Ontological Turn
Ontological Turn
Ontological Turn
Series EditorialBoard
Jonathan Spencer, University of Edinburgh
Michael Lambek, University of Toronto
iii
The OntologicalTurn
An Anthropological Exposition
MARTIN HOLBRAAD
University CollegeLondon
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Contents
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Contents
Conclusion 282
Post-critical Anthropology 288
The Politics of Ontology 293
Bibliography 299
Index 333
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Figures andBoxes
Figures
2.1 Wagners nature/culture reversal page 82
2.2 Wagners scheme of metaphoric invention 89
2.3 Wagners holographic model of obviation 97
2.4 Obviation sequence of Daribi myth about the origin of
food crops 101
3.1 Postplural abstraction 135
3.2 Trans-temporal comparison 149
Boxes
0.1 Why the ontological turn is not relativism 12
2.1 Part-whole relations in obviation and the hermeneutic circle 92
3.1 Stratherns dialogue on perspectivism with Viveiros de Castro 152
4.1 Ontology in the mirror:Viveiros de Castro and Wagner 174
4.2 Viveiros de Castro, Deleuze and anthropology 182
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Botelho and Neil Wells for their help with preparing the manuscript and
the index for publication.
For reading and commenting on drafts of our chapters we are enor-
mously grateful to Benjamin Alberti, Kristoffer Albris, Mikkel Bille,
Tom Boellstorff, Matthew Carey, Igor Cherstich, Jo Cook, David Cooper,
Iracema Dulley, Alice Elliot, Astrid Grue, Agnieszka Halemba, Casper
Bruun Jensen, Stine Krijer, Chloe Nahum-Claudel, Morten Nielsen,
Adam Reed, Joel Robbins, Julia Sauma, Mario Schmitt, Michael Scott,
Charles Stewart, Soumhya Venkatesan and James Weiner, as well as mem-
bers of the Cosmology, Religion, Ontology and Culture (CROC) research
group at University College London (UCL), students in the Contemporary
Anthropological Theory class at the University of Copenhagen and the
Advanced Cultural Theory seminar at the University of California Santa
Cruz and participants in seminars, workshops and conferences held in
the United Kingdom, Denmark and other parts of Europe, the United
States, Cuba, Mongolia and Japan where different versions of the argu-
ments developed in this book have been presented.
In Chapters 2, 3, 5 and 6 we have drawn liberally on the follow-
ing previously published works: pp 3746 of Holbraads monograph
Truth in Motion: The Recursive Anthropology of Cuban Divination
(Chicago:University of Chicago Press, 2012); sections of our co-written
article Planet M: the intense abstraction of Marilyn Strathern, pub-
lished in two different versions, in Cambridge Anthropology Volume 28,
Issue 3, pp.4365 (2009) and Anthropological Theory Volume 9, Issue 4,
pp.371394 (2009); sections of Holbraads article Can the thing speak?,
first published online on the Open Anthropology Cooperative Press
(Working Papers Series #7, 2011), with further versions published in
Savage Objects, edited by G.Pereira (Guimaraes:INCM, 2013), pp.1730,
and Objects and Materials:ARoutledge Companion, edited by P.Harvey
etal. (London:Routledge, 2014), pp.228237; sections of Chapter4 in
Pedersen's monograph Not Quite Shamans: Spirit Worlds and Political
Lives in Northern Mongolia (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2011);
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Introduction
To return to our example again, asking what people and things might be in
Maori gift exchange is to ask what they must be for these practices to make
anthropological sense. It is to ask for, and generate, the conceptual and
analytical apparatus that will permit us even to describe, let alone cogently
comprehend, Maori gift exchange, or whatever other ethnographic mate-
rials are of concern to us. Without the conceptual agility that ontological
relativization provides, we suggest, anthropology is resigned to misunder-
standing, even misdescribing, the very ethnographic materials it seeks to
elucidate.
So, this is the central concern of the ontological turn: It is about
creating the conditions under which one can see things in ones eth-
nographic material that one would not otherwise have been able to
see. And that, we should emphasize from the start, is at its core a
methodological intervention, as opposed to a metaphysical or indeed
philosophical one.1 In spite of its name, the ontological turn in anthro-
pology is therefore decidedly not concerned with what the really real
1
To be sure, we shall be seeing at certain points in chapters to follow, the reflex-
ive project of conceptualization on which this anthropological approach centres
does draw some of its inspiration from philosophical ideas and proposals. And
conversely, it is worth noting that the interest anthropologists of the ontological
turn have shown in philosophy has been to a certain extent reciprocated. As Tanya
Luhrmann has noted (2013), contemporary discussions about ontology in anthro-
pology can be compared to notorious debates about rationality in the 1960s and
70s, in which a number of philosophers engaged in a lively dialogue with anthro-
pologists in entertaining the possibility of alternative forms of reasoning of the
kind Evans-Pritchard, most emblematically perhaps, had sought to articulate for
Zande witchcraft (1937; e.g. see Winch 1967; Wilson 1974). While the rationality
debate had a clear epicentre in Britain, recent philosophical interest in anthro-
pologists turn to ontology has come from more diverse sources, crossing even
the proverbial divide between Analytical and Continental traditions (e.g. compare
Paleek & Risjord 2013 and Sivado 2015 with Watson 2014, Surel 2014, Maniglier
2014, and Charbonnier et al. 2016). It should be noted that these debates have been
conducted largely independently from the classic conversation between philoso-
phers and social scientists about the ontology of social phenomena (e.g. Weber
1968; Durkheim 1982; Elster 1982), which in recent years has continued into phil-
osophical and social theoretical discussions about social ontologies (e.g. Searle
1995; 2006; Marcoulatos 2003; Friedman 2006; Fullbrook 2008; Lawson 2012).
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the chapters that follow we shall see that some of the most decisive steps
in the development of this line of anthropological thinking emerged
from studies conducted in such traditional ethnographic locations as
Melanesia and Amazonia, and in relation to such classic anthropological
topics as ritual, gift exchange and animism, in principle, and increas-
ingly in practice, there is no limit to what discourses, practices and arte-
facts are amenable to the approach of the ontological turn. What might
seem an anachronistic if not downright dangerous theoretical approach
applicable only to indigenous cosmologies and tribal or non-Western
peoples, can and should be extended to all sites, themes and questions,
including, in some of our own recent work, hardnosed political prob-
lems as security, revolution and empire (e.g. Pedersen 2011; Holbraad &
Pedersen 2012, 2013; Pedersen & Bunkenborg 2012; Holbraad 2013b).
Other recent works that adopt an ontological approach, often elaborat-
ing upon it critically in innovative ways, include studies of such diverse
topics as money (Maurer 2005, Holbraad 2005), healthcare (Kelly 2011),
transnational migration (Elliot 2016), medical anthropology (Bonelli
2015), architecture (Corsn Jimenez 2013; 2014), postcolonial land reform
(Nielsen 2011, 2014; Di Giminiani 2013), new social movements (Krijer
2015; Heywood 2015); infrastructure (Jensen & Winthereik 2013), new
public management (Ratner 2012); creativity (Hirsch & Strathern 2004;
Leach 2014), fashion (Vangkilde 2015), contemporary music (Born 2005;
2010), climate change (Hastrup 2011), games and calculation (Pickles
2013), natural science and natural scientists (Candea & Alcayna-Stevens
2012; Helmreich 2012; Walford 2015) and digital worlds (Knox & Walford
2016; Boellstorff 2016; Hogsden & Salmond 2016).
Still, as our opening examples illustrated, one of the central messages
of this book is that there is nothing inherently new in the ontological
turn. Rather than a radical rupture from the anthropological past, we
suggest, the turn to ontology with which we are concerned here is ori-
ented towards releasing in their fullest form potentials that have always
been at the heart of the disciplines intellectual project, and that are
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of the ontological turn, to the extent that concept here should be read
as more or less synonymous to the more grave-sounding expression
ontological assumption.2 If an ontological assumption is an assump-
tion about what something (including what a concept) is, then it
depends also on how the concepts (including concepts of concepts)
involved in articulating it are defined. To ask, for instance, What is a
person? is to ask, How is a person to be defined?, which can be taken
as the same as asking, How are persons to be conceptualized? So to
assert, as the ontological turn does, that anthropologists engagement
with their ethnography may require a shift of their ontological assump-
tions, is to claim also that how to conceptualize things (including,
again, concepts) in a given ethnographic encounter is among its most
basic concerns.
Once again, then, more than a break with earlier ways of doing
anthropology, this focus on conceptualization is better considered as a
particular way of extending and intensifying aspects of anthropologi-
cal practice that have been present in the discipline for a long time.
Certainly, taken on its own, the idea that anthropological thinking
may involve the need to revise ones concepts is hardly novel, consid-
ering that ideas about anthropologys role in questioning that which is
taken for granted, relativizing things, denaturalizing them, displaying
the variability of human ways of being, including ways of thinking, or
of seeing the world, and so on, are so common that they almost appear
banal when listed in this way. Indeed, anthropologys special gift for
using peoples varied lifeways to present alternatives to what we may
otherwise have taken for granted is also what has lent the discipline
its sharpest critical edge its abidingly political mission of what is
2
Again, this is not offered as a philosophical thesis about the relationship between
ontological assumptions, concepts and definitions, much less as an attempt to
delineate the proper remit of ontology or metaphysics. This is a task for philoso-
phers (e.g. Honderich 1995:634). Ours is only an attempt to articulate clearly how
the particular manner of anthropological analysis in which we are interested in this
book operates, this being a point of anthropological methodology par excellence.
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Introduction
sometimes called cultural critique (Marcus & Fisher 1986; Hart 2001),
or what Foucault hailed as anthropologys role as a counter-science
(1970:378). Seen in this light, our rather cerebral-sounding insistence
on anthropologys capacity for concept creation may perhaps look
meek and non-engaged in comparison. And yet, assimilating our call
for conceptualization to such longstanding critical anthropological
concerns fails to recognize the ways in which these concerns are recast
by the ontological turn. This is so for two interconnected reasons.
First, it should be noted that, more than just pointing out the (obvious)
need for anthropologists to pay attention to their concepts, the ontologi-
cal turn makes this the pivotal task for anthropological thinking its pri-
mary challenge. Conceptualization, in this sense, is the trademark of the
ontological turn just as, say, explanation epitomizes positivist approaches
and that of interpretation typifies hermeneutic ones. Indeed, much of
the theoretical traction of the ontological turn comes down to the alter-
native that it presents to this rather hackneyed choice in the social sci-
ences, between explanation and interpretation. For anthropologists to
imagine their task as that of explaining why people do what they do, they
must first suppose that they understand what these people are doing. The
ontological turn often involves showing that such why questions (expla-
nation) are founded on a misconception of what (conceptualization).
E.g. the question of why certain people might believe in nations, say,
or ghosts, may be raised precisely because questions as to what a nation
or a ghost (and indeed what belief and doubt) might be have not been
properly explored. And similarly for hermeneutics:conceived as cultural
translation, to imagine that ones job as an anthropologist is to interpret
peoples discourse or actions one must assume that one is in principle
equipped with concepts that may facilitate such a process. To this the
ontological turn counterposes the possibility that the reason why the
things people say or do might require interpretation at all may be that they
go beyond what the anthropologist is able to understand from within his
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time. Nevertheless the idea of, say, a past ever-returning to the present
(e.g. Eliade 1991; cf. Gell 1992:306) is in itself confused:what exactly is
past about the past if it can be said to be ever-returning to become pre-
sent? Similarly, beyond its elegant air of paradox, in what sense exactly
are parts that add up to less than the whole parts at all? (e.g. Bohm 1980;
Durkheim 2006; Bubandt & Otto 2010) And what is the idea of a thing
meant to amount to when we say that it has a spirit (e.g. Mauss 1990; cf.
Henare etal. 2007:1620)? Arent things precisely the kinds of things
that do not have spirits, by definition?
