Posted on 04/26/2005 4:10:04 PM PDT by NutCrackerBoy
Last year the executive board of the American Anthropological Association (AAA) joined the controversy over gay marriage by issuing a statement that declared
The results of more than a century of anthropological research on households, kinship relationships, and families, across cultures and through time, provide no support whatsoever for the view that either civilization or viable social orders depend upon marriage as an exclusively heterosexual institution.
In fact, some 150 years of systematic inquiry by anthropologists leaves little doubt that heterosexual marriage is found in nearly every human society and almost always as a pivotal institution. Homosexual marriage outside contemporary Western societies is exceedingly rare and never the basis of "viable social order."
Since the executive board cites the history of anthropological research, let's oblige. An upstate New York lawyer, Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881), published the first modern systematic ethnography in 1851. Morgan's League of the Ho-De'-No-Sau-Nee, Iroquois offered an admiring account of how the Seneca and the other Iroquois tribes had built up an entire Indian confederacy based on extensions of their ideas of kinship and family. Anthropology has covered a lot of ground in the 154 years since, but Morgan's insight remained central during most of that time.
Morgan, though largely unknown outside anthropology, was one of America's greatest 19th-century scholars. He virtually invented the study of kinship; published a massive worldwide comparison of kinship terminologies; mounted his own expedition to visit the Indian nations east of the Rockies; and in his spare time published an exceptional natural history book, The American Beaver. In the United States, by historical mischance, anthropology came to be dominated by the German immigrant Franz Boas (1858-1942) and his numerous students, including Margaret Mead, who emphasized the particularity of individual cultures. (It was, in fact, Boas who first added the "s" to culture: a small addition that continues to exact a large cost.) But while Boas and his students were busy popularizing cultural relativism in the U.S., Morgan's stature was growing in Europe. His methods were taken up by both British and French anthropologists, who emphasized the bases of social order common to all societies.
The rift between American and European anthropology never completely healed, especially as the Morgan-inspired European approach proved far more intellectually powerful. At mid-century, for example, an American anthropologist, George Peter Murdock (1897-1985), launched a blistering attack on the British social anthropologists of his day, but to no avail. To the contrary, many American anthropologists began to take a more serious interest in kinship and marriage.
But the old Boasian preference for viewing each culture separately never died out, and it made a grand re-entrance in 1984. That year American anthropologist David Schneider (1918-1995), known for his studies of matrilineal and American kinship, was suddenly overwhelmed by doubt. Schneider's A Critique of the Study of Kinship accused anthropologists of projecting Western ideas of kinship everywhere they looked and thus failing to discern the actual, local definitions of how people relate to one another. The arguments in Schneider's Critique are not all that impressive, but they landed like a match in dry tinder. The study of kinship had grown baroquely complicated and was beset by arid scholastic debates. Schneider's essay gave an excuse to anthropologists who were already eager to move on.
Postmodernism was in the air, and so were exciting political ideologies including feminism and gender studies. Suddenly anthropology was ablaze with repudiations of the idea that the family, kinship, and marriage were the organizing ideas of human society.
Eradicating the central concept of an intellectual discipline, however, is not that easy. Anthropology departments proceeded by eliminating courses in kinship. Where the forest of kinship studies once stood, now grew the gardens of women's studies, and soon gender studies. Anthropologists who began their careers studying kinship redefined themselves as specialists on "inequality." The perspective that kinship holds a society together made way for the perspective that, at bottom, societies are "contested sites," where men and women strive against each other, the powerful oppress the weak, and the weak seek ways to subvert their oppressors.
In the last few years, the study of kinship has made a modest comeback in anthropology. Partly this is the product of young anthropologists with little or no training in kinship who go off to do fieldwork and discover themselves ignorant of the basics. But kinship studies are also heating up because anthropologists committed to feminist and gender studies have realized that to connect their ideological advocacy with the real world they too need to study kinship. Without a hint of embarrassment they have therefore announced the re-birth of the field they spent the last 20 years deconstructing. The new field is distinguished from the old as critical kinship studies, implying I suppose that Morgan and the five or six generations that followed him were practitioners of credulous kinship studies.
