symbol and power - asad Flashcards

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1
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background

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  • Advocates an anthropology of secularism
  • Genealogical method taken from Nietzsche, developed by Foucault
  • At boarding school, Asad was one of very few Muslims amongst a Christian majority. Interesting for learning about East-West relations
  • Theme in his work of colonialism and anthropology e.g. The Kababish Arabs: Power, Authority and Consent in a Nomadic Tribe
    o He argues that there is a view of the West as imposing true morality on the inhabitants of their colonial territories. Asad argues that colonial powers wanted a uniform view of justice, which ultimately made the people their subjects.
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2
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Intro – assumption re. Western history

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  • All essays are united in their ‘assumption that Western history has had an overriding importance – for good or ill – in the making of the modern world’ (1)
  • Asad believes that Christian and post-Christian history has had an important influence on non-Christian traditions
  • Need knowledge of Western religious practice to understand any other religion e.g. Islam
  • Focus for Asad is the ‘genealogy of religion’ (1)
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3
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Intro – history as active

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  • When we talk about history, we often refer to history as an ‘active voice…. People are “making their own history”.… “borrowing” meanings from Western dominators, and “reconstructing” their own cultural existence’ (2)
    o This presents history unstable and fluid
    o Many hence reject ‘claims about “authenticity”… “a unitary culture” etc.’
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4
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Intro - Marshall Sahlins

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  • Disagrees with the interpretation that Western capitalist expansion has made the colonised the ‘passive objects of their own history and not its authors’ (3)
  • Non-Western territories should not be defined in terms of their colonisation (this is what Eric Wolf does, according to Sahlins, which Sahlins explains through Wolf’s ‘attachment to economistic Marxism’)
  • Sahlins uses the examples of the ‘British opening up of imperial China’ to ‘show how each encounter was guided by the cultural logic of the local people concerned’ (3)
  • Asad argues that whilst Sahlins writes well etc. and is convincing in showing how colonised people do not necessarily have to be ‘passive’, he cannot also assume that they are hence ‘authors’ of their own history.
  • No one is author of their own life, since other people inevitably form part of other individuals’ personal histories.
    Definition of author is not clear: does it refer to someone who ‘produces a narrative’ or ‘authorises particular powers, including the right to produce certain kinds of narrative’ (4)
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5
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Intro – capitalism and passivity

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  • If we view capitalism as an active force of ‘production, coercion and destruction’, it appears that the colonised people are in fact placed into a position of passivity, as they are forced to ‘adjust consciously to those forces’
    o However, this is not necessarily unique to colonised people in non-Western countries. Individuals in Western territories are also rendered passive by some aspects of capitalism/hierarchy – Sahlins calls it the ‘larger system’
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6
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Intro - Sherry Ortner

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  • Western capitalism is an ‘abstraction’ and therefore does not impact people’s lives
  • She argues that anthropologists especially should not look at everything through the lens of capitalism. We cannot assume that capitalist influence always determines the way things are.
    It is essential to have a theoretical understanding/definition of capitalism if we are to empirically ascertain its impact
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7
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Intro – how to approach ethnography

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  • ‘The ethnographer may come from another system (say, a major capitalist country), but her task is to observe and describe the practices of people “on the ground”, not to intervene in what she sees’ (6)
    o Asad argues that only looking at world capitalism from one level may be restrictive. Do not know the other things one may discover from another level
    o Ortner combines two images: one of “real people”: the idea that capitalism may not in fact be a force of change. Two, that one must look at anthropology from the ‘ground level’
    o ‘The two images are then used to define autonomy as well as the distinctive contribution of fieldwork-based anthropology’ (6)
    o We cannot deny the existence of “real people”. However, it is wrong to assume a Logical Positivist view that only concepts that can be verified have meaning, since this would suggest that structures/systems are not real. He gives the example of life expectancies: we cannot say these are real until they are represented in another form e.g. graph.
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8
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Intro – how do we define local people?