The ontological turn distinguishes itself from such forms of relativ-
ism by taking seriously the work of conceptualization that they (should)
imply. It starts from the premise that what makes genuinely alternative
the possibilities for thought that ethnographies can provide is that they
can go beyond the anthropologists capacity to describe them by (ab)
using concepts in their familiar senses. To avoid the conceptual vague-
ness that such descriptions involve, and the confusions that they so easily
create, ontologically minded analysis takes on the task of providing the
conceptualizations that are needed to render ethnographic descriptions
and anthropological comparisons fully articulate:how might one indeed
conceptualize time as circular? What might past, present and future
amount to in such a manner of thinking? What do we need to do to the
notions of part and whole in order to alter the logical coordinates of
their relationship? And what might a thing be, and what a spirit, for the
two to be conjoined conceptually? In taking seriously the requirement to
follow through with these kinds of conceptual experimentations, then,
the ontological turn is ultimately an attempt to take the challenge of rela-
tivism to its ultimate conclusion.
Experimentation: The third way in which the ontological turn intensi-
fies the anthropological project lies in its commitment to experimenta-
tion. Once again, this should be understood as an intensification of ways
of operating that already have deep roots in anthropology, rather than a
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rapturous new beginning. In fact, there are at least two senses in which
the practice of anthropological research has always been experimental.
First, ever since Malinowski, anthropology has identified itself as an empir-
ical science whose practitioners gather their data in the field as opposed
to the armchair by way of the celebrated method of participant observa-
tion. And, while relatively little attention has been paid to this, anthropolo-
gists abiding commitment to participant observation involves them using
themselves as research instruments for registering their field-observations
within a thoroughly self-experimental research design (see also Shaffer
1994). After all, when one thinks about it, to an even higher degree than for
instance the discipline of medicine, whose history . . . is replete with ancient
and contemporary examples of doctors who chose themselves to be . . .
volunteers for research (Kerridge 2003: 204), the discipline that we have
come to know as modern anthropology relies on the fieldworkers ability,
and willingness, to use his or her own body and mind as both an instru-
ment and an object of investigation.
Second, it is widely agreed that scientific experimentation involves an
element of manipula[tion] of phenomena in such a way that answers can be
given to specific questions (Honderich 1995: 262). To be sure, anthropolo-
gists would do much to avoid using the term manipulation to describe what
they do in the field. Indeed, they often like to remind themselves about the
ethical and political commitments that grow out of long-term fieldwork,
and perhaps even more so as the conceptualization of (and relationship
to) the people they study has shifted from one of informants who consti-
tute the object of study from which data are gathered, to interlocutors or
respondents along with whom knowledge is co-created in collaborative
and inter-subjective research processes. Nevertheless, to claim that anthro-
pological research does not involve a more or less controlled intervention
in the lives of the people studied, as well as the lives of the ethnographers
who study them, would be to ignore one of the central lessons from the
disciplines crisis of representation debate. Namely, that anthropological
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3
Note the deliberate play here on the double meaning of the verb to experiment
as rigorous scientific method and open-ended exploration, respectively. Indeed,
the notion of experimentation suggested here would seem to be fundamentally at
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odds with conventional understandings among scholars and laymen alike of what
constitutes a proper experiment in the natural (and indeed the social) sciences.
After all, is scientific experimentation not widely defined as the quest for repeat-
able results through the setting up of controlled experimental environments that
allow for the reproduction of invariance and limited variables over time? And
does our vision for an experimental anthropology not represent an exact opposite
ideal by advocating for maximal variance and the production of singular, non-
repeatable results? To a significant extent, yes; but there are nevertheless grounds
for arguing that what we are proposing here may be said to be experimental also
in a more scientific sense. For one thing, as Latour has pointed out, there is in
fact little difference between observation and experiment. . . . An observation is an
experiment where the body of the scientist is used as instrument, complete with its
writing device, the hand. . . . It does not matter if [one] has an instrument . . . or . . .
huge laboratory-like paraphernalia (1990: 57). What is more, as Latour also points
out, nothing proves that an experiment is a zero-sum game. On the contrary, every
difficulty [encountered by experimental scientists] suggests that an experiment is
an event . . . and not a discovery, an uncovering, an imposition, a synthetic a priori
judgement, the actualization of a potentiality, and so on (1990: 656). In other
words, although it may not appear to do so (not even to its practitioners), ethno-
graphic fieldwork including the criteria of evidence associated with it (Engelke
2008) arguably is a distinct mode of (self)-experimental research practice. In
fact, if we are to follow the historian and philosopher of science Hans Rheinberger,
the anthropological method possesses several advantages when held up against
other, more laboratory-based research systems (to borrow Rheinbergers term),
notably the capacity to perpetually remain, as he puts it, young: (1994). After
all, proposes Rheinberger, [r]esearch systems . . . are characterized by a kind of
differential reproduction by which the generation of the unknown becomes the
reproductive force of the whole machinery. As long as this works, the system so to
speak remains young. Being young, then, is not here a result of being near zero
on the time scale; it is a function if you will of the functioning of the system. The
age of such a system is measured by its capacity to produce differences that count as
unprecedented events and keep the machinery going (1994: 68; emphasis added).
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part of the operation,4 which in turn may help to explain why the very
features likely to make an ontologically informed analysis look like a
failure from the (less reflexively experimental) vantage of prevailing
taste regimes, often turn out to be the same elements that indicate its
accomplishment in more ontological terms. So, indeed, failure is an
endpoint (Miyazaki & Riles 2005). Not, however, because anything new
and novel is automatically to be preferred over the well-tried and the
conventional, but because a successful run of the experimental onto-
logical machine is to be measured against the degree to which poten-
tially useful concepts have been generated by this heuristic procedure,
and more generally the extent to which this ontological experiment has
explicated, problematized and improved existing ways of thinking. (Just
to make this clear, even if it may seem unnecessary: this does not mean
that such heuristically generated analytical methods are necessarily any
less ethical, political or indeed critical than prevailing hermeneutically
informed forms of anthropological thought, an issue to which we shall
have the opportunity return to in the Conclusion to this book).
In sum, one might say that the ontological turns intensification of
anthropologys experimental condition stems directly from the way in
which it transforms cultural critique into conceptual creativity without
in so doing losing any of its critical edge and reflexive impetus. For what
is that which we earlier defined as intensified or indeed radical reflex-
ivity and conceptualization other than the logical extension of anthro-
pologys self-experimental habitus from the so-called ethnographic
4
According to Hans Rheinberger, successful scientific experiments produce results
that by definition cannot be produced in a goal-directed way. Given such condi-
tions, a research device has to fulfill two basic requirements. First, it has to be
stable enough so that the knowledge which is implemented in its functioning does
not simply deteriorate in the course of continuing cycles of realization. . . . Second,
it has to be sufficiently loosely woven so that in principle something unpredictable
can happen (1994: 701). This, we suggest, is precisely what the ontological turn
seeks to do by extending the object of anthropological experimentation from the
artificially circumscribed arena of the field to include the subsequent anthropo-
logical analysis.
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Introduction
An Overview of theBook
Having in this Introduction presented in a nutshell the key tenets of
the line of anthropological thinking we identify as the ontological turn,
the rest of this book is devoted to delineating its development within the
discipline, showing how it relates and contrasts with other approaches,
and exemplifying critically the kinds of insight to which it can lead. It is
important to make clear from the outset that, while our exposition will
be critical, at times exploring important ambiguities and inconsistencies
both within and across the writings that we review, our overall intention
is positive. Having, since our own years as graduate students in the
late 1990s, thought about, taught and published on different aspects of
the ontological turn, our aim, in line with the books title, is to expose
what we take this way of thinking to be, in the sense of putting it on
the table as a viable anthropological approach that can make important
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An Overview of theBook
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Other OntologicalTurns
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Other OntologicalTurns
1
Although the authors we shall be reviewing are mainly social and cultural anthro-
pologists, we should note that a turn towards ontology has also been debated
hotly within archaeology (Webmoor & Witmore 2008; Alberti & Marshall 2009;
Holbraad 2009; Alberti et al. 2011; Harris & Robb 2012). Benjamin Alberti in par-
ticular has been making a sophisticated case for the role of ontological reflexivity
in archaeological analysis, extending to this field the purchase of the kinds of argu-
ments we seek to explore in this book (e.g. Alberti 2014a).
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Other OntologicalTurns
proposal for intensifying certain trains of thought that lie at the heart
of the anthropological project. By contrast, notwithstanding the virtue
they often make of being experimental, provisional and partial, the four
other alternatives that we examine in what follows tend in one way or
other to assume, albeit often only implicitly, that a turn to ontology must
involve participating in, or contributing to, the traditional philosophical
project of building a metaphysical account of the basic constituents of
existence. In some cases, as we shall see, this aim is explicit and deliber-
ate, with anthropologists and STS scholars joining philosophers in pro-
viding their own answers to traditional ontological questions about how
best to conceive of the world, its constituents and the relations between
them (here, various critiques of Cartesian dualism have been promi-
nent). Accordingly, much of this writing takes the form of ever-novel
metaphysical stories about what the world is and how it works relations
replacing entities, processes swallowing up essences, assemblages and
networks co-opting subjects and objects, flows and stoppages usurping
the metaphysics of presence, only to be trumped by objects that retire
into themselves, and so on, in speculative recalibrations of the concep-
tual armoury of metaphysical thought.
In other instances, which come closer to our approach, similar moves
of conceptual revision are made, not in the name of arriving at a bet-
ter ontological image of what the world is really like, but rather as a
matter of methodological expedience. As we shall show, however, these
methodological arguments are often themselves grounded on prior
ontological commitments of their own. For example, the characteristic
methodological notion that the world with which, say, anthropologists
or STS scholars are empirically concerned is informed by an underly-
ing set of ontological principles, which vary from one set of local prac-
tices to the next, seems in much STS writing to be itself premised on an
(at least implicitly) metaphysical claim about the inherent multiplicity
of the world some have called this thesis ontological pluralism (e.g.
Law2004).
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So, in the rest of this chapter we sift through the different positions
that have been taken within recent debates about ontology in order to
set out the broader coordinates for the approach we shall delineate in the
following chapters, teasing out critically the elements that make it most
distinctive. And what better place to begin than with the old mainstay of
ontology, namely philosophy.
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[C]ontemporary philosophers have lost the great outdoors, the absolute out-
side of pre-critical thinkers . . .; that outside which was not relative to us, and
which was given as indifferent to its own givenness to be what it is, existing
in itself regardless of whether we are thinking of it or not; that outside which
thought could explore with the legitimate feeling of being on foreign terri-
tory of being entirely elsewhere . . . (2008: 7; emphases original)
There are several reasons for which this return to the concerns of pre-
Kantian philosophy is considered necessary for the speculative realists.
Chief among these, asserts Graham Harman, whose own Whitehead-
inspired theory of objects has spurred a lot of the recent surge in OOO
literature (e.g. Morton 2013), is the fact that relationality [has become]
a major philosophical problem. It no longer seems evident how one
thing is able to interact with another, since each thing in the universe
seems to withdraw into a private bubble, with no possible link between
one and the next (Harman 2010: 157). Once again, we recognize here
the doggedly metaphysical notion that there is a really real reality out
there one that includes objects imbued with a transcendent depth and
interiority, which is forever hidden to humans due to the fact that we can
only interact with these objects by relating to them. Notwithstanding
his differences with Harman, this is also the central question that
Meillassoux asks, namely how to break free from what he refers to as
the correlationalist circle (2008: 53). The question for Meillassoux is
to escape the Copernican shackles in which, as he writes, to be is to
be a correlate'. The speculative realist problem, then, consists in trying
to understand how thought is able to access the uncorrelate . . . whose
separateness from thought is such that it presents itself to us as a non-
relative to us, and hence as capable of existing whether we exist or not
(2008:29). In their attempts to address these and similar metaphysical
questions, the speculative realists and their OOO brethren cast their
nets in disparate theoretical directions, ranging from Meillassouxs
own Badiou-inspired philosophy of nature as radical contingency to
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Indeed, attempts have been made by anthropologists to draw on insights from
speculative realists to grapple with particular ethnographic phenomena and derived
ontological problems, even if these have invariably involved a fundamental depar-
ture from the more dogmatic and therefore, by definition, un-anthropological
metaphysical assumptions mentioned earlier. See, for example, Pedersen (2013a),
Jensen (2013) and Viveiros de Castro (2015). While Viveiros de Castro only alludes
to the speculative realists in passing and Jensen is unequivocally critical, Pedersens
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more radical consequence of this is also often put forward: namely, that,
contrary to the mononatural ontology of the modern constitution, a
world thus composed, which is to say a world that is always recompos-
able, is best conceived as multiple (e.g. Mol 2002). Differently config-
ured localized practices will have different ontological effects, bringing
forth different kinds of entities, with no overall ontological scheme to
sort them out in a unified way (Jensen 2004; Gad & Jensen 2010). In
such circumstances, it makes more sense to speak of the world in the
plural. As enacted in tourist visits, for example, the famous landmark
in the Australian desert, Ayers Rock, is something altogether different
than Uluru, as Aborigines call the rock when they make it the focus of
particular ritual practices and mythical narratives: the it in question is
two (in fact more) different things (Law 2004: 12239). Indeed, as Law
shows with reference to this politically fraught example, such a mul-
tiple worlds or multiple ontologies thesis has profound consequences
for how we think also about politics, since it implies that, more than
just a clash of opinions, views, beliefs or convictions, political dispute
is a tussle about the very constitution of the world a matter of politi-
cal ontologies (e.g. Verran 2014), ontological politics (e.g. Mol 1999)
or even cosmopolitics (Latour 2004a; Stengers 2010). We shall see that,
often adopting this terminology, in anthropology too politics features
prominently in debates about ontology.
