitive tribes in which informants become specialists on their own culture. 12 All of this has implications for our course. The title of our course is “Inhabiting Other Lives ” but the big question on which the course is based is “Who are We?”. In bringing the two together we are suggesting that by learning about others we not only broaden our horizons, but we are also learning about ourselves. How many of you have traveled away from home (for study abroad or just for vacation?) Have you found that you noticed things about yourself and your own culture that you never before questioned or even noticed? I have found this to be true of my own life. As an immigrant to this country who married outside of my own culture and whose current friends are from varied ethnic backgrounds, I have found myself asking questions about Jamaican culture that I had never asked before. I had never wondered about the way we greet each other until I was confronted with the required kiss in Haitian culture, which I learned about the hard way when I met my future mother-in-law and greeted her from afar by smiling very slightly and mumbling ‘hello’. (There is a very long explanation for my behavior which I would be happy to share with interested students – just not in this lecture.) But in my British West Indian background we tended to greet by saying “hello” perhaps with the right hand slightly raised as if for a brief wave. In closer relationships (close friends/family) we often greeted with a hug…but only if we had not seen each other for a while. As far as I can recall, greeting with a kiss was just not the norm. In fact, I cannot recall ever seeing that kind of greeting as I grew up. In my recent visit to Jamaica I observed on more than one occasion, people greeting friends with a kiss. Is it possible that I had in fact seen this before, but never really noticed? I still insist that kissing as a greeting is not a widely performed action in Jamaica. But isn’t it interesting that I should notice that now after having been exposed to cultures in which that type of greeting is the norm? Along the lines of learning about oneself, I did make another observation in my last visit to Jamaica. It seems that every time I visit, the place which is in a sense home, no longer really feels like home. The familiar (or what I recall was once familiar) is no longer familiar. I found myself observing behavior, and understanding to a degree what it means without being able to fully identify with it or sense the connection I once took for granted. In the two 13 weeks that I was there I felt more like an outsider than an insider…Or perhaps I was both??? There is one additional angle that I would like you to consider as you think about the vantage of the actor vs. observer. In the letters, we read the perspective of Persians traveling in Europe – outsiders studying European culture. But is this really the case? To return to the possibilities I posed earlier: Who is actually writing these letters? 1. 2. 3. 4. Persians writing about Parisians? Persians writing about Persians? Parisians writing about Persians? Parisians writing about Parisians? The 4th is correct. Montesquieu is really posing as an outsider and writing what he imagines might be the perspective of an outsider on his own culture. The book is really social satire, written intentionally to criticize aspects of French society. In so doing, he is able to include his own commentary on life in France. The example I used earlier of the comment in L. 24 about the magician who controls the mind of the prince is really Montesquieu criticizing the established religion and the control religion wields over government. In letter 75 the critique of religion continues: “Religion does not so much provide an opportunity for regeneration as for controversy, in which everyone takes part.” (151) The comparisons we identified earlier regarding marriage, the family, gender relationships and so on – are part of his critique of French society. Why does he pose as outsider? Might the reason be that he believes the report will be considered more valid because it is written by an “outsider”? But I also think that even his description of life in the seraglios is used as part of his critique of France. We know that Montesquieu opposed all forms of despotism. Yet Usbek is essentially a despot, whose wives, slaves and eunuchs are at his mercy and have no choice but to obey him even when he is far away. When Montesquieu writes of Usbek’s deep fear of the possibility that one of his wives might be unfaithful, when he writes about 14 the rebellion at the end of the book of Usbek’s wives and the Eunuch who was placed in charge after the chief eunuch has died, and when he writes of Roxana’s affair and ultimate suicide – are we not being given a picture of a despot who has lost control? Recall the sociopolitical situation in France at the time the letters were published and think of what we know about Montesquieu’s views on despotism. So in Persian Letters we have an insider who poses as outsider so that he can criticize his own society and have his critique accepted. Was he successful? How many of you did not know until this lecture that the letters were really written by Montesquieu? Before you knew, did the comments about Paris seem valid? Now that you know, do you find yourself questioning the comments or seeing them differently? Do you deep down think that perhaps the comments were affected by Montesquieu’s biases and perhaps therefore not quite valid? In closing let’s return to the issue of the title of our course “Inhabiting other Lives”. This term for your final project you have been asked to endeavor to inhabit the life of another. In his second lecture last semester, Prof. Hauptli discussed consciousness and subjective experiences. He asked us to think about whether it was possible to fully appreciate the subjective experience of another. Do you remember his conclusion? Now if you agree with his conclusion (that it is not possible to fully appreciate the subjective experience of another), if you agree that neither the actor nor the observer can arrive at a complete understanding of the culture/social action being studied, you might have real problems with the idea that it is possible to inhabit another life – correct? Based on all of this – can we do it? Can we fully inhabit another life? Should we therefore not try? Why have we asked you to do so? (To learn about others and thus learn about ourselves.) Why does Usbek travel to Europe? To learn about Western culture. But does he also learn about his own culture. In the letters there is constant reflection. He finds his opinion changes: Read L34. Page 86. He asks questions about his religion: Why is pork taboo? Dr. Hauptli believes it is important to try to inhabit other lives. I submit that he is correct, not only because of what we learn about others, but also because of what we learn about ourselves. 15 I end by quoting T. S. Elliot: The end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time 16 References Bendix, Reinhard. 1984. Force, Fate and Freedom: On Historical Sociology. California University Press Berger, Peter L and Thomas Luckmann. 1966. The Social Construction of Reality. New York: Doubleday Durkheim, Emile [1895] 1982 Rules of the Sociological Method. New York: The Free Press Giddens, Anthony. 1993. New Rules of the Sociological Method. California: Stanford University Press --1984. The Constitution of Society. California: University of California Press Ritzer, George. 1996. Modern Sociological Theory. New York: Mcgraw Hill Companies Weber, Max. 1978. Economy and Society. California: University of California Press http://faculty.ircc.cc.fl.us/faculty/jlett/Article%20on%20Emics%20and%20 Etics.htm