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  • Locatable? This is what anthropologists deal with: a specific, locatable group of people
    o However, people’s ability to locate others varies. Easier for people in the UK to locate people in France than in a remote Brazilian tribe.
  • If you are not local, you do not belong to a specific place. Or alternatively, you are ‘unlimited, cosmopolitan’ (8)
  • ‘Saudi theologians who invoke the authority of medieval Islam texts are taken to be local; Western writers who invoke the authority of modern secular literature claim they are universal’ (8)
  • Whilst both understand notions of belonging, the power of the West means that e.g. ‘immigrants who arrive from South Asia to settle in Britain are described as uprooted; English officials who lived in British India were not’ (8)
  • Is space something that is owned? It is both phenomenal and conceptual and yet with both, boundaries are constantly shifting.
  • ‘Knowledge about local peoples is not itself local knowledge, as some anthropologists have thought (Geertz 1983)’ (9)
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9
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intro – Western altruism

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  • Asad argues that the attempt of the West to impose its ideals on other territories is not necessarily ‘ungenerous’. They believe that their way is the best and so they wish others to adhere to it.
    o ‘In a tradition that connects pain with achievement, the inflicting of suffering on others is not in itself reprehensible’ (12)
    o However… is this justified? Cannot self-impose ideals
    o Asad asks, ‘to the extent that such power seeks to normalise other people’s motivations, whose history is being made?’ (12)
    o The question is, who is the author/subject of change?
    o Cultural change does not need to lead to anonymity. Even after Western influence, the countries maintain an element of uniqueness. Western influence creates possibility, albeit unpredictable.
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10
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Intro – how are meanings generated

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  • ‘Meanings are never simply generated by a cultural logic; they belong variously to conventional projects, occasional intentions, natural events etc.’ (13)
    o This similarly applies to the religious sphere. E.g. ‘a monk who learns to make the abbot’s will into his own learns thereby to desire God’s purposes’
    o I.e. the monk becomes willingly heteronomous, as he seeks to follow what God wants of him
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11
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Intro – post-enlightenment autonomy

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  • Post-Enlightenment emphasised the importance of autonomy. However, this ultimately becomes difficult with the division of labour in modern capitalist society. There is an inherent interdependence between individuals.
    o Autonomy criticised by Rosalind O’Hanlon (Indianist)
    ♣ She questions the ‘liberal humanist notions of subjectivity and agency’ (14)
    ♣ India was denied autonomy
    ♣ She wants to rediscover India’s history, but states that this risks ‘slipping into “essentialist humanism”’ (14)
    ♣ History does not need to lose its meaning; on the contrary, we should uncover lost meaning within history.
    ♣ ‘The idea of self-constitution is not merely a historiographical option but a liberal humanist principle that has far-reaching moral, legal and political implications in modern/modernising states’ (15)
    ♣ Heteronomy does not allow individuals to fully dictate their own history. O’Hanlon’s progressivist attitude therefore argues for autonomy.
    ♣ Consciousness is key to autonomy
    • Asad argues that consciousness in everyday life is not powerful enough to achieve autonomy
    • Consciousness is not the sole factor in understanding power/domination. We must also look at the ‘structures of possible actions’ (15) whether they be included/excluded.
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12
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Intro – gyan Prakash

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  • Against the idea that history cannot be reduced as well as the concept of ‘teleological history’.
  • Advocates a ‘poststructuralist position intended to supersede conventional ethnography and historiography’ (16)
  • His work ‘exposes metaphysical traces in historical narration that, he argues, reproduce the capitalist-centered view of the world’ (16)
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13
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Intro – history

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  • History does inevitably have a focus e.g. a country. When we look at the parts of this focus separately, we gain a more comprehensive view of the focus’ history.
    o The history is kept alive through people living according to it e.g. speaking the language/are simply affected by it
    o Power cannot be seen as a purely unifying force. Ambiguity can be a source of power via improvisation (17)
    o E.g. India, ‘power is constructive, not repressive’ (17)
    o Asad argues that sometimes, history is inevitably teleological e.g. we can trace the impact of colonisation on a country’s economy etc. this is looking at consequences and hence, is teleological
    o European Enlightenment placed importance on the language of liberty etc. especially in the context of struggle against colonialism
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14
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Intro – essentialism and modernisation