Here, however, we may note that STS scholars have developed a rich
conceptual vocabulary in order heuristically to track and empirically to
unpack the diversity of these ontological operations. Indeed, the some-
times perplexing quality of the neologisms of STS corresponds to its
departure from the modern regime of ontological common sense, effec-
tively inventing a new language to speak about possible alternatives to
it. So alongside the by now standard Latourian vocabulary of networks,
hybrids and actants, formalized as Actor Network Theory (ANT), we
have a growing mass of STS-inspired terminology:cyborgs and nature-
cultures (Haraway 1991), method assemblages (Law 2004), inscription
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3
To take just one indicative example of the approach we have in mind, consider
how, in the context of a review of the ontological turn in STS, Andrew Pickering
presents his own alternative to what he calls representational idioms of scientific
practice:The world humans, nonhumans and whatever just is an indefinite
multiplicity of performative entities endlessly becoming in decentred and emer-
gent dances of agency. This is the ontological picture I want to dwell on. . . . My
ontology is a symmetric one of a multiplicity of reciprocally coupled emergent
agents, human and nonhuman (2016:4-5, 6, footnotes omitted).
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[A]s she studies segments from Law, Science, The Economy, or Religion she
begins to feel that she is saying almost the same thing about all of them:,
namely, that they are composed in a heterogeneous fashion of unexpected
elements revealed by the investigation. . . . [S]omewhat to her surprise, this
stops being surprising, in a way, as each element becomes surprising in the
same way. (2013: 34; emphases original)
What is most telling, perhaps, is the remedy Latour offers for this
predicament, namely an inquiry effectively devoted to charting out
nothing less than the whole ontological constitution of modern society,
modulating the ontological principles according to its segments (Law,
Science, Economy. . .). Latour admits that with this move he effectively
has come out as a philosopher albeit, as he says, an empirical one
(Latour 2014a; cf. Maniglier 2014 and Mol 2002; see also Berliner etal.
2013) joining in the grand, though in his case still radically diversified,
project of ontology as a matter of metaphysical settlement. Indeed,
this is exactly how philosophers have received him, and not least those
associated with OOO (e.g. see Harman 2009; Foster 2011). Be that as it
may, and notwithstanding the fact that few STS scholars have followed
him in this move, we suggest that Latours slide from methodological
disruption to metaphysical model building is not accidental:It renders
explicit an ontological premise that has always lurked at the heart of much
of STS literature, effectively marking its limits as a reflexive project. As
per our Geertzian image in the previous chapter, with STS it is reflexivity,
yes, but not necessarily all the waydown.
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2014; Kohn 2015) there is little agreement, and often little clarity, as to what
anthropologys turn to ontology is actually meant to be, and how it relates
to other recent ontological orientations within cognate fields, including,
as we have just seen, philosophy and STS. Properly speaking, we are deal-
ing here with a loose collection of ideas, arguments and approaches that
appear mainly to have in common a strongly polemical tone whatever
it is, everyone who subscribes to it, as well as many of its critics, seem to
think the turn to ontology is tremendously important. Still, with refer-
ence to our foregoing distinction between ontology as a substantive met-
aphysical construction-project and the ontological as a methodological
orientation for anthropological analysis, it is possible to distinguish two
broad tendencies,4 and contrast them with the line of thinking that we
seek to delineate in considerably more detail in this book.
The first tendency is akin to Latours empirical philosophy as it seeks
to extract from the anthropological exposure to ethnographic materials
elements with which to build original ontological frameworks, often with
a view to providing an alternative to what is taken as the modern onto-
logical status quo. We call this the tendency towards alternative ontol-
ogy (we use the singular to indicate the normative propensities of this
approach:modern ontology is flawed, and by looking ethnographically
4
These two tendencies do not encompass all of the ways in which anthropologists
have invoked questions of ontology in recent years. For example, in France, Albert
Piette has been developing an existential anthropology focused on ontological or
ontographic questions (2012; for alternative senses of that term see Holbraad 2003;
2009; 2012; Bogost 2012), understood as an attempt to observe and describe the
entities present in any given ethnographic situation, focusing on what really exists,
beyond what people do or say (Piette 2015: 97; original emphasis). Piette contrasts
his realist approach, as he calls it, with the writings on the ontological turn (includ-
ing many of those we are reviewing here), which he sees as centring on anthropolo-
gists pet themes, namely, differences in culture, language and relations (ibid.: 98).
Piette is correct: the approaches that are the focus of our review have in common
the fact that they appeal to the notion of ontology in the context of dealing with
anthropologys standing concern with apportioning similarity and difference across
the diverse phenomena in which anthropologists are characteristically interested.
Perhaps the most concerted account of how questions of sameness and difference
take on ontological characteristics in anthropological meaning making is provided
by Vassos Argyrou (2002).
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Alternative Ontology
Perhaps the most systematic and deliberate exponent of the idea that
anthropological expertise can be mobilized to articulate a cogent
alternative ontology has been Terence Evens. Drawing on his own
ethnographic engagement with kibbutz in Israel as well as a long-term
project of reanalysis of Evans-Pritchards Nuer and Zande materials,
since the 1980s Evens has been providing meticulously argued critiques
of concepts such as rationality, causation, logic, and other mainstays
of philosophical debate, effectively using the alterity of ethnographic
materials as a standpoint from which to supplant Western philosophical
presuppositions, including ontological ones (e.g. Evens 1983). In
his Anthropology as Ethics: Nondualism and the Conduct of Sacrifice
(2008), arguably the culminating synthesis of this work, Evens casts his
intellectual project as one of ontological conversion (ibid.:xi), which he
introduces likethis:
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connect as they separate and a thing is always also other than what it
is (Evens 2008: xx). Evenss corpus of work, then, is devoted largely to
showing how such an ontological shift is necessary, not only to solve
otherwise intractable anthropological problems, such as the classic
debate about rationality, but also because it captures an experiential side
of our existence that science cannot acknowledge (2008: xi). Indeed, as
the title of his magnum opus would indicate, for Evens such an approach
ultimately also offers an ethical advantage, inasmuch as nondualism
revitalizes the ameliorative and irenic forces of ethics [such that] the
world is projected as basically and truly enchanted (2008).
Evenss deeply Lvy-Bruhlian idea of nondualism closely parallels
certain conceptual moves made by Wagner, Strathern and Viveiros de
Castro (see also Scott 2013b). Moreover, the surely not unintentionally
soteriological sonorities of Evenss call to ontological conversion the
idea that nondualism is just morally better than dualism (see also Barad
2007; Pickering & Kuzik 2008) might also seem to resonate with some
of the political consequences of this books version of the ontological
turn, as we shall discuss in our Conclusion. Still, a key divergence may
be said to lie in Evenss overriding interest in the we the first person
plural of the foregoing citation. His interest in ontology is founded on a
desire to arrive at a better characterization of what it is to be human
what makes human being tick, as he puts it in the opening sentence
of his book (2008: ix). If for him, too, ethnographic contingency is a
conduit for conceptual experimentation, as per our own position, that
is only because it is a cipher of a deeper ontological reality which is
itself universal, ethically superior and, in that double sense, necessary.
Conceptual innovation in the service of an ontological regime-change,
if you like. Notwithstanding his affinities with the ontological turn as we
understand it, then, Evens is perhaps best considered as a particularly
ontologically attuned exponent of a more diffuse strategy within anthro-
pology, which has been branded by another of its most distinguished
proponents as philosophy with the people in (Ingold 1992: 696).
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Indeed, Tim Ingold too is often mentioned in debates about the onto-
logical turn and related discussions (e.g. Knudsen 1998; Henare et al.
2007; Candea 2010c), mainly for his own recommendation of a whole-
sale revision of not just anthropology but all disciplines, in order to rec-
tify, as he puts it boldly, that single, underlying fault upon which the
entire edifice of Western thought and science has been built namely
that which separates the two worlds of humanity and nature (2000: 1).
Drawing on an extensive and diverse range of readings, including phe-
nomenologists such as Merleau-Ponty and Heidegger, and heterodox
biological and psychological concepts such von Uexklls umwelt (1934)
and Gibsons affordances (1979), Ingold has spent several decades formu-
lating a dwelling perspective based on
Often in polemical style, Ingold has over the years expressed serious
reservations towards a number of the ontology-oriented approaches
discussed in this book (2008, 2014), just as, conversely, scholars associated
with the turn to ontology have objected to what they consider Ingolds
over-reliance on phenomenology (Willerslev 2007; Pedersen 2014)
an argument to which we shall return in Chapter5. Still, his relentless
and sophisticated deconstruction of the representationalist (Cartesian)
dogmas behind mainstream anthropological (and archaeological,
psychological, biological etc.) thought has played a key role in the
scattered topical and theoretical debates (about animism, for example;
see Chapter4) that eventually coagulated in the ontologicalturn.
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We humans live in a world that is not only built according to how we per-
ceive it and the actions those perceptions inform. Our world is also defined
by how we get caught up in the interpretive worlds, the multiple natures . . .
of the other kinds of beings with whom we relate. . . Rather than turning to
ontology as a way of sidestepping the problems with representation, Ithink
it is more fruitful to critique our assumptions about representation (and,
hence, epistemology) through a semiotic framework that goes beyond the
symbolic. If we see semiosis as neither disembodied (like the Saussurean
sign) nor restricted to the human nor necessarily circumscribed by the self-
referential properties of symbolic systems that, in any event, are never her-
metic, then the epistemologyontology binary . . . breaks down. Humans are
not the only knowers, and knowing (i.e., intention and representation) exists
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in the world as an other than human, embodied phenomenon that has tan-
gible effects. (2008:17)
5
As he writes, by being ethnographic, and by developing conceptual resources
out of this engagement, ontological anthropology, . . . makes a unique contribu-
tion to what could otherwise seem to be a topic best reserved for philosophy . . .
Ontological anthropology is not generically about the world, and it never fully
leaves humans behind (2015:313).
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Haraway (1988, 1991), Anna Tsing (2005, 2013, 2015), Steven Helmreich
(2009, 2012), and others, such as Matei Candea (2010a, 2011a, 2014)
whose work can be described, to borrow an expression from Strathern
(2004), as partially connected to our own ontological turn.