For an instance of the new critical kinship studies at work, consider the forum, "Are Men Missing?" in the newest issue of the journal The American Ethnologist. The lead article, "Wedding Bell Blues," is by Evelyn Blackwood, an anthropologist at Purdue University. She complains that anthropologists have assumed "heteronormative marriage" as "a foundational model for human society" and thereby treated "matrifocal families" as a weak alternative. Once we get rid of underlying "constructs" of "masculine domination," we are free to see the alternatives. Blackwood's principal example is a group in Western Sumatra, the Minangkabau, for whom descent is reckoned through women, a man moves upon marriage to his mother-in-law's household, and women hold both real estate and political clout.
The Minangkabau situation indeed looks favorable to women, but it does not exactly look like a challenge to the idea that men and women marry to form key social units. But Blackwood says otherwise: "I found that the normative model of conjugal relations is absent. In this particular case, intergenerational ties through women, rather than heterosexual conjugal bonds, are constitutive of households and kin groups." Translation: Marriage happens among the Minangkabau, but it doesn't have any genuinely important consequences.
The non-anthropologist who reaches this point may well ask, "So what?" Does it matter how a small ethnic group in Western Sumatra arranges its household affairs? Do the Minangkabau matrifocal households have any bearing on whether the United States should legalize gay marriage?
Obviously these are not the terms in which the debate is going to play out in Congress and in the states. But it would be a mistake to underestimate the degree to which these seemingly arcane academic disputes play into the larger debate. Last April, John Borneman, an anthropologist at Princeton, and Laurie Kain Hart, an anthropologist at Haverford College, published an essay in the Washington Post purporting to find in the history of anthropology a mandate for gay marriage: "Does marriage have to be heterosexual? The human record tells us otherwise." As proof, they cite a well-known East African case, in which a woman pays the brideprice of another woman and officially claims her as a "wife." The trouble is that this "marriage" is only a legal fiction, not a lesbian coupling. Borneman and Hart clearly knew that, but buried the explanation in an opaque observation that "This role of wife is above all social, and not contingent on her sexual relations."
Borneman is also among the contributors to the American Ethnologist forum, and he commences his essay by telling how his Washington Post article resulted in an invitation to appear on Nightline, which was unfortunately cancelled at the last minute.
So offering reckless distortions of the ethnographic record in support of gay marriage may indeed feed into the national debate. Neither the Washington Post nor Nightline is likely to factcheck East African marriage customs. And I would not be much surprised to see the Minangkabau matrifocal family cropping up in future mainstream-media pronouncements to the effect that "marriage" is just one of a myriad of cultural forms, and is of no essential significance. Some tribes shrink heads; some drink reindeer milk; some marry. All is flux.
In her article, Evelyn Blackwood takes a moment to congratulate John Borneman for using "insights from queer theory to destabilize the dualism of married-unmarried." This is the typically obtuse jargon of contemporary anthropology, but surely Blackwood has it right. Borneman aims to knock (heterosexual) marriage out of its "privileged place in the replication of our present social order." But he is one among many anthropologists engaged in this ideologically motivated demolition disguised as social science.
The difficulty they face is that the factual record is overwhelmingly against them. That is why Blackman, among others, are straining after ethnographic gnats and propounding tendentious interpretations of gnat anatomy.
I don't know whether the editors of the American Ethnologist (published by the AAA) or the AAA's executive board really think that "The results of more than a century of anthropological research...provide no support whatsoever" for the importance of marriage as "an exclusively heterosexual institution." Maybe they are so trapped in contemporary ideology that this strange assertion seems plausible to them; or maybe this is just an attempt to throw dust in the eyes of opponents of gay marriage who might think (correctly) that the anthropological record does lend support to the view that heterosexual marriage is very likely a foundational human institution. Perhaps it is best to assume good faith, even though that implies dismal scholarship.