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  • We cannot deny the presence/importance of essentialism. Change is an inevitable part of history. Some things determine historical identity e.g. rules determine games. However, we cannot say this and deny the possibility of change.
  • An example is ‘modernisation…including its aim of material moral progress’. This is ‘certainly a matter of history making’ (18)
    o It does not have to be an actively sought process. Often, changes occur without being directly intended.
  • The West is defined by ‘its modern historicity’ (18)
    o It influences all areas of the world, directly/indirectly
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15
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Intro – modern definition of process

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  • Christian attitudes towards historical time (salvational expectation) were combined with the newer, secular practices (rational prediction) (19)
  • People learnt the importance of action in achieving change. Greater sense of autonomy in determining one’s own history.
    Maintaining order is not a form of a history making. You are simply resisting change
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16
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Intro – classification

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  • Anthropologists often depends on the modernity of the West as a point of contrast in their work. E.g. led to categorisation of ‘the savage’
    o The Renaissance allowed for a ‘reconstruction of European individuality’ (20)
    o How do we classify people?
    ♣ Response was to suggest that everyone has a basic level of humanity, but that some’s intellects etc. are more developed than others’
    ♣ The view that there is a ‘single human nature’ (21) regardless of culture/upbringing is maintained today
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17
Q

Intro – post WW2

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  • Post WW2, less emphasis on progress and the positivity of change.
    o H, Asad argues this is not necessarily true
    ♣ Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown did not reject progress in less developed countries
    o ‘It could be argued that there was less concern with demonstrating the principle of a common human nature, and more with describing ‘normal’ historical developments in various parts of the non-European world’ (22)
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18
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chapter 1 – 19th/20th century

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  • 19th century, people began to view religion as a primitive idea separate from all other aspects of life
  • 20th century: anthropologists view religion as a ‘distinctive space of human practice and belief which cannot be reduced to any other’ (27)
  • Religion can overlap with other aspects of society, but its essence is separate
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19
Q

Chapter 1 – difficulty in defining religion

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  • ‘Medieval religion… is nevertheless analytically identifiable’. (28)
    o ‘Religion has the same essence today as it had in the Middle Ages, although its social extension and function were different in the two epochs’ (28)
  • Religion’s autonomous nature results in us defining religion as a ‘transhistorical and transcultural phenomenon’
    o Asad is setting up a clear distinction between religious autonomy and social ideology
  • Difficulty in defining religion is a form of defence of religion as it demands a distinction between religion and other aspects of social life (which are usually hubs of power)
  • Religion cannot be defined as the ‘definition is itself the historical product of discursive processes’ (29)
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20
Q

CH 1 – Geertz and symbol

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  • Geertz links symbol to conception i.e. its meaning. H, Asad argues that a symbol is in itself the conception.
  • Geertz is contradictory, sometimes he portrays symbols as aspects of reality, sometimes as representation.
  • Asad argues that G is confusing ‘cognitive questions’ with ‘communicative ones’ (31) which makes it hard to inquire how ‘discourse and understanding are connected in social practice’
  • G argues that symbols are ‘extrinsic sources of information’
    o Extrinsic = outside subjective understanding
    Sources of information = provide basis on which to define external processes
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21
Q

CH1 – analysis of G

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  • Positive of G: it allows for a discussion of discourse
  • However… G goes against this progress by reaffirming his view of the relationship between symbols and meaning
    o ‘This alleged dialectical tendency towards isomorphism, incidentally, makes it difficult to understand how social change can ever occur’ (32)
  • G is wrong to separate meaning from the socio-psychological.
    o Symbols are not ‘meaning-carrying objects external to social conditions’ but rather intrinsic to these concepts
    G tries to universalise religion
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22
Q

CH1 – G and participation

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  • G does acknowledge that symbols participate in the reality they describe in order to enhance the experience of those participating in the symbols through allowing them to adopt certain tendencies, skills etc.
    o However… it is impossible to say what these tendencies/skills may be for a Xian in an industrial society.
    o Cannot reduce human life to worship. People acquire skills/tendencies through different aspects of life e.g. political sphere. Geertz assumes that religion is the primary factor in determining individuals’ behaviours etc.
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23
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CH1 – G and dispositions