This brings us to our final illustration of alternative-ontology-anthro-
pology, namely the writings of Arturo Escobar (2007), Marisol de la
Cadena (2010, 2014, 2015), Mario Blaser (2009, 2010, 2013) and more
junior scholars associated with them (e.g. Lyons 2014). Under the aegis
of what Blaser calls political ontology and de le Cadena cosmopoli-
tics (c.f. Stengers 2010), these scholars have over recent years formu-
lated a powerful, engaged and highly influential theoretical intervention
in political and political-economic anthropological debates that have
for long been dominated by various combinations of neo-Marxist
and/or Foucaultian cultural critique (e.g. Ferguson 1994; Geschiere
1997; Comaroff & Comaroff 1998; for other critiques of this approach,
see Pedersen 2011; Bertelsen 2014; Bubandt 2014). The crux, as well as
the spirit, of this far-reaching critique is captured nicely in the follow-
ing passage from a much-cited paper by de la Cadena (2010), tellingly
titled, Indigenous Cosmopolitics in the Andes: Conceptual Reflections
beyond Politics :
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Deep Ontologies
Deep Ontologies
The second anthropological tendency we wish to examine, which
we have branded deep ontologies, is one that very much embraces
ethnographic contingency. Rather than delineating a truer or otherwise
better ontological order, here the language of ontology serves as a
manner of articulating the divergent principles that may underlie the
contingent diversity that ethnographic descriptions detect. Reiterating
that this tendency includes diverse and often only loosely related
approaches, not all of which are explicitly associated with debates about
an ontological turn, it is nevertheless noteworthy that some of the main
authors we think display this tendency trace their interest in ontology
back to Claude Lvi-Strausss notion of deep structure (Lvi-Strauss
1963) hence our gloss of deep ontologies.6 One prominent version of
this genealogy is associated particularly with the University of Chicago
and traces the link back to Lvi-Strauss via the influence he had on
Marshall Sahlins and Valerio Valeri there. While neither of them lays
great store by the concept of ontology as such, both follow Lvi-Strauss
in paying particular attention to the categorial presuppositions that
underlie particular cultural practices, which often receive their most
explicit and tractable expression in cosmology, ritual and myth (e.g.
Lvi-Strauss 1964; 1969; Sahlins 1985; Valeri 1995; see also Hallowell 1960;
Eliade 1991). Often expressed in Lvi-Straussian oppositions between
the continuous and the discontinuous, the one and the many, the
complete and the incomplete (a language Lvi-Strauss himself referred
to as qualitative mathematics 1954), these deep-seated assumptions
about basic categories and the relations between them are then seen to
6
We thank Michael Scott for emphasizing this common denominator, and for
providing his own, insiders overview of the development of this line of thinking
(Scott, pers. comm.). Our more brief account here is informed by Scotts, although
responsibility for any errors of interpretation is of course entirely ourown.
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It is relevant for our purposes to note that one of Scotts main concerns
in developing this model is to counteract what he sees as the undue
dominance in Melanesian anthropology of the so-called Melanesian
Model of Sociality, which he ascribes particularly to Roy Wagner and
Marilyn Strathern, two of the prime movers of the line of thinking with
which this book is concerned. Strictly inverse to his, Scott argues, this
model is mono-ontological: it posits the primordial oneness of all
things (Scott 2007: 18), as expressed in the relational flow of Melanesian
sociality (Wagner 1977b; Strathern 1988), which lends personhood
its partible and fractal character (e.g. Strathern 2004; Wagner 1991),
such that the burden on [social] praxis is to achieve and maintain
differentiation (Scott 2007: 18). To the extent that this ontological monism
is now a nascent orthodoxy (ibid.: 31) in Melanesian anthropology,
Scott suggests, the Arosi study offers a counterexample that may also
provoke us to re-examine its applicability in different parts of the region,
including even the Highlands of Papua New Guinea, where Wagner and
Strathern conducted fieldwork (ibid.: 2432). We shall return to this
debate in Chapter 6.
In more recent writings, Scott has extended his critique of the domi-
nance of particular ontological models in anthropology by examining
how they format also certain strands of anthropological theory (Scott
2005; 2013a; 2013b; 2014). Treated ethnographically as contingent config-
urations of thinking and acting, theoretical trends in anthropology too
manifest root assumptions concerning the essential nature of things and
their relationships, as per our earlier citation of Scott on onto-praxis. In
fact, a prime target of Scotts critiques has been the literature on the onto-
logical turn itself. He suggests that at the root of diverse writings on this
theme, including not only by Wagner and Strathern, but also Viveiros de
Castro, Ingold, Latour, Evens, Kohn, Elizabeth Povinelli (2002), as well
as the two of us, is the ontological assumption of what he calls nondu-
alism, citing Evens (2008). Presented as the inverse of Cartesian dual-
ism (a poly-ontolog[y] of the simplest kind [that posits] a plurality of
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essential qualities, but in this case only two Scott 2014: 34), nondual-
ism emphasizes the perpetual movement and mutability of that which is
always already mixed a kind of ceaselessly surrealist metamorphosis or
recycling of transiently stable and co-mingling beings (ibid.: 35). Indeed,
Scott is careful to note that the nondualist ontology that he thinks is
indigenous to much of contemporary anthropology comes in two vari-
ants. For some, the nondualist orientation of their ethnographic con-
sultants constitutes a fuller apprehension of the true flow and ambiguity
of being and becoming (here he cites as examples Evens and Ingold
among others). For others, nondualism is to be elevated as a methodo-
logical principle that allows anthropologists to adopt a position of apo-
sitionality, a motile analytical transit that, because it is potentially every
theoretical position, everywhere and every-when, is simultaneously no
theoretical position, nowhere and no-when (ibid.: 37) this being an
excellent gloss on the kinds of positions and methods to which the rest
of this book is devoted. Indeed, the distinction coincides with the one
we are making here, between the alternative ontology tendency and the
methodological orientation we are seeking to delineate in this book.
We shall have occasion later in the book to address the important idea,
which Scott is not alone in expressing (see also Heywood 2012), that the
ontological turn, including in the version we present here, manifests a
particular meta-ontology of its own. But regardless of the question of
how far this claim is born out (we shall see that to an extent it is, though
perhaps not as absolutely as Scott would have it), we note here that Scotts
profoundly reflexive move of applying his onto-practical analytical frame-
work to the practice of anthropological theory itself closely parallels the
kind of reflexivity we seek to elucidate in this book. Similarly, although
it is beyond the scope of the present discussion to assess the rights and
wrongs of Scotts critique of mono-ontology in Melanesianist anthropol-
ogy, we note that Scotts insistence on the difference that his ethnography
of the Arosi can make to this debate is very much in line with the idea,
central to this book, that the experimental conceptualizations that are
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Orientalism, and so forth (see also Venkatesan et al. 2010; Alberti et al.
2011; Keane 2013).7
But from the point of view of our line of thinking here, the biggest
question mark has to do with the limits that the deep ontologies ten-
dency places on the possibility of conceptual experimentation. Building
into its own premises particular ways of conceiving not only of ontol-
ogy, but also of society, praxis, cosmology and other such mainstays of
anthropological reflection and debate, it would seem that its tendency
is to exclude them from the scope of the reflexive conceptual versatility
that we are seeking to propound here. For example, Scotts proposal that
social forms and practices rest on underlying ontological assumptions
invokes a series of anthropological assumptions about what might count
as a social form or practice in the first place. Left largely unproblema-
tized, such assumptions are ratified in his analysis of the Arosi material,
as, for example, when he presents the tension between the underlying
poly-ontology and practices of leadership which precariously promote
social cohesion between ontologically diverse matrilineages. But faced
with the thoroughly anti-social (or at least anti-Durkheimian) nature of
poly-ontology as Scott characterizes it he defines poly-ontology also as
a cosmos in which the parts precede the whole (Scott 2007: 10) , one
may fairly wonder what might even count as social cohesion in such a
cosmos. Probing such a question would at the very least involve shifting
the conceptualization of society away from the standard Durkheimian
image of a whole that precedes its parts. There is no reason to assume
that the deep ontologies tendency outright precludes this kind of reflex-
ive experimentation with the conceptual infrastructure of anthropologi-
cal thinking, i.e. the turn of thinking to which this book is devoted. But
the meta-ontological weight of this way of locating ontologies, deep in
7
Much of the energy of writers in deep ontology has indeed been devoted to giving
new, ontologically inflected responses to these otherwise familiar-sounding ques-
tions (e.g. Scott 2007:229300; see also Kapferer 2010; Lloyd 2007; 2011; 2012; cf.
Luhrmann etal.2013).
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the world, roughly underneath societies and cultures, does seem to get
in the way.
A similar critical perspective can be taken on an approach advanced
by Philippe Descola, which has been at the centre of debates about
anthropology and ontology in France, and is now so influential also
among English-speaking anthropologists that for some (not least in the
United States) it has become almost synonymous with the ontological
turn of the discipline (although see below Descolas polite disclaimer; cf.
Kelly 2014; Lenclud et al. 2014; Kohn 2015). Put forward with magnifi-
cent clarity and detail in his magnum opus, Beyond Nature and Culture
(2013), Descolas approach takes the form of a comparative ontology that
is in some ways analogous to Michael Scotts proposal. While tracing a
more direct line back to Lvi-Strauss, whose post he held at the Collge
de France, Descolas anthropological objective too is to push anthropo-
logical analysis to the deepest level at which differences between human
lifeways can be registered, which for him too is the level of ontology. As
he writes:
Much as we saw with Scott, then, for Descola ontologies are plural
and are to be found somewhere underneath, or upstream as he puts
it (2013: 115), the phenomena that ethnographers record, and can be
used anthropologically to arrive at the principles that account for their
diversity. The major difference from Scott and the Chicago culturalist
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Faced with some other entity, human or nonhuman, I can assume either
that it possesses elements of physicality and interiority identical to my own,
that both its interiority and its physicality are distinct from mine, that we
have similar interiorities and different physicalities, or, finally, that our inte-
riorities are different and our physicalities are analogous. I shall call the first
combination totemism, the second analogism, the third animism, and the
fourth naturalism. These principles of identification define four major types
of ontology, that is to say systems of the properties of exiting beings; and
these serve as a point of reference for contrasting forms of cosmologies,
models of social links, and theories of identity and alterity. (2014: 121)
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Our OntologicalTurn
Our OntologicalTurn
In this chapter, we have attempted to draw clear, principled distinctions
between four other ontological turns and the version this book is about.
As an exercise in broad intellectual heuristics, we have sought to map
out some of the general paths of thinking that can be detected in the
literature on the ontological turn, the better to set up the coordinates
of the exposition to which the following chapters are devoted. We
should make very clear here that our tendency in this chapter towards
purification (if not quite in Latours modern sense) is the by-product
of our attempt to present in terms that are consistent and clear bodies
of writing whose subtleties inevitably go beyond the purposes of our
discussion here. So, as we have tried to indicate without going into the
full exegetical detail, particular authors that we have identified with one
line of thinking may often express thoughts or make arguments that are
more in line with another, or indeed with the perspective we seek to
articulate in thisbook.
For instance, notwithstanding their abiding argument in favour of
nondualism as a superior alternative ontology, Evenss methodological
reflexivity and Ingolds critique of representationalism have provided
some of the most distinguished examples of the kind of conceptual exper-
imentation we here associate with our ontological turn an observation
that may be extended to the work of Kohn, De la Cadena and Blaser.
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that we present as part of the ontological turns trajectory make little ref-
erence to the notion of ontology at all. We shall argue, nevertheless, that
these writings consistently lend themselves to a synthetic exposition of
the core orientation that this book seeks to articulate. So our task in pre-
senting this line of thinking, showing its pitfalls as well as its strengths, is
neither exegetical nor an exercise in intellectual history in the tradition
of George Stocking (e.g. 1987, 1995) and other historians of anthropol-
ogy. Indeed, while in the chapters that follow we shall go deep into the
writings of the three key figures we have selected, we do so not in order
to present a judicious review of their writings, but rather in order to
extract from them the line of thinking we want to expose. Our aim, in
other words, is not to be comprehensive or encompassing in our account
of the works we present, but rather to convey as clearly as we can certain
core moves of argument that they contain. Our task is interpretatively to
mould these arguments into an intellectual exposition, showing how it
runs through the work of the authors we review.
The rest of this book, then, traces the development of a certain
form of anthropological thinking and mode of ethnographic descrip-
tion that has led up to the current debates about the ontological turn
within anthropology. Having examined in this chapter a selection of
the most influential contenders to this label, we shall now proceed to
use the expression ontological turn in a deliberately programmatic
way, to refer only to the strand of thinking with which we are primar-
ily concerned in this book. We use the expression advisedly, and not
without hesitation, for it is fast becoming a kind of intellectual brand,
at least according to some of its most ardent critics (Laidlaw 2012; Vigh
& Sausdal 2014, Bessire & Bond 2014; Graeber 2015). We hasten to add
that, while engaging with it critically and acknowledging that its name is
not always helpful, our goal is to demonstrate that the ontological turn
is far more than a passing fad.
