Anthropology Through a Double Lens. Daniel Touro Linger

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       Anthropology Through a Double Lens

       Anthropology Through a Double Lens

      Public and Personal Worlds in Human Theory

      Daniel Touro Linger

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia

      Copyright © 2005 University of Pennsylvania Press

      All rights reserved

      Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper

      1 0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

      Published by

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4011

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Linger, Daniel Touro.

      Anthropology through a double lens : public and personal worlds in human theory / Daniel Touro Linger.

      p. cm.

      ISBN 0-8122-3857-5 (cloth : alk. paper)

      Includes bibliographical references and index.

      1. Anthropology—Philosophy. 2. Anthropology—Methodology. I. Title.

      GN33 .L56 2005

301′.01—dc22 2004057207

      For my father

       Contents

       Introduction

       Part I: Meanings

       1.Has Culture Theory Lost Its Minds?

       2.Missing Persons

       3.The Metropolis, the Globe, and Mental Life

       Part II: Politics

       4.The Hegemony of Discontent

       5.The Semantics of Dead Bodies

       6.Wild Power in Post-Military Brazil

       Part III: Identities

       7.Whose Identity?

       8.The Identity Path of Eduardo Mori

       9.Do Japanese Brazilians Exist?

       Notes

       References

       Index

       Acknowledgments

       The Double Lens

      On the way to the new millennium, anthropology, still a young field, became prematurely forgetful. Anthropos almost vanished, crowded out by culture, the discipline’s celebrated contribution to social science. That contribution has been valuable, but too imperious in its claim on human lives. This book, while reserving an important place for culture, seeks to recover a focus on human beings for an anthropology worthy of its name.

      The essays collected herein run against the strong culturalist current that has carried anthropology for the past several decades. Culturalism is a type of social or historical determinism. It consigns human beings to the margins of the analysis, as incidental to culture or else, more tendentiously, as culture’s effects. Its job is the interpretation of public representations, or symbols—words, images, performances, and narratives—which, it is said or implied, hold human minds in their thrall. Culturalism has a long pedigree in anthropology, especially in the United States, but recently it has, in its discursivist guise and in tandem with parallel shifts in critical and textual theory, achieved a position of near-dominance in the discipline. Indeed, many anthropologists now say that they practice “cultural studies,” an emerging, heavily discursivist field strongly influenced by literary criticism.1

      To be sure, culturalism opens up unique and fascinating problems. Culturalist perspectives illuminate human affairs from an intriguing angle, suggesting that human groups (tribes, nations, ethnicities, classes, castes, genders, and so on) cut up the world into arbitrary chunks, represented by arrays of symbols. In newer, more radical versions of culturalism, representations constitute, fragment, and reconfigure groups themselves. Culturalism encourages studies of the diverse frameworks of thought and feeling that purportedly ensnare us all. The thousands of ethnographies gathered in any university library attest to the fecundity of culturalist theories and their associated research practices.

      But culturalism bears a high cost. That is why its triumph has not been complete. Many anthropologists, myself included, have now come to view the culturalist wave with reserve. Culturalism seems reductive. It arrogates too much to its own domain, disfiguring and oversimplifying human worlds. One line of criticism has emphasized culturalism’s appropriation of economic and political relations, its penchant for converting the materialities of social interaction into constructions of culture or discourse (Shaw 1995: ch. 1). Equally serious is the issue I highlight in this book: culturalism’s tendency to turn personal experience and human minds into derivative, spectral phenomena.

      Some of my colleagues despair that anthropology may already be a lost cause for human (as opposed to cultural) studies. Research on human beings, they contend, is not going away, but will simply move elsewhere (D’Andrade 2000). They are certainly right that the study of human beings will not disappear, and they may be right about its future emigration from anthropology, but I do not believe that we—anthropologists concerned with substantial personal worlds, and skeptical of what Dennis Wrong long ago (1961) called “the oversocialized conception of man”—should lightly surrender a field to which we have contributed so much and which still, given its unusual perspective and its distinctive sensibilities, has so much to offer.

      I outline a possible route to a cultural anthropology that, building on the insights of disciplinary ancestors and contemporaries, opens vistas for future work encompassing public and personal worlds. The “double lens” of the title refers to a theoretical eye holding both worlds in focus. I offer a view, through the double lens, of anthropology’s central concern: human worlds, in all their plenitude, variability, specificity, and complexity.

       Beyond the Cultural Relativity Effect

      The essays presented here draw on my ethnographic fieldwork in Brazil, done mostly in the mid-1980s, and in Japan, a decade later.2 I worked primarily in two cities: São Luís, capital of the northeastern Brazilian state of Maranhão; and Toyota City, an industrial hub of central Honshu. In São Luís, I looked at local politics, Carnival, and interpersonal violence. In Toyota City, I examined the identity quandaries of Brazilian migrants of Japanese descent. Although the research topics were disparate, the theoretical focus remained the same: the intersection of public and personal worlds.

      Strange as it may sound, over this period I gradually learned what I was talking about. Gregory Bateson once described theoretical advance in dynamic terms, as a dialectic between “loose thinking,” or heuristic play, and “strict thinking,” the hammering of intuitions and guesses into formal schemes (1972a). My own practice has likewise zig-zagged, crablike, between imagination and tentative formalization. I have come to understand better, and learned to formulate more precisely, my own concerns, presuppositions, and models.


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