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  • G says religious symbols produce two kinds of dispositions (i.e. skills/tendencies)
    o Moods
    ♣ Teleological. Assess its impact based on the effects it has
    o Motivations
    ♣ Deontological. Based on conditions they come out from
    o Xian may argue that we should not reduce symbols in this way. Religious symbols should not be subject to testing; they are true/valuable by definition. However, it is impossible not to be concerned at the lack of efficacy of certain symbols in society.
24
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CH 1 – Augustine and Geertz on power

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  • Experience with Donatist heresy influenced his emphasis on coercion as necessary for the realisation of truth. Discipline is key for it to be maintained (34)
    o Augustine argued that our lives are tailored in way for us to learn, we need to be taught goodness, or disciplina
    o Process of ‘corrective punishment’ (34)
    o We are fallen and need to be controlled
  • Arguably G’s theory of symbolism does not have the force that comes with combining symbols with power.
    o A argued that power is inextricably linked to God, we are God’s instruments.
    o Power is necessary to understand and experience truth. It determines the success/accessibility of religious truth
    o ‘Even Augustine held that although religious truth was eternal, the means for securing human access to it were not’ (35)
25
Q

CH1 – living religion

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  • G attempts to argue that if you engage in religious discourse, you must live that which you speak of. He is attempting to distinguish the religious from the secular.
  • Argues that you need the secular to experience religion. ‘If sacred symbols did not at one and the same time induce dispositions in human beings and formulate… general ideas of order, then the empirical differentia of religious activity or religious experience would not exist’ (G, p.98. A, p.36)
  • Must look at this in relation to the ‘authorising process by which “religion” is created’ (37)
26
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CH1 – history and creation of religion: middle ages

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  • Middle Ages: rejected paganism, authenticated miracles etc.
  • ‘The medieval Church did not attempt to establish absolute uniformity of practice; on the contrary, its authoritative discourse was always concerned to specify difference, gradations, exceptions’ (38)
  • By identifying differences, the Church could contrast this with the objective truth they offered as an institution.
  • They recognised that religious theory and practice is not always uniform. Hence, it needed to provide a strong basis of reference.
  • Emphasis on conforming with rules set by church rather than individual faith
  • With rise of science, emphasis shifted to the individual. Belief dominated. ‘but theory would still be needed to define religion’ (39)
27
Q

CH1 - history and creation of religion: post-Reformation

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  • 17th century, following Reformation, the first attempt was made to define religion
  • Lord Herbert attempted to find a definition of religion that encapsulated not only Xianity, but the other emerging, more Eastern religion
    o Produced definition of Natural Religion – beliefs, ethics and practices universal to all societies.
    o Emphasis on belief allowed religions to be subject to public attestability and comparison with others
    o Scripture is not essential, not all societies had writing
    o Nature = authority for all sacred texts. God’s works on earth. Crucial to formation of modern religion
  • 1795, Kant proposes a ‘fully essentialised idea of religion which could be counterposed to its phenomenal forms’ (42)
    o led to hierarchical classification of religions
  • View that symbols are linked to specific features/forms is ‘in fact a view that has a specific Christian history’ (42)
    ‘Religion has become abstracted and universalised’. It has been subject to mutation through different processes that have given these mutations meaning
28
Q

CH1 – G assumption of meaning

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  • G looks at significance of meaning without examining how these meanings came into being
  • He assumes that religious meaning must affirm something. A says this is wrong
    o Emphasis on affirmation can be seen in evangelical mission. Need to affirm something objective to those they are trying to convert
    o The unevangelised may have systems of meaning, but they will not affirm anything
    o ‘It is the function of religious theory to reach into, and to bring out, that background by giving them meaning’ (44)
  • ‘Geertz is thus right to make a connection between religious theory and practice, but wrong to see it as essentially cognitive’ (44)
29
Q