Indeed, keeping the foregoing critical discussion of the four alterna-
tive approaches in mind, we are now in a position to state in a nutshell
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the most distinctive feature of the version of the ontological turn that we
consider ours and which we seek to delineate in the remaining chap-
ters of this book. This, we suggest, is its abiding concern with freeing
thought from all metaphysical foundationalism whether substantive
or methodological, normative or pluralistic. Or, if this sounds rather
too ambitious, at least strategically to displace the search for ontologi-
cal foundations to give precedence to a distinctly anthropological task,
namely that of giving full expression to the contingencies of a given eth-
nographic situation. This is significant because, in principle, these con-
tingencies can cut against not only the metaphysical commitments of the
ethnographer, but also the ontological binds within which anthropologi-
cal methodology is meant to operate. In other words, as we explained in
the Introduction, insofar as this way of doing anthropology is concerned
with matters of metaphysics or ontology in the philosophical sense of
the word, it is so in the service of allowing the object of ethnographic
analysis to have a transformative effect on the ontological assumptions
the anthropologist brings to it, and in that way contribute to setting the
terms for the anthropologists conceptualization and analysis of it. The
point is not to keep looking for new alternatives to what the world is
like. Rather, it is to find ways to allow the world, as it expresses itself in
the contingent ethnographic situations that we encounter as anthropolo-
gists, to show us how things could be otherwise. Posing ethnography as a
conduit for metaphysical contingency, anthropology turns to ontological
questions without taking any single ontology as an answer its ultimate
concern being not with what is, but with what could be. To set this argu-
ment on its tracks, let us now turn to the work of Roy Wagner who, as we
shall see, essentially set it in train in the first place.
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TWO
Analogic Anthropology:Wagners Inventions and
Obviations
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This chapter demonstrates this claim by first outlining the central ten-
ets of Wagners anthropological invention of culture and then exploring
its consequences with reference to Wagners work on myth in particular.
Wagners symbolic analyses of myth, for which he develops a technical
vocabulary and elaborate interpretative procedure centred on the concept
of obviation, does not only demonstrate his experimentation with the
notion of culture, but also reveals particularly clearly the ontological impli-
cations of his approach. To set the stage, we begin by outlining the manner
in which Wagners invention of invention sets itself up in relation to the
prevailing conventions of anthropological thinking, and particularly the
North American tradition of cultural anthropology upon which Wagner
sought so drastically to innovate.1
American Convention
We have already suggested that, in a variety of different ways, the turn
to ontology in anthropology has been bound up with a critique of the
distinction between nature and culture (and the kindred distinction
between nature and society) as the founding anthropological matrix for
distributing similarity and difference. Wagners wholesale reinvention
of the concept of culture can be seen in this light. In particular, his
experiment with the concept of culture constitutes a concerted attempt
to rid a particular strand of the anthropological critique of nature/culture
thinking of its central contradiction, namely that it is so often done in
the name of cultural relativism the prime tenet of the Boasian tradition
of American cultural anthropology. According to this view, the very
1
This is not the place to go into any detail about the degree to which Wagners pro-
ject might be deemed representative of the US tradition of cultural anthropol-
ogy, insofar as it makes sense to speak of such a unified intellectual tradition in
the first place. But it is perhaps worth pointing out that the thinking of his PhD
supervisor David Schneider, and possibly that of Wagner himself too, was framed
by what has been described as the schism between socially and culturally ori-
ented anthropologists in the department of anthropology at Chicago; a schism
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American Convention
2
In an incisive discussion, Keith Hart shows that the task of relativizing assump-
tions that other disciplines as well as the wider public may take for granted has
been a major part of anthropologists intellectual mission from the early years of
the discipline. For example, the positivist outlook of Durkheimian sociology did
not stop Marcel Mauss from using Maori prestations as a vantage point from which
to criticize modern markets any more than the relativist premise of Boasian cul-
turalism dictated to Margaret Mead that she should use her fieldwork among ado-
lescent girls in Samoa to show up the peculiarities of American parenting (Mauss
1990; Mead1961).
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Culture as Invention
A number of largely tacit assumptions lie behind the American cultural
anthropological conventions that Wagner set out to lay bare and criticize
in Habu and Invention of Culture. In line with the words etymological root
in the Latin colere, to cultivate, Wagner argues (1981:21), anthropologists
imagine culture, in its broadest sense, as a set of conventions by which
people order and make sense of themselves and the world around them
(again, in the broadest sense, nature). Since conventions established at
different times and places by different groups of people vary, and the
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3
As Wagner explains: When [anthropologists] speak as if there were only one cul-
ture, as in human culture, this refers very broadly to the phenomenon of man;
otherwise, in speaking of a culture or the cultures of Africa, the reference is to
specific historical and geographical traditions, specific cases of the phenomenon
of man. Thus culture has become a way of talking about man, and about particular
instances of man, when viewed from a certain perspective (1981: 1).
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4
The sense in which culture is an invention for Wagner is directly opposite to the
sense in which it can be, famously, for Hobsbawm and Ranger, when they write
of invented traditions (1983). Hobsbawm and Rangers core observation is that
practices that may seem traditional typically turn out to be recent inventions that
act to legitimate present practices by establishing a sense of continuity with an
often-fictitious past. In terms of Wagners argument, the claim amounts to the idea
that conventions typically purport to be older than they actually are. What is being
invented for Hobsbawm and Ranger are not inventions in Wagners sense, but
rather new and suitably old-looking conventions. While the invented traditions
argument is persuasive in its own terms, (though see also Sahlins 1999), it should
in no way be confused with Wagners, which is that the very assumption that peo-
ple are bound always to control the vagaries of history by appeal to the stability of
convention (putative or otherwise) may in some cases have more to do with the
analysts needs than with those of the people he studies.
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Anthropology will not come to terms with its mediative basis and its pre-
ferred aims until our invention of other cultures can reproduce, at least in
principle, the way that those cultures invent themselves. We must be able to
experience our subject matter directly, as alternative meaning, rather than
indirectly, through literalization or reduction to the terms of our ideologies.
(1981:301)
Thus, if the assumption that people like the Daribi must have a culture
that consists of conventions gets in the way of making sense of the fact
that culture in their case consists of processes of invention, then the onus
is on the anthropologist to move away from his initial assumptions and
conceive new ones, to avoid reducing them in terms of our ideologies.
Hence the ethnography of Daribi invention must precipitate a process
of invention on the part of the anthropologist. Departing from the
conventional anthropological notion of culture as convention, the
anthropologist is called upon to transform the notion in a way that
incorporates the possibility of invention as described for the Daribi in
other words, to re-invent the notion of culture as invention.
Set forth as the epistemology of the ethnographic argument pre-
sented in Habu (Wagner 1981: xv), The Invention of Culture does just that.
Putting in place the conditions of possibility for invention on the part of
the anthropologist, much of the argument of the book is devoted to show-
ing that such processes of invention are as present in modern Western life
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Habus invention:
ghost-humans
C
A B
conventional distinction: analogic flow of meaning:
ghosts vs humans ghosts humans
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in the habu (synthesis C). Conversely, looking at this process from the
viewpoint of its outcome, the habu-statement C mediates between thesis
A and its antithesis B in that it is the result of the modification of the for-
mer by the latter and is in that sense their synthesis. So far, so Hegelian.
However, to these two forms of mediation (call them syntagmatic and
paradigmatic respectively) Wagner adds a third, which, while not nec-
essarily contradicting the Hegelian model, takes the notion of dialectic
progression in a startlingly novel direction, namely backwards. For if
one is prepared to think against the flow of invention (from C to B to
A), the initial point of departure of the invention, thesis A, can also be
understood as having a mediating role. As Wagner puts it, it provides
the context (cf. 1981:3750) with reference to which the particular set-
tlement of the flow of meaning that C embodies makes sense. It is only
by referring back to the initial distinction between humans and ghosts
(A)that the habu-statement (C)we are ghosts, which is made possible
by the analogic flow of meaning (B), makes sense at all. Wagners techni-
cal term for this form of retrospective mediation is counter-invention
(ibid.:47), drawing attention to the fact that every act of invention (we
are ghosts) involves ipso facto also a retroactive re-invention of the very
meanings upon which it innovates (humans, ghosts), figuring them as
the obvious grounds that need to be overcome as and when new mean-
ings are, in turn, refigured upon them. In the very act of establishing that
they are ghosts, the habu-dancers must willy-nilly remind us, as it were,
that normally wed take them to be human instead. In this way the habu
synthesis C both stems from the default thesis Aand takes us back to it,
thus closing off the triangle, if only by implication and largely as a side
effect (hence the intermittent line connecting C to Ain Figure2.2).
This, then, is the point of obviation. As the three-step pattern of
invention illustrates in rudimentary form, acts of symbolic/metaphori-
cal expression and for Wagner all acts of expression are symbolic and
metaphorical to some extent involve dispensing with prior meanings,
taken for these purposes as already established, in order to supplant
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them with new ones. So in both senses of the word, and with a strong
tinge of paradox, meaningful expression for Wagner is an act of obvia-
tion:it requires that already established meanings are revealed (made
obvious) as being unnecessary, overcome, old hat, obviated. Speech (i.e.
meaning) is indeed lethal, as the title of Wagners book would have it,
and perhaps the best image of its motion would be that of a snake eat-
ing its own tail (although to do justice to Wagners conception we would
have to imagine the snake forming a triangle rather than a circle). And
it is on this point that Wagners model of dialectic differs quite mark-
edly from the Hegelian image. The latter posits dialectical motion as an
extensive progression, repeating itself linearly as each successive synthe-
sis becomes the point of departure for a further dialectical contradic-
tion, requiring a further synthesis, if not ad infinitum, then perhaps till
the end of history. Wagners model of obviation, by contrast, posits the
motion of meaning as an irreducibly intensive and non-linear process
a matter of unpacking the density of the flow of meaning in determinate
ways, rather than extending it by adding to it new elements from beyond
itself. Meaning mined elicited out of its own resources. Symbols, as
the title of his famous book has it, that stand for themselves (1986).
On Wagners model, then, the backwards-and-forwards (vicious)
circularity of traditional hermeneutics wholes presupposing parts
and parts presupposing wholes is replaced by the forward-thrusting
motion of a spiral:meaning that closes in on itself ever and again only by
moving forward (see Box 2.1). Here the generation of meaning depends
not on aggregating and disaggregating parts to make or break up wholes,
but rather on the possibility of what we may call auto-substitution, with
semiotic wholes generating ever new wholes out of themselves, either by
unfolding themselves outwards (invention) or by folding inwards, back
onto themselves (counter-invention, viz. obviation). Indeed, as James
Weiner points out in one of his many illuminating commentaries on,
and extensions of, Wagners analysis, the folding of imagery back on
itself so that it comes to have an inside and an outside (1995:xviii; see
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also 1988; Wagner 2000) is as good a way as any to define Wagners dif-
ficult but crucial idea of obviation.
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a central feature of these writings, and this is also one of his main points
of contact with the work of Marilyn Strathern, as we shall see in the next
chapter. Indeed, insofar as the ontological turn in anthropology is char-
acterized by its propensity for conceptual innovation and neologisms, a
telltale sign that Wagner can rightfully be considered its progenitor is the
sheer mass of concepts he has developed over the years. As with obvia-
tion, many of them are about adding a dimension of depth to the con-
cept of meaning: figure/ground reversal (1987), the outward symmetry
of twinning (2001:4863), expersonation as opposed to impersonation
(2010:47102; 2012b), and more. When Wagner talks of holography he
means it:his game in anthropology, one might say, is to create concep-
tual holograms. For present purposes, however, we restrict our account
to Wagners original deployment of obviation in the analysis of myth,
since it is in the guise of what Wagner calls myths obviation sequences
that the core tenets, manners of operation and sheer analytic power of
his model become most explicit.
