Title: History of anthropological research in Central America
1History of anthropological research in Central
America
2Readings
- Beals, R., R. Redfield S. Tax 1943.
Anthropological Research Problems with Reference
to the Contemporary Peoples of Mexico and
Guatemala. American Anthropologist 45, 1-21. - Hewitt de Alcántara, Cynthia 1984. Conclusions.
In Anthropological perspectives on rural Mexico.
London Routledge, pp. 178-191.
3Discussion topics
- Main theoretical perspectives in Central America
ethnography and criticism (Hewitt de Alcantara) - Main topics in Central American ethnography
- The example of anthropology in Mexico
- Summer Institute of Linguistics
4Theory major schools
- Evolutionism
- Particularism / culturalism
- Indigenismo
- Functionalism
- Cultural ecology
- Dependentismo / Marxism
- Other
5Theory vs fact (I)
- Hewitt de Alcántara 70 years of systematic
anthropological research in Mexico - Can be extrapolated to CA
- Theoretical determination of anthropologists has
influenced their ways of observing social
phenomena - Congruence between social setting and
paradigmatic concerns - Approach to countryside a function of the
intellectual structure of schools, not of a
random confrontation with life
6Theory vs Fact (II)
- Search of settings and situations which fit their
preconceived images partial and selective
choice - Yet in Kuhnian terms anthropologists acted
scientifically - Selective use of data common in anthropology
- E.g. Oscar Lewis - culture of poverty - poor
people develop certain cultural and social values
that prevent them from improving their situation,
and thus enter a vicious circle (based on various
ethnographies of Mexican families, Lewis
presented just the facts that would prove his
theory)
7Theory vs Fact (III)
- Eg. Margaret Mead - studying gender issues and
ageing in Samoa - interviewed the missionaries
daughters instead of the local girls - Eg. Napoleon Chagnon and the Yanomamös as fierce
people
8Theory - evolutionism
- Second half of the 19th century
- Not major trend in Mexican anthropology
- Underlying assumption of indigenismo
- So-called traditional societies represented an
impediment to change
9Theory particularism/culturalism (I)
- Franz Boas
- primitive" peoples in the static and
non-historical framework - isolated settlements
- The International School of American Archaeology
and Ethnography (1911) - Jimenez Moreno,
Weitlaner, Comas, Basauri, Mendieta y Nuñez,
Fabila, Villa Rojas, and Beals - mapping of "cultural areas"
- ethnographies of "pure" cultures (The Tepehuán,
The Seri, The Cahita)
10Theory particularism/culturalism (II)
- Later - the whole Mesoamerica regarded as one
cultural area. - The concept introduced to the anthropological
discourse by Paul Kirchhoff in his article
"Mesoamérica. Sus lÃmites geográficos,
composición étnica y carácteres culturales"
(1943).
11Theory indigenismo (I)
- indigenistas - modified particularism
- After the Mexican Revolution (1910) - a growing
concern for the integration of indigenous
communities into the national society. - indigenous groups are culturally distinct from
the wider society - Manuel Gamio (student of Boas) pioneer of
Mexican anthropology and indgenismo - The purpose of ethnographic fieldwork among the
"small cultures", as he used to call them, was
not so much to preserve cultural idiosyncrasies
as to understand them in order to hasten their
disappearance.
12Theory indigenismo (II)
- Gamio also launched comparative studies in CA
ethnography - Study of indigenous groups representative of
seventeen regions of Mexico - Only one study was completed - La Población del
Valle de Teotihuacán (1922) - Negative attitude towards the traditional
life-style in rural areas - Looked only for those issues that proved his
point of view of backwardness
13Theory indigenismo (III)
- Not all indigenistas shared Gamios pessimism
- Moises Sáenz - represented the anti-incorporationi
st wing of indigenismo, - study of a Tarascan village
- concluded that rural communities could not all be
regarded as similar and that in some people were
satisfied with their lives. - Common to all indigenistas - they looked for the
methods of initiating community development
programs and modernisation policies.