CH1 – G view of religion as therapy

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  • Religious theory must be actively linked to practice, it is not an inherent relationship
  • ‘What kinds of affirmation, of meaning, must be identified with practice in order for it to qualify as a religion?’ (45)
    o G says religion fills the human desire for order
    o A argues that G’s argument has moved away from the importance of religious meaning has having an affirmative quality to a more general view of religion as simply a cause of order
    o Reflective of post-Enlightenment framework. Religion is a form of therapy
    ♣ This however could reduce religion down to a more primitive function
    ♣ Religion becomes a ‘mode of consciousness’ (46)
30
Q

CH 1 – G as overly Xian

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  • G understands religion in a Xian way. He emphasises belief not activity. For most modern Xians, belief is ‘precondition’ to knowledge. In past, Xian belief was based on knowledge rather than knowledge being based on belief. E.g. more emphasis in past on power of church offices etc. This difference inevitably impacts the form of religion in the two different societies.
  • A argues that G’s view of a universal religious perspective is wrong. This is a largely Xian interpretation of religion, emphasising belief and religious testimony.
31
Q

CH 1 – G attempts to present religion as a universal concept

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  • G and ritual
    o By stating that religious ritual is not necessary for a religious state, G suggests that a religious view is not necessary for ritual. Hence, ritual is no longer about religion but rather how rituals are being carried out.
  • G’s attempt to present religion as a universal concept separate from non-religious perspectives
    o Religion is separate to non-religion, but G also argues that a religious perspective impacts other aspects of life. How does religion relate to the real world? G seems to be paradoxical in his view.
    o Attempts to combine religious and common-sense. For him, common sense is inherent to all people, it allows us to act practically
    o Once people accept the religious perspective, their common sense perspective is altered
32
Q

CH1 – A criticism of G attempt to present religion as a universal concept

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♣ ‘It is not clear, for example, whether the religious framework and the common-sense world, between which the individual moves, are independent of him or not’ (51)
♣ It seems to G that it is independent. However, his emphasis on an individual changing when their common-sense view shifts does suggest that they are linked. But the religious world remains a distinctive form of experience
♣ ‘There is no suggestion anywhere that religious world (or perspective) is ever affected by experience in the common-sense world’ (52)
• Hence symbols are sui generis
• However, concept of paradoxical. Common sense is distinct from world, but it ultimately has an effect of people.
• ‘Reality is at once the distance of an agent’s social perspective from the truth… and also the substantive knowledge of a socially constructed world’ (52)

33
Q

CH1 - conclusions

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  • G does not explain how meanings from religious symbols are formed. How can they be formed independently?
  • A argued that religious symbols cannot be viewed as independent to aspects of social life
  • Practice is key to religious representation.
    o ‘From this it does not follow that the meanings of religious practice and utterances are to be sought in social phenomena, but only that their possibility and their authoritative status are to be explained as products of historically distinctive disciplines and forces’ (54)
  • ‘My aim has to been to problematize the idea of an anthropological definition of religion by assigning that endeavour to a particular history of knowledge and power… out of which the modern world has been constructed’ (54)
34
Q

CH2 – definition of religion

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  • ritual is now regarded as a type of routine behaviour that symbolises or expresses something and, as such, relates differentially to individual consciousness and social organisation’ (57)
  • Ritual is a definable form of practical event
  • Repetitive nature of ritual is linked to sociological reasons. It is a habit
  • Ritual is not purely a religious idea. It has an essential social function. (However, this is a modern idea)
  • It is separate to practical behaviour
35
Q

CH2 – shifting meaning of rituals

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  • Meaning of rituals has shifted from theory to practice
    o This is linked to history, ‘among these is the nineteenth-century view that ritual is more primitive than myth – a view that neatly historicises and secularises the Reformation doctrine that correct belief must be more highly valued than correct practice’ (58)
  • Contrast between ‘outward sign’ and ‘inward meaning’ (59)
    o This has been influential not only on religious but secular thought since it is maintained that those who display ‘outward signs’ do not fully understand the ‘inward meaning’ they seek to express
36
Q