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writes, is not that of replicating the world, but of setting up its own
world in contradistinction (ibid.:33).
The crucial difference between Wagner and Lvi-Strauss, however,
is that for Wagner the self-contained and self-generative character of
myth is not owed just to the freedom with which myth deploys, mediates
and thus proliferates structural oppositions, as Lvi-Strausss account of
mythical meaning would have it (e.g. Lvi-Strauss 1969). For Wagner,
to view myth as this kind of free combinatorial operation as a form of
mental gymnastics, as Lvi-Strauss famously put it (1969:11; cf. Friedman
2001) is effectively to contain it within a semiotic of convention, as if
all myth did were to play around with the structural possibilities allowed
for by an already existing underlying code of oppositions (nature/
culture, raw/cooked, hot/cold etc.):5
5
While the contrast with Lvi-Strauss is a recurring theme in Wagners work on
myth (e.g. 1978:357, 512; 1981:1501; 1986a:131), perhaps the most detailed and
systematic comparison between obviation and structural analysis is offered by
Weiner (1988:15472).
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E C
F A B
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myth6 that relates the origin of food crops to an act of human parricide.
We paraphrase the relevant part of the myth (cf. 1978:3951):7
Once an old man was living together with his two sons. Lacking edible food,
they had to live on tree fruit [which is what gardening birds are deemed
to garden and eat]. The eldest son went in search for food. Encountering a
gardening bird, he tries to shoot it but misses, his arrow making contact only
with its feathers. The feathers turn into food-domesticates of various kinds
(sweet potatoes, sago, bananas etc.), which the man collects and takes home.
He asks his younger brother to cook them and then goes out to find the bird
again. Losing track of it, he finds himself at the clearing where he had earlier
shot at it, only now its a garden. There the bird appears in human form and
recounts to him how he too (the bird) had lived here with his own father
without food, and that when his father had died food-crops had sprouted
from his burial place. So he gives the man foods to take with him, telling
him that when he gets home he should ask of his brother that they kill their
father and bury him. When the man got home he said this to the brother
and the two of them were despondent and hesitant. Still, in his sorrow, the
eldest brother kills the father, buries him, and out of the burial place sweet
potatoes, sago, banana and other foods begin togrow.
Figure2.4 maps the turns of the myths plot onto Wagners obviational
model his triangle of triangles. Without going into the detail of each
6
We could have equally well used our standing example of the habu-statement,
since Wagner has provided a detailed obviational analysis of the whole sequence of
the habu curing ritual itself (1986:6980), thus illustrating how obviational analy-
sis can be extended beyond the plot-lines of myth. We have chosen to illustrate
obviation sequences with reference to myth, however, staying close to Wagners
own original conception.
7
For purposes of this brief illustration, in our paraphrase we include only those
parts of Wagners transcript of the myth that feature in the obviation sequence
he extracts from it interpretatively. Curious readers are encouraged to consult
the original transcript (1978:3945), where they will find, for example, that the
myth continues with some further episodes, which Wagner interprets as an apo-
logia that, as he proposes, extends the obviational sequence by adding to it its
own inversion, revealing what Wagner calls an internal myth (ibid.:4851) this
being an example of the kind of complexity Wagner builds into his obviational
analyses.
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step in the sequence (see ibid.:458 for Wagners full analysis), the over-
all picture here is of a movement from an opening situation (A)to a final
outcome (F). To start with, humans (presented as a microcosm of father-
with-sons) lack edible food, having to make do with tree-fruit like the
birds. By the end, humans are able to enjoy gardened food, but in order
to do so must first (E)engage in a wretched act of parricide, thus institut-
ing the social form of paternal succession. This overall movement is one
of obviation:a situation set up as the myths conventional point of depar-
ture, namely a time in which humans had to make do with wild food
crops, is ultimately overcome by the advent of a world in which food
cultivation is a human activity. This technological transition, accord-
ing to the myth, is a function of a social one:from a time before time,
when fathers and their sons lived alongside each other (presumably) in
perpetuity, to a time when, like now, fathers die and are succeeded by
theirsons.
So, Wagner formalizes the obviation produced by this complex transi-
tion as a substitution of relationships: in the initial convention fathers
and sons stand together and in contrast to the undomesticated food
crops (father + sons / tree food), while with the invention of domesti-
cated food the sons stand together with the food crops and in contrast to
the father whom they killed in order to procure them (sons + garden /
father). Much as with the habu-statement (there the substitution would
be humans / ghosts humans + ghosts), we have here a startling shift
in the coordinates of meaning, where fathers, sons and food and the
relationships between them are all drastically redefined. Note, however,
the difference from habu: While there the goal of the obviation was to
take a social convention and invent a powerful new effect out of it men
that are ghosts , here we have effectively the origin story of what is an
established social convention in real life. The goal of obviation, then, is
to give us the back-story that leads up to social convention, making it
apparent that what we, the Daribi, take for granted is actually an inven-
tion that emerged out of particular circumstances once upon a time.
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gardening-bird
human
D
F A B
sons+garden father+sons tree food
father tree food gardening-bird
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Wagners Ontology
Creating an anthropology that contains within itself the horizons
of its own conceptual renewal is as good a way as any to describe the
ontological turns aspiration for the discipline. So, might one imagine
Wagners systematic account of the self-renewing character of meaning as
providing the theoretical foundations for the ontological turn? Certainly,
Wagners argument lends itself to such an interpretation. As we have
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8
In particular, Wagners theorization of metaphor and obviation can be read as an
account of the inner workings of ontological transformation, rendering it a central
feature of the very constitution of meaning. The triangle of metaphor (Figure2.2),
on this account, models ontological transformation as a dialectical shift in the
coordinates of meaning, while the spread out triangle of obviation (Figure 2.3)
models the inner complexity of its operation.
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artificial is something not only the Daribi, but all tribal, peasant and
religious people do, while the inverse stance is a general character-
istic of the West e.g. 1981: 745; cf. 1981: 7). Nevertheless, Wagners
deliberate (and increasingly cryptic) use of irony, humour and trickster-
like wordplay over recent years (e.g. 2010) casts doubt on the degree to
which such theoretical or ontological affirmations are meant seriously
as claims about what the world is really like (viz. the representational
semiotic of convention). At any rate, as with culture, one suspects that
what counts as serious for Wagner and for the practitioners of (serious)
science may be two different things.
Be that as it may, the danger that this kind of theoretical foundational-
ism represents for the project of the ontological turn is indeed serious,
as has been pointed out by a number of critics (Course 2010; Alberti
et al. 2011; Laidlaw 2012; Scott 2013a; 2013b; Ricart 2014; cf. Holbraad
2012:2605; Pedersen 2012a). If the ontological turn is to be defined by
its propensity reflexively to undo ontological presuppositions in the face
of ethnographic contingency, then to premise it on a prior set of ontolog-
ical presuppositions a meta-ontology (Heywood 2012) about mean-
ings, symbols, dialectics, obviation, revelation, or what-have-you, is at
best half-measured and at worst downright contradictory. It is, in effect,
to exclude the reflexivity of the ontological turn from its own scope
(Holbraad 2013a), belying one of its defining characteristics, namely that
its conceptual experimentations go all the waydown.
Heeding the criticism implies refusing to take Wagners framework
as a theoretical grounding. Instead, we should conceive of the analytical
pyrotechnics that Wagner has been firing in and at the discipline decade
after decade as an ongoing demonstration of the power of conceptual
invention an outcome of a form of thinking always on the move a
point to which we shall return in Chapters 5 and 6. We may even go
as far as to embrace the manner in which Wagners analytic allows us
to articulate and sharpen some of the central tenets of our argument
for the ontological turn, without excluding it willy-nilly from the very
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THREE
Relational Ethnography:Stratherns
ComparisonsandScales
For it to make sense to say that Marilyn Stratherns work has any bearing
on questions and problems of ontology, then surely the meaning and
purchase of ontology would need to differ from its conventional
essentialist and absolutist (philosophical, metaphysical) connotations.
After all, for many of her admirers from anthropology and other
disciplines, her work captures just about everything that anthropology
has got right (or, according to critics, wrong) since postmodernism. At
issue is not only that what Strathern writes evolved in dialogue with wider
intellectual-cum-political visions, critiques and projects formulated
broadly between late 1970s and early 1990s, including feminism and the
so-called crisis of representation; at issue is also how Strathern writes,
and her hyper-reflexive attitude towards knowledge-making of all kinds.
For, as Strathern herself puts it in a recent publication, What is true of
what is observed is true also of the manner of observation (2014a: 7).
What could be more anti-essentialist and epistemological (as opposed
to ontological) than that?
In fact, we argue in this chapter, Stratherns work has played a deci-
sive role in the development of anthropologys ontological turn, even
if she herself remains awkwardly (cf. Strathern 1987a) positioned with
respect to it. Indeed, we are going to show, it is because of Strathern that
the ontological turn is the natural heir to anthropologys postmodern
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Relations Everywhere
It has been suggested that hardly anyone in social anthropology
today claims to be a follower of Radcliffe-Brown (Barnard 2000: 73).
Nevertheless, while Strathern might not describe herself as a follower,
she clearly sees her project as following on tracks set down by the
1
Much as with Wagner and the American tradition of cultural anthropology (see
Chapter2), the suggestion that Marilyn Strathern is somehow representative of
the British social anthropological tradition must be qualified, since it bypasses
what might be described as the non-Durkheimian (and therefore, if you like, non-
French) part of the tradition promulgated and popularized by Malinowski and his
students following the demise of Victorian anthropology (Stocking 1984:10691;
Stocking 1986). Certainly, to highlight, as we are going to do below, the intellectual
genealogy that can be traced from Durkheim through Radcliffe-Brown and Meyer
Fortes to Marilyn Strathern downplays the significant interest in psychology that
was such a prominent intellectual current in British anthropology not just during
the Haddon-Rivers period, but also among the first generation of functionalists,
including Malinowski (who found much inspiration in Victorian psychologists as
well as Freud) and many of his students, several of whom had degrees in psychol-
ogy (including, interestingly and perhaps surprisingly, Fortes, who experimented
with psychoanalysis and also underwent and conducted therapy Stocking 1986;
H.Kuper1984).
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2
As she explains, [W]ith their penchant for the concrete, Rivers and his student
Radcliffe-Brown set the agenda for . . . how to understand the totality of social
life in terms of its own internal ordering (1995a: 12). And, crucially, it was by
virtue of a double emphasis . . . on relations known to the observer as principles
of social organisation and relations observed as interactions between persons
(1995a:12)that British social anthropology remained closely tied to the conviction
that at the heart of systems . . . [was a] primary human ability to make relationships
(1995a:14; see also 2014a).
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3
Like the Melanesian model of sociality (c.f. Chapter 1) and similar-sounding
terms, the New Melanesian Ethnography is a label that has been used by fel-
low Melanesianists commenting on and criticizing the distinct kind of analytical
method that since the mid-1980s has been associated with Roy Wagner, Marilyn
Strathern and several of their students as well as other Melanesian anthropologists
influenced bythem.
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1977b; Weiner 1988; Battaglia 1990; Leach 2003; Reed 2004; Crook
2007), social relations are not just comprised of connections visible
between persons, but also all the past and future connections presently
invisible within them. Here, gender relations play a defining role. For
the differences between the two dominant aesthetic forms that are
known by anthropologists as the two genders are dynamically replicated
across multiple scales ranging from tribe, clan, household and person so
that, at a given moment, one gender is rendered visible while the other
one is eclipsed.4 Thus, as Strathern goes on to explain in The Gender
of the Gift, Melanesian [s]ocial life consists in a constant movement
from one state to another, from one type of sociality to another, from
a unity (manifested collectively or singly) to that unity split or paired
with respect to another . . . The singular person, then, regarded as a
derivative of multiple identities, may be transformed into the dividual
composed of distinct male and female elements (1988: 15). So, to use a
distinction invoked by several commentators on Stratherns work (Gell
1999; Jensen 2012), whereas the structural functionalists conceived of
relations as external in that they bridged an imagined space between
social units and scales (individuals, households, clans, states, and so
forth), for Strathern as for Wagner (1977b), relations are conceptualized
as internal in the sense that there is nothing that is not relational. Instead
of relations between different units and scales, there are only relations
between different kinds of relations relations everywhere, indeed.5
4
By eclipsing, Strathern refers particularly to a special feature of [the] concealment
(1988:155)that takes place in gendered processes of production and exchange in
Melanesia, namely the fact that, as in lunar eclipse, for the effects of [male agency]
to be registered, there can be only partly concealment and not obliteration [of
female labour] (1988:157). In more general terms, Strathern deploys this concept
which resembles but is not identical to Wagners obviation (see Chapter2) to
describe various figure-ground reversals that she identifies in Melanesian and
other ethnographic materials.