14Theory functionalism (I)
- areas with strong communal tradition
- derived explanations from the study of the
microcosm alone - treating communities as hypothetical isolates
- Malinowski, the main proponent of functionalism
as a whole - studied Oaxacan markets together with Julio de la
Fuente in the early 1940s
15Theory functionalism (II)
- the functionalist approach in best exemplified by
Robert Redfield's study of "folk communities" - initiated the tradition of "community studies" in
American anthropology - a model of local communities as distinctly
integrated and different from urban communities - Tepoztlán A Mexican Village (1930)
- urban values and lifestyles as a threat and
disintegrating force on local value-systems - Later - folk-urban continuum
16Theory functionalism (III)
- Reaction by Oscar Lewis
- Life in a Mexican Village Tepoztlán Restudied
(1951) - hottest dispute in the history of anthropology
- Redfield portrayed the village life as harmonious
and integrated - Lewis stressed hostility, jealousy and greed
- Other disputes over the same community
- Benedict and Thompson vs Goldfrank and Eggan over
Pueblo Indians - Mead vs Fortune over the male role among the
Arapesh are just some
17Theory functionalism (IV)
- Methodologically Lewis' restudy of Tepoztlán was
provocative - the same village
- breach of anthropological etiquette
- unwritten rule of avoiding restudies
- theoretically marked a shift of perspective from
stability and harmony to process and disharmony
in anthropology as a whole - Gluckman and the Manchester School
18Theory functionalism (V)
- Foster (1967a), doing research in Tzintzuntzan,
encountered mistrust, suspicion and fear rather
than collectivism as an underlying feature of a
rural community - image of limited good" to explain the prevailing
worldview - psychological factors as the basic impediment to
raising standards of living
19George Foster
20Theory functionalism (VI)
- Redfield's reply to Lewis' (1951 428-9)
criticism - I think that it is simply true that ... I
looked at certain aspects of Tepoztecan life
because they both interested and pleased m - Agar - differences between Lewis' and Redfield's
work caused their different personalities and
backgrounds. - Redfield - from impersonal and over-urbanized
Chicago - tended to romanticize rural life,
believing it to be closer to the "natural state"
of human existence
21Theory vs personal values (I)
- The great role played by personal value
preferences in shaping the argumentation and
perspective of an anthropologist - e.g. Bernard 1988, Pelto and Pelto 1978)
- Not only a feature of anthropology or social
sciences but in "hard sciences" - overlooked
Feyerabend (1979) Against the Method
22Theory vs personal values (II)
- Watson - The Double Helix (1970 13) science
seldom proceeds in the straightforward logical
manner imagined by outsiders. Rather, its steps
forward are often very human events in which
personalities and cultural traditions play major
roles. - Aya (1990) - most anthropologists studying
peasant rebellions in 1960s and 70s have seen
these as upheavals against capitalism, although
the facts do not prove it. - The reason - in the late 1960s and early 1970s
the prevailing sentiment among academic
intellectuals was anti-capitalist and they thus
saw peasants also motivated by the same
sentiment.
23Theory - away from community
- Starting from the 1950s stepping out of the
geographical confines of the isolated rural
community and the temporal confines of the
functionalist present - Even if studying communities focus not on what
separated rural people from the wider economic
system but what integrated them with it. - Communities part of socioeconomic region
- The latter placed within a framework of world
capitalist system
24Theory cultural ecology
- Julian Steward
- The picture of the Mexican countryside took the
conceptual form of the levels of integration - Communities part of a bigger system
- critical of geographical localism
- rural communities are increasingly integrated
into ever-wider spheres of interaction - villages linked to others through various
mechanisms in both rural and urban settings and
the latter to others at the apices of national
and international networks of power
25Julian Steward
26Theory dependentismo (I)
- Marxism, historical structuralism
- 1960s and 1970s
- Chain of exploitation extending from metropolitan
centers of capitalist accumulation to the most
remote areas of Third World - center vs periphery
- Modernization vs dependency theory
- Opposed to localism and preferred to apply
generic laws to the whole of the countryside - Focused on poverty (something that functionalists
had not seen)
27Theory dependentismo (II)
- Regiones de refugio (Aguirre Beltran)
- Indian communities engaged in the subsistence
cultivation of maize, with methods going back to
before the Spanish conquest in the 16th century. - poor communications, adverse geophysical factors,
and relatively high concentrations of population
28Theory dependentismo (III)
- particularly concerned with the impact of
capitalist development upon rural society and