CH2 – Durkheim

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o Soul is comprised of images from inside and sentiments from society
o ‘Our sensations are essentially individual; yet we are more personal the more we are freed from our senses and able to think and act with concepts’ (p.271-72, elementary 1915)
o Soul is mediated by ritual as it too is dual in its nature
♣ Collective representations need to be embodied in some sort of form
♣ But it is in this exterior projection that interior consciousness is revealed

37
Q

CH2 – Conclusion

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  • symbols are no longer based on discipline but formal manners.
  • For Xians, rites have become symbolic occasions (79)
  • Do not have to be religious to understand ritual, just be aware of symbolism. They can be interpreted
  • Could the transforming of rites/passions to symbol/practice have impacted the transformation of heterogeneous life into readable text? (79)
38
Q

CH7 – Rushdie Affair summarised

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  • Protests against publication of Satanic verses
  • Home Secretary Douglas Hurd makes speech about the importance of assimilation
  • Interesting how it was largely the liberal middle classes who condemned Muslim violence
  • Government had never issued such a large scale warning against violence to white people. They did in the case of Muslims and the Rushdie affair
  • Muslim violence was perceived as a threat against British identity. Britain already facing violence in Northern Island etc.
  • The Rushdie crisis = ‘another symptom of post-imperial British identity in crisis’
39
Q

CH7 – John Patten open letter

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  • John Patten writes an open letter acknowledging hurt of Muslims
    o A depicts this as ‘the atavistic voice of an English colonial governor responding kindly to the injured sensibilities of his native subjects’ (241)
    o A argues that in an attempt to compliment Muslims, he presents them as ‘potential Tories’ due to their ‘belief in hard work and enterprise’ (242)
    o He advocates equality for all before concluding that the Satanic verses cannot be banned
40
Q

CH7 – John Patten ‘On Being British’

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  • Being British is a ‘matter of essential sentiments and loyalties’ (243)
  • ‘The document is an implicit description of the white cultural majority community, which supposedly sets the norm, and so of what that cultural essence is’ (243-244)
  • Emphasis on freedom as made up of tolerance and obligation. Rights create obligations and these can be conflicting
  • A argues that freedom of speech is necessarily limited in the UK due to intellectual property etc…
  • A argues that Patten does not address whether diversity is intrinsic or rather only applicable when there is no conflict with Britishness
  • Must assimilate as an individual not a group
  • If you want to be part of British society, you must conform with the values and culture
  • Loyalty = ‘legal subjection and moral attachment’ (246)
  • English language is key part of being truly British. Patten also mentions British history
  • However… A brings to light how we cannot forget British imperial history as a key factor in the creation of a British culture
41
Q

CH7 – British empire

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  • A uses the example of the British Empire as epitomising British culture
    o Western influence can be enriching or disintegrating
    o Britain forced to anthropologically examine the culture of their subjects before imposing Westernisation
    o Culture = form of colonial reconstruction
  • ‘My argument is only that in both contexts the concept of culture was part of that totalising project which Williams identified with the emergence of industrial, liberal society’
42
Q

CH7 – cultural minority

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  • You are born into culture
  • But minority/majority is a question of number
  • Minority/majority assumes that one group is superior, the others do not fully belong. Never describe the upper class in terms of ethnic group
  • Lord Fraser, 1983. Definition of ethnic group as legal group
    o ‘distinct community by virtue of certain characteristics’ (238)
    o Emphasis on the group’s history, culture, geography, language, literature, religion and minority status.
  • ‘perhaps the crucial point about a politically established cultural minority is that constitutionally it cannot authorise new cultural arrangements but only request them’ (259)
  • If certain groups are dominant in terms of numbers, it is impossible to have true cultural equality
43
Q

CH 7 - Multiculturalism – education

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  • If it were achieved, it would solve issues of education/social services.
    o ‘Construcion of diversity (is) an effect of modern government’ (260)
  • Emphasis in schools on teaching history applicable to minorities also = multicultural education
    o However… many argue that this is not empowering as it intends to be. E.g. learning about black history just reinforces the horrors of the past
  • We cannot have true equality whilst engrained racial prejudice remains
44
Q