5
As Strathern explains in a recent article, relations are the very membranes . . .
by which the heirs of the scientific revolution assemble, and dis-assemble, their
knowledge (2014a: 14). Thus, relations constantly appear as solutions to anthro-
pologists problems of description. Indeed, the more so-called bounded notions
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of society and culture are held up to criticism, along with the systems and struc-
tures that were once their scaffold, the more relations, relationships, the relational,
relationality, are evoked as prime movers (of sociality) in themselves . . . (2014a: 5).
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Later in this chapter and the ones to follow, we shall explore in detail
the consequences that this heuristic conception, and therefore inher-
ently experimental and strategic application, of the relation has for our
understanding of anthropology as an intellectual endeavour. For now
we wish to emphasize that, for Strathern in particular, anthropological
concepts always come from somewhere concrete, and from there they can-
not, and thus should not, be fully detached. In the case of the relation,
this somewhere concrete is English kinship terminology and imagi-
naries traceable back to the seventeenth century if not before (2014a:
6; 911), which, to be turned into anthropological concepts deployable
in other ethnographic contexts, were stretched first by the structural
functionalists and then subsequent generations of social anthropologists
such as herself (1995a; 2014a). It is this capacity of the relation in the
English but not necessarily other language for simultaneously denot-
ing something very concrete and very abstract that explains the interests
and inclinations, as well as the success and endurance, of classic British
social anthropology.
Note that this conceptual contingency is different from but not in
contradiction with the conceptual contingency that the ontological
turn (and Strathern herself) has otherwise mostly focused on, namely
the equally concrete nature of the relationship between the object of
an ethnographic description and its anthropological analysis (in fact,
one could say that the key argument of the present book is also about
how anthropological concepts always come from somewhere concrete,
namely the particular kind of concretion instantiated in turning ethno-
graphic materials into anthropological concepts). As such, Stratherns
reflections on the emergence of the concept of the relation in British
social theory from the seventeenth century onwards might be said to
add another side to that coin, namely the contingency of the origins of
the analytical concepts that the anthropologist has at his or her disposal
when confronted with ethnographic contingency. In other words, we
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is not the actual nation states of Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands,
Vanuatu, and so on, but a manner of speaking, or more precisely the site of
certain problems of expression and understanding, peculiar to the cultural
project of anthropology . . . It has nothing intrinsic to do with the totally
artificial and internally discontinuous ethnographic area that happens, for
mostly rather bad reasons, to have been christened Melanesia (Gell 1999:34;
see also Strathern 1988:1213; Reed 2004; Crook2007).
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6
This is also why Stratherns project of anthropology, with its recurrent use of a
contrast between Melanesia and the West, is not recourse to relativism (Hirsch
2014: 42). To be true, a sense of relativism may emerge from the anthropologists
investment in relations, and from taking these relations across cultures (Strathern
1995a: 25). But instead of mapping similarities and differences between contexts,
[o]ne must . . . be prepared for the unpredictable, including different distributions
of what people take as finite and what they take as infinite about their circum-
stances (Strathen 1988: 249).
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shall see, this focus on comparison (and the more technical notion of
scale which she introduces in this connection) takes us to the heart of
what is at stake in her anthropology. It also takes us a long way towards
realizing why her project cannot simply be described as epistemologi-
cal (as she generally prefers), but also as having inherently ontologi-
cal implications, if by that we understand the kind of concern with
conceptual reflexivity and experimentation that lies at the heart of the
ontologicalturn.
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terms, this must involve deciding which data go with each other and
which does not. In this general sense all Euro-American descriptive
activity is indeed comparative, although there is also a sense in which
the anthropological challenge of cross-cultural comparison is exem-
plary (2004:xvi) in this respect, since the things compared societies
or cultures are fields of phenomena that are defined precisely by the
fact that their constituent elements somehow go together, the problem
being to work out what these elements are and how they do or do not
relate.7
In response to this challenge, Strathern shows, social scientists tend
to plot their materials against different scales, understood as particular
ways of switching from one perspective on a phenomenon to another,
as anthropologists routinely do in the organization of their materials
(2004: xiv.) Such anthropological scalings happen in two ways. For
our purposes of exposition, here we may gloss the first one as quanti-
tative scaling, since it involves switches in size, and corresponds to the
conventional meaning of scale as having to with numerical measure-
ment and size. Like Gregory Bateson, for example, one might devote
a book to a single ritual performed by a particular group of the Sepik
River in Papua New Guinea (1958), or contrastingly one might devote
four major volumes to the study of hundreds of myths from across the
American continents, as Lvi-Strauss did (1969, 1979, 1990a, 1990b).
The switches for which this kind of quantitative scaling allows depend
7
It is important to stress that, as far as Strathern is concerned, comparison is an
intrinsic feature of Euro-American knowledge, but not necessarily Melanesian
also. On the contrary, she suggests that if we do comparison, they do something
different, namely division. As she writes, Euro-American question[s] . . . of differ-
ence [are] made manifest in comparison . . . And Istress comparison rather than
division in order to reserve the term division for a different mode of conceptual-
izing gender difference altogether . . . [In] Euro-American social practices . . .[a]s
elsewhere the sexes are opposed and contrasted, their attributes seemingly divided
off from one another; however . . . such differences draw not on the kind of division
found in the Melanesian . . . cases but on a form of analogy that Ihave been calling
comparison (1995b:4344,53).
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The interesting feature about switching scale is not that one can forever clas-
sify into greater or lesser groupings but that at every level complexity rep-
licates itself in scale of detail. The same order of information is repeated,
eliciting equivalently complex conceptualization . . . The amount of informa-
tion remains, so to speak, despite an increase in the magnitude of detail.
(2004:xvi)
8
It goes without saying that, in ethnographic craftsmanship, any attempt at com-
parison will involve multiple combinations and mutual adjustments of both quan-
titative and qualitative scaling, and its success will depend on the skill and the
degree of reflexive awareness about its own undertaking as a knowledge-practice
with which this is done.
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[The map] implies the existence of certain points or areas, like so many
villages or fields seen from the air, that will remain identifiable however
much their features are replotted; all that changes is the perspective of the
observer. [The tree] implies some kind of closure that defines a system of
concepts and their potential transformation from within, insofar as only
particular trajectories are genetically possible from the principles one starts
with. (2004:xvii)
The images of the map and the tree correspond to what we have called
quantitative and qualitative scales of comparison. Scaling up and down
to alter a forms scope over content corresponds directly to what one
means by scale when referring to a map: the proportion that holds
between a territory (content) and its depiction (form). Analogously,
qualitative switches from one form of comparison to another (e.g.
focusing on economic as opposed to religious dimensions of a given set
of data) involve the assumption that each of these forms is related to
the others in terms of the lateral and vertical relations that make up a
genealogical tree. For example, while one might imagine economic and
religious scales to belong to the same generation, like siblings, one might
posit the scale of the social to contain them both, like a parent. The two
images are themselves laterally related (on a tree they would be siblings)
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associates with that term. As we shall see, this point about abstrac-
tion also connects her work explicitly to the development of the onto-
logical turns investment in experimental forms of reflexivity and
conceptualization.
The closest Strathern comes to an explicit statement of her concern
with abstraction in Partial Connections is, tellingly, not as part of char-
acterizing her own concept of comparison, but in the course of her
discussion of other anthropologists attempts to provide an integrated
frame for comparing societies from the Highlands region of Papua New
Guinea with reference to a theme they are meant to have in common,
namely the association of the use of bamboo flutes with male power
(e.g. Hays 1986). The problem with such cross-cultural comparisons, she
argues, is that while they do pick out significant ethnographic and his-
torical connections, they also, necessarily, involve a slippage of levels.
From where, one may ask, do they draw the features of the common
theme whose variations they wish to chart? If, for example, in some cases
flutes are focal to male initiation while in others less so or not at all, or in
some cases the flutes themselves are conceived as male and in others as
female or as both, while elsewhere bamboo flutes are absent altogether,
then from which of these cases does the putatively common notion
that flutes are an important element of male power draw its strength?
As Strathern herself writes, The difficulty with this comparison is that
our supposed common regional culture is composed of the very features
which are the object of study, the meanings people give to these instru-
ments, the analogies they set up . . . [T]he common cultural core, the
themes common to the variations, is not a context or level independent
of local usage (2004:73).
At issue here is the familiar anthropological charge of essentialism: mis-
taking ethnographic categories for analytical ones. Yet, Stratherns remedy is
anything but the familiar reminder or tautology of saying that all categories
are by definition cultural, and that therefore the modern chimera of a cul-
turally neutral analytical language for comparison should be replaced by the
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Postplural Abstraction
In plural terms, Stratherns comparisons evince a failure of abstraction.
As a scale for comparing Highlands societies, flutes and male power are
not abstract enough, because they do not constitute a level of analysis
that is consistently of a different logical order from the cultural contexts
9
As Strathern writes in The Gender of the Gift, My account makes explicit one com-
mon implicit practice:extending out from some core study certain problems that
become in the form derived from the core study a general axis of comparative
classification . . . What becomes objectionable in much comparative analysis is the
decentering of the initial correlation, as though it somehow belonged between or
across several societies and was not in the first place generated by one of them
(1988:456; see also Schlecker and Hirsch 2001; Morita 2013; Pedersen & Nielsen
2013; Englund & Yarrow2013).
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10
This creative cutting (Pedersen 2014) is integral to the fractal imagery of Cantors
dust, in which scalar effects are replicated by the creation of intermittencies and
gaps (Strathern 2004:xxii-xxiii), and, indeed, to the entire organization of Partial
Connections as a text and an argument. In the foreword to the updated edition,
Strathern thus explains how it was composed with the intention that every section
is a cut, a lacuna:one can see similar themes on either side, but they are not added
to one another (2004:xxvii). Note the characteristic sense of cutting here, which
is used not in the sense of reducing complexity (its conventional, plural sense
of making a generalization), but as a particular conduit for (scale of) complex-
ity itself:Partial Connections was an attempt to act out, or deliberately fabricate,
a non-linear progression of argumentative points as the basis for description . . .
Rather than inadvertent or unforeseen and thus tragic or pitiable partitionings
that conjured loss of a whole, Iwanted to experiment with the apportioning of
size in a deliberate manner. The strategy was to stop the flow of information or
argument, and thus cut it (2004:xxix).
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distance (the images of maps and trees) have no place here. Nor does
the corollary of this way of thinking, according to which abstractions
represent things in more general terms as the concept of quadruped
stands to any particular dog. Indeed, one way of characterizing postplu-
ral abstractions would be to say that they are what abstractions become
when they are no longer thought of as generalizations, i.e. as concepts
that group together in their extension things that share a particular
feature.
Instead, postplural abstraction is what happens to abstraction when it
turns intensive, in Deleuzian terms (De Landa 2002; c.f. Deleuze 1994).
Postplural abstraction, then, refers to the capacity for things-cum-com-
parisons to transform themselves in certain ways. Considering our rudi-
mentary example once again, postplural abstraction is what happens to
a dog when it is considered as a quadruped. To think of a dog as a quad-
ruped does not involve positing a relationship between two elements
a dog (deemed as a particular) that instantiates, as philosophers say,
the concept of quadrupedness (deemed, in this sense, as a universal).