what in 1950s became to be called "peasantry" - already Redfield and Kroeber in the 1940s
regarded peasantry as a specific category. - In studies by Mexican anthropologists, however,
the study of peasantry was strongly influenced by
the classical Marxist concepts - "mode of production", "social class", "value",
"income" etc
29Theory dependentismo (IV)
- Eric Wolf and Sydney Mintz
- peasant/indigenous community as intrinsically
integrated in (as well as a product of) national
political and economic relations, but on unequal
terms - different social relations that sustain the
peasant community - vertical (patron-client)
- horizontal (compadrazgo)
30Theory dependentismo (V)
- The theoretical perspective having changed,
anthropologists started also to see different
things in communities. - Wolf - "coalitions" between peasants
- Foster - "dyadic contracts"
- Earlier - communities had been regarded as having
collective identities, now an individual stepped
on the stage - life-history method was used most extensively in
numerous ethnographies by Oscar Lewis , as well
as Paul Friedrich and others
31Theory - other
- New theoretical paradims
- post-structuralism,
- symbolist approach,
- interpretative anthropology
32Theory conclusions (I)
- Hewitt de Alcántara - change in perspective can
be attributed to - change in the basic characteristics of the rural
socio-economic and cultural field - the post-war facilitation of communication
between European and American scientists and the
consequent adoption of European concepts - The near-subsistence cultivators no more
"peasantry" in the 1960s than in the 1860s - The new concept to Central America from Europe
through the medium of European social scientists - translation of Marx
33Theory conclusions (II)
- theoretical predispositions have an impact on
anthropological practice - anthropologists in the field and perception of
the surroundings were (and are) influenced by
particular schools and paradigms. - They look for material that supports their
hypotheses - the production of new kind of information
generally seems to have followed, rather than
preceded, the paradigmatic change. - the changes in social scientific paradigms
reflect the social structure of the disciplines
rather than their subject matter.
34Topics (I)
- 1) Studies of Native American indigenous cultures
and communities - Till 1960s
- internal structuring of indigenous communities
- community studies
- cultural content
- 2) Studies of the social processes
- Since 1960s
- peasant studies
- modernization and industrialization
- relations between local community and the wider
society - Migration, urbanization etc.
35Topics (II)
- Folk Catholicism
- Fiestas, syncretism, religious change, religious
cargos - Social structure
- Cargo system, socio-political hierarchy
- Social and power relationships
- Compadrazgo, tequio, guelaguetza etc
- Folk medicine
- Curanderas vs medicos
36Topics (III)
- Â Â Poverty and migration
- the barrios of the great cities,
- Oscar Lewis's (1961) study of one single family
(Sánchez) as the classic text - a distinctive a culture of poverty
- Â Â Peasants, land and the relations of power
- Contemporary studies
- various articulations of modernity and identity,
meanings and construction of gender, football,
tango, and the notions of honor and shame
37Mexican anthropology - origins
- origins in the Indian Laws introduced by the
Spanish Crown in the 16th century - Bernardino Sahagúns La Historia General de las
Cosas de Nueva España - Francisco Pimentel - in 1864 - Memoria sobre las
causas que han originado la situación actual de
la raza indÃgena de México y los medios para
remediarla - a study of the problems of
indigenous peoples of Mexico, and his solutions
to those problems
38Mexican anthropology French impact
- Systematic social scientific studies in Mexico in
the second half of the last century - French military intervention to Mexico in the
1860s - Anthropology as a shadow following colonial
powers - In 1862 - Gosse, Auburtin and Le Bret - prepared
the so-called Ethnological Instructions to be
used in the study of indigenous peoples of Mexico - Foundation of the Comission scientifique du
Mexique in 1864. - Instructions, which prescribed how to approach
certain problems of the Mexican indigenous
peoples anthropologically. - Coindet and Jourdanet - first studies in Mexico
in the field of physical anthropology
39Mexican anthropology vs other regional schools (I)
- Early systematic Mexican anthropology very
distinct from that of early British or US
anthropology - Anthropological research often congruent with the
political and demographic dimensions of the
particular country - Early British anthropology
- mostly concerned with its former or at that time
current overseas colonies in Africa and Asia - orientated so that it would in the end lead to
more effective exploitation of both natural and
human resources in the (ex)colonies - anthropologist limited to that of an advisor to
colonial administration
40Mexican anthropology vs other regional schools
(II)
- North American Anthropology
- not so much in service of the exploitation of
