S ESSION 7: G LOBALIZATION T HEORY IN A NTHROPOLOGY 1
A N W O A W D NT TH HR RO OP PO OL LO OG GY Y I IN N T TH HE E OR RL LD Decolonization, detribalization, urbanization anthropology losing its raison d’être? internal criticisms in anthropology: “the global is the true state of affairs and the only adequate framework for the analysis of any part of the world, at least since the rise of the first commercial civilizations” (Friedman, 1994, p. 3). Eric Wolf (1982): web-like interconnections “the appearance of a global perspective is contained within the self- consciousness of the ethnographic act itself” (Friedman, 1994, p. 3) “what is ethnography if not the activity whereby members of the center travel to already pacified peripheries to examine the life of ‘the other’?” (Friedman, 1994, p. 3) 2
Situating the local within the global, understanding anthropology as representative of an early globalization process, questioning culture as local and bounded A M I N ? A I N ? ME ER RI IC CA AN NI IZ ZA AT TI IO ON N O OR R ND DI IG GE EN NI IZ ZA AT TI IO ON Arjun Appadurai “alternative fears to globalization” (p. 295) “indigenization” Criticisms of “indigenization”: mask for Americanization? 3
Akhil Gupta and James Ferguson: “we worry at least as much about the opposite danger of celebrating the inventiveness of those ‘consumers’ of the culture industry (especially on the periphery)….The danger here is the temptation to use scattered examples of the cultural flows dribbling from the ‘periphery’ to the chief centers of the culture industry as a way of dismissing the ‘grand narrative’ of capitalism …and thus of evading the powerful political issues associated with Western global hegemony” (1992, p. 19) Ulf Hannerz: “With regard to cultural flow, the periphery, out there in a distant territory, is more the taker than the giver of meaning and meaningful form . Much as we feel called upon to make note of any examples of counterflow, it is difficult to avoid the conclusion that at least as things stand now the relationship is lopsided (1991, p. 107, emphases added) 4
C O C R C C S OS SM MO OP PO OL LI IT TA AN NS S A AN ND D RE EO OL LE ES production of new diversity the cosmopolitan and the creole 5
T H M O T M S HE EO OR RE ET TI IC CA AL L OD DE EL LS T H H A M O T H M L HE E AN NN NE ER RZ Z OD DE EL 1) the autonomy and boundedness of cultures is understood as a matter of degree; 2) the asymmetrical center-periphery structure affects the distribution of culture within the world; 3) the center-periphery structure shapes the material and power contexts to which cultures adapt and they direct the influx of “initially alien” meanings; 4) these “alien meanings” do not enter a cultural tabula rasa , and hence interaction has to be stressed; 5) “not all cultures are local, in the sense of being territorially bounded;” and, 6) the global homogenization of culture is not a self-evident end result (Hannerz, 1992, pp. 261-262) 6
T H A P M O T A M L HE E PP PA AD DU UR RA AI I OD DE EL 5 dimensions of “global cultural flow”: 1) ethnoscapes; 2) mediascapes; 3) technoscapes; 4) finanscapes; and, 5) ideoscapes = “deeply perspectival constructs” (Appadurai, 1990, p. 296) 7
C U O U P L : B E P L , B E C U C O P E : B P E , B C E UL LT TU UR RE ES S UT T O OF F LA AC CE EY YO ON ND D LA AC CE EY YO ON ND D UL LT TU UR RE “movement” (Kearney, 1995, p. 547) “transnationalism” (Basch et al., 1994, p. 22) C R L O - C C L L - M RI IT TI IQ QU UE E O OF F OC CA AL CE EN NT TR RI IS SM a fiction that treats cultures as discrete, object-like phenomena (Gupta & Ferguson, 1992, p. 7) If culture was really bound to place, then what is “the culture” of farm workers who spend half a year in Mexico and half a year in the United States? (1992, p. 7) Colonialism brought cultures into relation with one another, in specific places; what then is the resulting culture of the colonizer, of the colonized? problem of understanding multiple cultures within the same space Migration blurs distinctions between “here” and “there” (Gupta & Ferguson, 1992, p. 10) 8
T H G U & F E M O T G & F M L HE E UP PT TA A ER RG GU US SO ON N OD DE EL spaces have for centuries been hierarchically interconnected difference has to be understood in relational terms, through connection first comes space, then comes place “The move we are calling for, most generally, is away from seeing cultural difference as the correlate of a world of ‘peoples’ whose separate histories wait to be bridged by the anthropologist and toward seeing it as a product of a shared historical process that differentiates the world as it connects it (Gupta & Ferguson, 1992, p. 16) 9
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Kahn, Joel S. (1989). “Culture: Demise or Resurrection?” Critique of Anthropology , 9(2), 5-25. Matos Mar, Jose (1988). “Anthropology in the Twenty-First Century,” International Social Science Journal , No. 116, May, 203-10. Mintz, Sidney (1977). “The So-Called World System: Local Initiative and Local Response,” Dialectical Anthropology , 2(4), 253-270. Nash, June (1981). “Ethnographic Aspects of the World Capitalist System,” Annual Review of Anthropology , 10, 393-423. Sahlins, Marshall (1987). Islands of History . London: Tavistock. Sahlins, Marshall (1994). “Cosmologies of Capitalism: The Trans-Pacific Sector of ‘The World System’,” in N.B. Dirks, G. Eley & S.B. Ortner, eds., Culture/Power/History . Princeton: Princeton Univ. Press, 412-455. White House. (2010). National Security Strategy . Washington, DC: The White House. Wolf, Eric (1982). Europe and the People without History . Berkeley: Univ. of California Press. 11
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