CH7 - Multiculturalism – collective identity

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  • However… there is a risk that if multiculturalism is fully enforced that the ethnic groups will lose their collective identity. The real problem is in ‘the connection between learning about difference and learning to become different’ (262)
  • Some argue that culture should be viewed as a fluid aspect of society. It modulates according to the impact of different ethnic groups etc… Emphasis on culture of society as a whole disestablishes political/cultural supremacy
    o ‘Social identities do need to be authenticated, but Rushdie has taught us – so Bhabha claims – that their authentication derives from our ability continuously to reinvent ourselves out of our confused cultural conditions’ (263)
  • A argues that diversity does not damage a uniform cultural identity in every case.
    Inclusion/exclusion is key to determining tradition and common life
45
Q

CH7 – multiculturalism and politics

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  • A argues that a country’s lack of unity is often exploited by politicians, interventionist tactics
    o Impossible for the minority to have a voice and represent their values in politics
  • Freedom of faith in UK has led Muslim groups to demand faith schools/politicisation of their beliefs
  • Multiculturalism in the UK has ‘meant the reinforcement of centralised state power and the aestheticisation of moral identity, and that therefore (it has not) been seen as a potential threat to British identity’ (266)
  • We all live on the same earth, are subject to the same global disasters etc. yet people are so suspicious of the international
  • Immigrants pose a threat to authority, not to power
    o They seemingly threaten social unity of the UK
46
Q

CH 8 – satanic verses

A
  • ‘It is generated by the encounter between Western modernity – in which anthropology is situated – and a non-Western Other, which anthropologists typically seek to understand… but which in this case is also in the West’
  • It is easier to read texts that we identify with.
  • Must read in relation to context of the book. Look at political debate that surrounds Rushdie and examine how the ‘ambiguous heritage of liberalism… affects non-Western immigrants’ (271)
47
Q

CH8 – political climate of the satanic verses

A
  • Political climate: politicians speak out about threat posed by non-EU immigrants
    o Described by former Belgian interior minister Joseph Michel as ‘barbarian peoples’
    o Significant hostility towards Muslims
    o Radical Islamic movements are emerging in the Middle East
48
Q

CH8 – position of muslims in the UK

A
  • Beginning to seize identity as a legitimate group in British society
  • They ask of the state different demands in order for them to live their lives according to their faith e.g. specific burial services
  • People are surprised at their demands for they are religiously specific
  • ‘The European sense that these demands constitute a kind of perverse behaviour is largely a reflection of two things: the ideological structure of modern European nation-states and the altered site of the European encounter with its Other’ (272)
  • State is said to represent all citizens. Religion is privatised outside CofE. The UK demands assimilation of non-white immigrants.
  • A argues that Islamic literature in the UK is often politicised. The Satanic Verses is political
49
Q

CH8 – Zaheera’s view of SV

A
  • Zaheera, young Muslim teacher
    o Book should not be banned but people should respect Muslims’ right to protest
    o ‘Her sense of unfairness does not connect with any demand for extending the laws of blasphemy; it points to an old and unresolved anxiety about minority vulnerabilities in the modern state’ (278)
    o A argues that Zaheera’s argument does not stand as it ‘does not conform to a secular liberal literary reading of the book’ (279)
    o Ability to criticise should not be restricted to certain social groups
50
Q

CH 8 – racial division in SV

A
  • Some argue that the Rushdie affair illuminated a pre-existing, deep-rooted racial division
  • What emerged was ‘the combination of paternalist and assimilationist attitudes displayed in all their self-righteous arrogance by the British middle class’ (281)
  • Difficult for government to know how to proceed, as religion is supposedly a private matter. Cannot financially quantify spiritual injury
51
Q

CH8 – different reactions SV evokes

A
  • The context of the book has become integral to its reading
  • Arguably, Rushdie’s book is being criticised by those who do not understand its literary purpose i.e. not meant to be taken literally. Fiction is not fact
  • ‘In this book self-recognition works to confirm the self-satisfied reader in her/his established predispositions and prejudices instead of inviting her to think herself into a new world’ (284)
    o Responses to book are based on recognition
    o The text is ultimately rooted in modern politics
    o It evokes different reactions. Horror in Muslims, appreciation (?) in others – all different responses based on recognition
    o ‘My argument is not that European readers applaud The Satanic Verses because they are filled with an irrational hatred of Islam, but because it brings into play metanarratives of Western modernity that conflict with Islamic textualities by which Muslim immigrants in Britain try to define themselves’ (286)
52
Q