people and resources of the overseas colonies,
but the acculturation and incorporation of the
internal ones - its indigenous minorities living in the
reservations. - Mexican anthropology
- the great ethnic, linguistic and cultural
diversity, together with the social and political
doctrine of the Mexican Revolution, required an
entirely different approach - the task of Mexican anthropology to solve the
countrys own major internal problems and not
those of the overseas colonies or the countrys
periphery
41Mexican anthropology vs other regional schools
(III)
- mostly concerned with the integration and
development of the countrys indigenous
population - developed into an applied social scientific
discipline at the very beginning. - Applied anthropology
- in the Anglo-American world emerged approximately
during the decade of 1925-35. - in the United States, the aim of which was to
re-orient the politics of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs in Washington, then headed by John
Collier
42Mexican anthropology (I)
- Although Manuel Gamio was the real initiator of
the Mexican national anthropology, its roots can
be traced back to the last decades of the 19th c. - In 1887 - the first department of physical
anthropology directed by Nicolás León - In 1903 - the first Chair of Anthropology
- The aim of anthropology at that time, much in the
Boasian tradition was just the collection of
ethnographic and cultural data
43Mexican anthropology (II)
- 1906 the Mexican government under the presidency
of Porfirio DÃaz passed the first law in favor of
Indians (Tarahumarans). - Many started to call for the acknowledgement of
the cultural and sociological heterogeneity of
the indigenous peoples of Mexico - Molina EnrÃquez (1909)
- the indigenous element, composed of tribes and
villages very different from each other, lacks
unity. Every tribe, and every village is a
unique sociological individual.
44Mexican anthropology (III)
- In 1909 the National Museum of Archaeology,
History and Ethnology (Museo Nacional de
ArqueologÃa, Historia y EtnologÃa) - In 1939 renamed the National Museum of
Anthropology (Museo Nacional de AntropologÃa) - In 1910 the Mexican Indianist Society (La
Sociedad Indianista Mexicana) in order to study
indigenous peoples
45Mexican anthropology (IV)
- In 1911 the International School of American
Archaeology and Ethnology (La Escuela
Internacional de ArqueologÃa y EtnografÃa
Americanas) - a collaborative project of the Mexican and
Prussian governments and the Universities of
Columbia, Harvard and Pennsylvania, - directed among others by Franz Boas, Edward
Seler, George Engerrand, Alfred M. Tozzer and
finally by Manuel Gamio - In 1920 the publication of the first Mexican
anthropological journal Ethnos
46Mexican anthropology (V)
- The 1920s and 30s - cultural missions to various
Mexican rural areas and the attempts to integrate
and mexicanize the indigenous population
(indigenismo) - In 1922 the Mexican Rural School (La Escuela
Rural Mexicana), the leading idea of which was
integrity in action (integridad en acción). - In the 1930s Escuela Rural lead by Moisés Sáenz,
who was also the initiator of the first major
project in applied anthropology in Mexico.
47Mexican anthropology (VI)
- June 1932 - January 1933 - Saenz - Experimental
Station for the Incorporation of the Indian,
comprising 11 villages in the State of Michoacán.
- pretended to be an institute of ethnological and
sociological studies - the aim of - to culturize the Indians, improve
their living conditions and achieve the
integration of these communities.
48Mexican anthropology (VII)
- The 1930s were also marked by an ever-increasing
presence of North-American anthropologists in
Mexico. - Under the auspices of the Carnegie Institute in
Washington and directed by Robert Redfield,
numerous projects in various regions of Mexico
began in 1930. - The studies in the South-Eastern part of the
country, especially in Yucatan and Chiapas,
developed as a collaboration between the
University of Chicago, the Viking Fund, and the
National Institute of Anthropology and History of
Mexico.
49Mexican anthropology (VIII)
- In 1934, Beals, Tax and Redfield published a
co-authored paper on the anthropological problems
that had emerged in the investigation of Mexican
indigenous groups and claimed that the major
opportunities in these countries lie in the
fields of community studies - The North-American anthropological and academic
presence in Mexico increased in the 1940s - the Smithsonian Institution in Washington
established the Institute of Social Anthropology
in 1943 - directed first by Julian H. Steward, and later by
George M. Foster
50Mexican anthropology (IX)
- Anthropology gained an important place in Mexican
academia - In 1930, the Institute of Social Studies (El
Instituto de Investigaciones Sociales) had been
founded at UNAM - In 1937 the Mexican Society of Anthropology (La
Sociedad Mexicana de AntropologÃa), directed by
Alfonso Caso - The increasing preoccupation with the problems of
indigenous peoples lead to the birth of the
National School of Anthropology (Escuela Nacional
de AntropologÃa) in 1938.