In any case, what the anthropological record really shows is that a society's decisions about marriage are among its most consequential. Political regimes and economic systems are, deep down, the results of particular ways of organizing families. Until Scandinavia and the Low Countries, Canada, and Massachusetts began their experiments with gay marriage, humanity appears to have steered away from this particular option. Possibly gay marriage will be a step forward for humanity; but it is a step into the dark. Civilization as we have known it, even on the western coast of Sumatra, has depended until now on exclusive heterosexual marriage.
---- Peter Wood, a professor of anthropology at Boston University and provost elect at King's College, is the author of Diversity: The Invention of A Concept.
Peter Wood....what an unfortunate name.
Nonetheless his book is most excellent.
No doubt.
It could have been worse. He can be thankful at least that it wasn't "Woody Peters."
I'm sure somewhere, someone has that name.
This makes about as much as much sense as the fourteenth-century Cathar view that procreation was evil. It only took about one generation for the Cathars to disappear as a religious sect.
Better than his brother, Pecker.
Maybe it's closer to the truth say many anthropologists have hardly ever been free of such diseases. For plenty of anthropologists what made them take up the subject -- a belief in cultural relativism -- outweighs any conclusions that they might draw from what they've learned. It's as though the point isn't what you learn, but the state of openness and skepticism that one begins with.
Maybe anthropologists fear the conclusions they'd have to draw if they thought things through further. Lately anthropology looks a lot like a dead end. Other fields or approaches aren't so reticent about drawing conclusions and synthesize the data that anthropologists don't bother to draw conclusions about.
How very true and yet no one seems to pay attention.
With all the ranting and raving by homosexuals to have gay marriage Im surprised no one has spoken up for polygamy. Which by the way is practiced here where I live. A man is legally allowed to have 4 wives.
Here is something interesting ~ "...George Murdock's (1967) Ethnographic Atlas presents a categorization of 849 societies. Of these, 709 are polygynous and only four are polyandrous (women being permitted more than one husband). In the latter, exceptional cases, extreme conditions can usually be identified, such as severe economic deprivation leading to the practice of female infanticide. The surplus of males and the need to have more than one bread-winner thus creates a climate in which it is acceptable for women to acquire more than one husband. Even then, the women seem little inclined to capitalize on their privilege."
Glenn Wilson on Cross-cultural Comparisons
Ah yes. You know, anthropologists have discovered that in some tribes in New Guinea, the men routinely rape 9 year old boys. I guess that'll be evidence enough that it isn't so bad. Maybe there'll be a NAMBLA scholarship available for anyone willing to develop this interesting perspective a little further.
Prof. Wood has it dead on. Anthropologists/archaeologists are in the 90 percentile range liberals (Democrats). I'm one who is NOT. Some of the funniest and most worthless stuff ever written was that gender studies BS that spewed from the cultural relativists and gay/lesbian anthropologists from the mid-to-late 60s to the early 80s. By 1986-1988 you could purchase the trash for two or three dollars a copy from the sale pages of the Barnes and Noble catalogues. It was really amazing how wishful thinking actually gained credence and "academic" standing amongst the not so literate graduate students!
I studied anthropology a bit. This is definitely one field that has been warped by the liberals and gender benders. I was a liberal back when I studied. Anthropology is useful but not when it's so dominated by the left. Homosexuals have always been with us. Their role amongst the *primitives* is usually a weird or closeted one. But they contribute.
But rarely has the institution of marriage included them in a meaningful way. Sometimes in a joking way amongst the *primitives* who are better than us on this issue. They know that homo-ness is an aberration
Tangential, but I get a chuckle when I see a title prominently displayed at Barnes & Noble that argues that it is a myth that men are stronger or better at sports than women.
Huh huh, huh huh.
BU is fortunate to have Dr. Wood with us.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.