CH 8 – flaw in SV

A
  • The text functions as a form of ‘weapon’. The text is written to appealing a post-Xian audience and therefore focuses on Prophet’s sex life etc. - trying to satirise Islam
  • The flaw in The Satanic Verses is its lack of understanding of true Islam
    o It depicts Gabriel as revealing hadith. This is wrong as Gabriel reveals the Koran, hadith rather refers to the sayings of Muhammed external to the Koran.
    o Rushdie conflates the doctrines of sunni and shia
    o To successfully write satire, one must have an understanding of the thing that they are satirising.
    o Specific example of description of halal in Satanic Verses is not contained in the Koran or hadith – this shows a misunderstanding of Islam
    ♣ The practice of halal is also politically rooted. There was a debate surrounding whether or not it should be declared illegal.
  • A argues that Rushdie’s status as a non-Muslim does not make his argument invalid. Rather, ‘the force of that criticism depends on the fact that he is situated in a Western liberal tradition and is perceived to be addressing an audience that shares it’ (295)
    o Rushdie does not have the moral high-ground in writing such a work. If people were to convert as a result, it would be out of shame.
  • Contradictory that Westerners like the book. It does not possess reasoning and is rooted in rhetoric
53
Q

CH8 – Chamcha and Pamela in SV

A
  • She commits adultery with Chamcha’s friend, wants a half-English child. Very left-wing politics, does not want to confirm Chamcha as a real English gentleman. Married Chamcha because he was Indian.
  • ‘It is thus Pamela’s sexual history, not her politics, that constitutes real betrayal of Chamcha precisely because it is a betrayal of an essential (i.e. racially pure) Englishness’.
  • ‘There is a double displacement… for Chamcha is at once the object of betrayal and the ultimate betrayer – the self-hating colonial’ (297)
  • Chamcha chooses to return to India. His wife is burnt to death, carrying her half-Indian child.
    o ‘Chamcha’s solution to the problem of conflicting identities, a return to his real place, is scarcely open to many immigrants, although the idea of deporting colored immigrants to their country of origin is one that right-wingers in Britain… have always favoured’ (298-299)
54
Q

CH8 – Bradford burnings and paradox

A
  • Burnt in Bradford by Muslims. Likened to Nazi burnings
  • ‘Why was there no liberal outrage at the public burning of copies of immigration laws by dissenting members of Parliament some years ago?’ (301)
  • Difference was that the Satanic Verses was considered literature. ‘And it was burned by people who did not understand the sacred role performed by literature in modern culture’ (302)
  • Rushdie had to have security with him as protection. However, the government shows little interest when a black person is attacked by a white person.
    o ‘Their security evidently cannot receive the same practical and ideological attention that liberal society gives to an internationally famous author’ (302)
  • Paradox: cannot ban book as it is an abuse of freedom of expression. However, simultaneously, Muslims are being criminalised for expressing their dissent at its publication. If you are not British, you cannot challenge the British.
55
Q

CH8 – conclusion

A
  • Anthropological practice does not have to do with fact, but rather the ‘political project in which cultural inscriptions are embedded’ (305)
  • Key question: ‘how do discursive interventions by anthropologists articulate the politics of difference in the spaces defined by the modern state?’ (306)
  • The Enlightenment is responsible for fostering the concept of ‘the Other’ due to its ‘homogenising thrust’ (306)
56
Q

a main criticisms of G

A

G tries to universalise religion
G links symbol to meaning, A says that symbol in itself is the meaning
A focuses on how symbols are formed rather than attempting to portray symbols as a system
G understands religion in a purely Xian way, emphasises knowledge as consequence of belief rather than medieval view of belief as based on knowledge

57
Q

how does A view of ritual relate to Durkheim

A

embodied collective representation is reminiscent of D ideas of exterior projection as revealing an interior consciousness