51Mexican anthropology (X)
- In 1936, during the presidency of Lazaro
Cardenas, the Autonomous Department of Indigenous
Affairs (El Departamento Autónoma de Asuntos
IndÃgenas) was opened, directed among others by
Manuel Gamio and Julio de la Fuente - 1946 the Ministry of Public Education established
the Institute of Alphabetization in Indigenous
Languages. - Interamerican Institute of Indigenous Peoples
(Instituto Indigenista Interamericano) in 1942,
lead first by the same Manuel Gamio, and the
already mentioned Insitituto Nacional Indigenista
(INI) in 1948 by Alfonso Caso - The foundation of INI also marks the birth of
clear and systematic indigenous politics in
Mexico Â
52Summer Institute of Linguistics (I)
- In 1934, the Summer Institute of Linguistics
(SIL), originally founded at Oklahoma University
by William Cameron Townsend, a former missionary
of the Disciples of Christ - Explicit aim - the study of indigenous languages
and the compilation of dictionaries, grammars etc
- Implicit aim - christianize the indigenous
peoples by translating the Bible into indigenous
languages - Some of the best linguists (eg. Kenneth Pike)
were working for SIL, but in the end linguistics
was just a tool in the service of religious aims - SIL actually lead to castellanization and
cultural homogenization
53William Cameron Townsend
54(No Transcript)
55Kenneth Pike
56Summer Institute of Linguistics (II)
- The activities of the SIL in Mexico were
authorised by President Cárdenas in 1936 - as a conscious strategy to reduce the costs of
governments alphabetisation projects - in the fear of another Cristero rebellion
- Friendship with Townsend
- In 1951, a contract between the SIL and the
government - authorised the SIL for the investigation of
indigenous languages, - the detailed study of cultural and biological
characteristics of distinct indigenous groups in
Mexico
57Summer Institute of Linguistics (II)
- This meant that the SIL linguists and
missionaries could move into rural communities,
usually in couples, and live there for years,
sometimes for decades - Proselytism and conversion not the explicit aims
of the SIL members - recruiters of braceros, Mexican migrant workers
to the United States
58Summer Institute of Linguistics (III)
- Consequence - religious divisionism and in some
cases overt confrontations - in the 1970s, opposition against the SIL in
various Third World countries - In Mexico, this criticism emanated mostly from
anthropological circles. - In 1975, thirty anthropologists signed the
document known as The Denouncement of Pátzcuaro - The anthropologists initiative eventually led to
the unilateral ending of the contract between the
Mexican government and the SIL by the former in
1979
59Summer Institute of Linguistics (IV)
- Patzcuaro denouncement declared
- SIL causes divisions within the communities that
constitutes a hindrance to their organisation and
the defence of their communal rights - SIL was an imperialistic tool
- related to the CIA
- propagating the gringo god
- The parallel drawn between the SIL members and
16th century Catholic missionaries. - Salomón Nahmád Those Americans are the Spanish
Catholic missionaries of our time. They may not
see it that way but they constitute the religious
arm of an economic, political and cultural
system. Theyre plainly part of American
penetration.
60Summer Institute of Linguistics (V)
- Different studies - generally hostile and
emotional accounts that took the double
identity of the SIL for granted, a stance that
echoed from their very titles like Is God
American?, Fishers of Men or Founders of Empire?
and Mission Behind the Mission. - Fernando Benitez - Catholic priests have actually
caused considerably more destruction, making
their services costly, having a great influence
over the Indians, keeping them in superstition,
promoting mayordomÃas, organising anti-Communist
campaigns with the aim of retaining their
privileges, never really helping the Indians, not
fighting against their alcoholism, being allied
with caciques and becoming parasites living off
the exploited people
61Summer Institute of Linguistics (VI)
- The ending of the contract has not led to the end
of the SIL activities in Mexico, although it has
changed their strategies and modes of work. - The previous official centre of the SIL in Mitla,
Oaxaca, now renamed The Linguistic Institute of
Jaime Torres Bodet, - 40 SIL members working in Oaxaca