After all, the distinction between particular things like dogs and univer-
sal concepts like quadrupedness is exactly the distinction from which
a postplural analytics moves us away just a version, surely, of the dis-
tinction between concrete things and abstract scales which renders the
world a plural place. So, to consider a dog as a quadruped, on the post-
plural image of abstraction, is just to turn it (or scale it) into something
different, namely, that thing-cum-scale that one would want to hyphen-
ate as dog-as-quadruped. This new third element is a self-comparison
in just the sense outlined earlier: it is more than itself because, qua dog-
as-quadruped, it is a full-blown dog; but it also less than itself because,
again qua dog-as-quadruped, it is merely a quadruped that has been
postplurally, as opposed to plurally, abstracted.
To bring out the peculiar sharpness of postplural comparison, we
may supplement the range of images that Strathern uses to convey her
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thing-cum-scale:
dog-as-quadruped
thing-end scale-end
(dog: more) (quadruped: less)
notion of comparison (the fractal, the cyborg and so on) with what one
could claim is their most rudimentary form the shape of a cone laid on
its side (see Figure3.1).
Imagining anthropological comparison in this way serves, first of all,
to illustrate the crucial differences between postplural abstraction and
its plural counterpart, which Strathern depicts with the twin images of
the tree and the map. Conventional comparisons posit distances that
separate both things from one another and things from the increas-
ingly abstract generalizations in whose extensions they are included.
Moreover, the relationship between things and their generalizations is
irreducibly hierarchical, since what makes generalizations suitable as
scales for comparing things is that they are more abstract than the things
compared. Postplural abstractions have neither of these characteristics.
What in plural abstraction look like extensive gaps between things (and
between things and scales) in the postplural mode figure as intensive dif-
ferentiations within them, indicated in Figure3.1 by the asymmetrical
proportions of the two ends of the postplural abstraction the broad
thing-like end and the sharp scale-like one. Furthermore, the lack of
a straight vertical axis indicates that hierarchy is absent here. Laid on its
side, the hierarchical dimension that in plural terms marks the distances
between things and scales dissipates into the internal self-differentiation
withinthem.
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Deep Hesitation
As already discussed in the Introduction to this book, the postmodern
crisis that anthropology purportedly underwent in the 1980s was,
essentially, an attack of disciplinary self-consciousness that took the form
of an intense concern with the question of anthropological reflexivity as
well as styles of ethnographic writing. Imagining earlier generations of
anthropologists as having ignored in the name of positivist objectivity
the irreducible influence of their own personal, cultural, and political
biases on their research, the idea was to re-invent anthropology by
making these hitherto tacit influences and genres explicit. After all,
it was recognized, anthropology is itself a socio-cultural practice,
and hence belongs to the same order of phenomena that it purports
to study. What was called for, therefore, was an anthropology imbued
with a double vision: one eye on the object of inquiry, the other on
the inquirer. And what made this move a crisis of representation was
that it had the potential to bring down the entire project of modern
anthropology, understood as the endeavour to arrive at accurate
representations of social and cultural phenomena which could provide
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11
This is why Tylers vision of an evocative ethnography (Tyler 1987) falls short. As
much as he was impatien[t] with the idea of representation (Strathern 2004: 14)
and celebrated incompleteness as the baseline condition, his cognitive utopia
of a unifying pastiche (2004: 16) still rested upon a very modernist longing for
a return to an idea of integration (2004:14) personified in the transcendental
(2004: 22) figure of the cosmopolitan (2004: 23). Instead of this well-known criti-
cal inter-subjective reflexivity, where the supposedly transparent subjectivity of
the ethnographers self is made into an object for introspection (Rabinow 1977),
Strathern offers what might be called an intra-objective alternative, where the
objectivity of the anthropological self is rendered into an ever less stable and
ever less transparent scaling of itself.
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view to taking representation (and its crisis) so seriously that one is able
to push and extend its boundaries from within. While Strathern does not
say this directly, one of the things that she appears to find lacking in the
work of the postmodern anthropologists is the fact that, as much as they
experimented with writing and authority, they developed their critique,
and alternatives, within the very representational logic from which they
were so eager to escape. In other words, the problem was not that they
were too reflexive, as some of their critics have objected (see e.g. Sangren
1988), but that their reflexivity did not go far enough.
In contrast to the crisis of representation literature, we suggest,
Strathern in her writings avoids or deflects the charge of navel gazing.
Taking to its ultimate consequence the postmodern injunction to treat
the self both as an object and a subject of scrutiny, we argue, Strathern
effectively comes out on its other side. At whatever scale one might
choose to recognize it, the self is eliminated as the subject of anthropo-
logical analysis and thus features only as its object. Unwilling to partake
in anthropological self-therapy, Stratherns texts enunciate a self that is
perpetually obviated in a process of what might be dubbed extrospec-
tion, which, to borrow a description of Melanesian persons from Partial
Connections, allows for the centres of others [to] become centres for
[itself] (2004: 117).12
But precisely how does one do this where to find the intellectual,
political and aesthetic inspiration and ammunition to construct this
third way of personifying the ethnographic experience, to draw a fig-
ure who seems to be more than one person, indeed more than a per-
son? (2004: 27). Here, we need to consider what Strathern has famously
12
Several commentators have reflected on the manner in which Strathern deliber-
ately seems to absent herself from her texts. In her review of Gender of the Gift,
Margaret Jolly thus notes that [j]ust as the individual is expunged in the analyses
of Melanesian personhood, so the author eludes us (1992: 146). The effect, adds
Tony Crook, is that the author appears to have disguised herself in order to let the
methods [for description and analysis] first be seen for themselves; indeed, it is as
if the methods were making exchanges amongst themselves (2007: 75).
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13
As Viveiros de Castro and Goldman warn, dont try to understand the texts of
Marilyn Strathern hastily, because they are slow, hesitant texts, folded within
themselves, texts that heave and halt, and keep coming back to where they started
(2008:25).
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Trans-temporal Comparison
Trans-temporal Comparison
Stratherns original fieldwork in the Mt Hagen area of the Papua New
Guinea Highlands occupies a special place in her anthropological thinking.
Given that the bulk of her fieldwork was carried out in the 1960s and 1970s,
one might see this as posing an (automatically growing) methodological
problem: does the increasingly historical nature of her material not
render her comparative project more and more dubious? Surely, a standard
social scientific objection would go, one cannot in the same analysis
compare two different ethnographic sites and two different periods. Either
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amateurish desire to gather up anything (1999: 8). For the nice thing
about this holism, as she explains, is that it forces the fieldworker to be
anticipatory . . . being open to what is to come later. In the meanwhile, the
would-be ethnographer gathers material whose use cannot be foreseen,
facts and issues collected with little knowledge about their connections.
The result is a field of information to which it is possible to return,
intellectually speaking, in order to ask questions about subsequent
developments whose trajectory was not evident at the outset (1999: 9). It
is almost as if Strathern thinks that the longer the gap between fieldwork
and analysis, the greater the chance that truly ethnographic insights can
be reached: [K]nowing that one cannot completely know what is going
to be germane to any subsequent re-organisation of material demanded
by the process of writing can have its own effect. It may create an expec-
tation of surprise (1999: 10).
This is what Strathern has described as the ethnographic moment
(1999:36). Unlike its better-known sister concept of the ethnographic
present, which has been hailed for its ability to transcend the historical
moment by adding more provisional truth[s] to the world (Hastrup
1990:567), the concept of ethnographic moment rather seems to work
by cutting away what might, at first sight, appear to be the most likely
connections between fieldwork experience and anthropological inter-
pretation. This flies in the face of established phenomenological and
largely tacit anthropological wisdom concerning the purportedly tragic
loss in immediateness, sensuousness and everydayness as ones embod-
ied memories of fieldwork experiences fade overtime.
To better explain how the ethnographic moment involves a postplu-
rally abstract process of trans-temporal scaling, we may return to our
earlier visualization of postplural abstraction (see Figure3.2).
As we explained earlier in this chapter, the logic of postplural abstrac-
tion refers to how things-cum-scales transform themselves in specific
ways. As we depict in Figure 3.2, the ethnographic moment may be
said to constitute one such intensive self-transformation in the form of a
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thing-cum-scale:
ieldwork observation-as-
ethnographic moment
thing-end scale-end
(ieldwork (ethnographic
experience: more) moment: less)
14
Indeed, if trans-temporal comparison involves an act of postplural abstraction in
which some thing (a fieldwork experience) is scaled into a different version of
itself (an ethnographic moment), we may ask: Which scale is being thinged in the
same process? From the postplural vantage of Strathernian comparative analyt-
ics, time is not different from flutes in its capacity to act as a conduit for com-
parison: both can act as postplural scales that allow for specific kinds of relational
transformations. So, on the postplural logic of trans-temporal comparison, time
is reduced to just one of many (in fact, countless) possible scales for the elicitation
of analogies between actual and virtual forms, and, more generally, for perception
and conceptualization of the world (one could imagine an alternative universe
where apples and pears are invested with the same a priori nature as time and
space in Kantian epistemology). If the ethnographic moment is a certain scaling
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contexts where the division between humans and others is not the
principal perspectival axis (1999:232; see also 2005:140), as it is in
the Amerindian ethnographic contexts discussed by Viveiros de
Castro (more on which in the next chapter). Nevertheless, on several
occasions she has also emphasized how Viveiros de Castros model
of perspectivism has offered her a useful re-entry into the Melanesia
material (1999: 252; see also 2005: 13844). After all, as she puts it,
there are ontological consequences to being a son to these people and
a sisters son to those, or to being a consanguine by contrast with an
affine (1999:2523; emphasis added). More precisely, at issue here is
the ethnographic as well as analytical question of what perspective
might . . . look like in a society that does not . . . imagine perspectives
as self-referential, unique contexts for action and hence with the
potential to co-exist with, and overlap with, limitless numbers of
unique others (1999: 249). It is precisely this shared difference
from Euro-American assumptions about what perspectives might
be that in Stratherns view delineates a fruitful (postplural) scale of
comparison between her own Melanesians and Viveiros de Castros
Amerindians. In particular, Melanesia and Amazonia provide
conceptual vantage points that appear equidistant from the plural
notion of what Strathern calls perspectivalism, according to which
determinate things, understood as objects of attention, can be seen
and compared from different points of view that therefore also
provide varying contexts for them. Contrasting this characteristically
Euro-American notion of perspective with her own perspectivist
analysis of Melanesian kinship, she queries: what would be finite
here? Could it be the manner in which ones perspective was returned
to one? (1999: 249). As she stresses, these, among other decidedly
ontological questions about what might count as a perspective in any
given ethnographic situation, are what Viveiros de Castros work on
Amerindian perspectivism allowed her and others toask.
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At the same time, however, one is also left with the unmistakable
impression based as much on what she has not said than what she has
said about ontology and key scholars associated with it, such as Viveiros
de Castro that Strathern does not in any full sense consider herself as
part of this anthropological turn. Perhaps, to borrow her own way of
capturing the productive tension between anthropology and feminism,
the relationship between Strathern and ontology can be characterized as
irreducibly awkward? But where does this awkwardness lie? To be sure,
it can have absolutely nothing do to with Stratherns core notion that
relations are not to be found out there, but are rather something that
we cannot help doing as anthropologists using the English language
when conducting our analyses of them. Nor, and no less emphatically,
has it to do with the fact that, as a logical consequence of this relational
analytics, everything is imagined as if it were a comparison the post-
plural injunction, that is, that any given thing contains the latent poten-
tial to be scaled into what it is not (yet). And, finally, it cannot have
anything to do with the fact that Stratherns interests are explicitly epis-
temological insofar as they amount to a systematic investigation and cri-
tique of the most basic conditions of possibility of what anthropological
knowledge is, including potential persuasive fictions (Strathern 1987b)
through which new and more adequate ethnographic descriptions might
be made. After all, as we explained in the Introduction, each of these
three basic premises for conducting anthropology (that relationality
is an anthropological invention rather than an ethnographic fact, that
comparative activities have ontological ramifications, and that epistemo-
logical questions in anthropology are inseparable from ontological ones)
lies at the core of the ontological turn as we understand it.
In sum, within the premises of Strathernian anthropology and our
ontological turn more generally, the business of anthropology is not com-
parison of ontologies (c.f. Descola 2013) but rather comparison as ontology
(c.f. Holbraad et al. 2014). This goes to the core of her concept of the rela-
tion as a form of anthropological enquiry, that by comparing something to
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something else one gets to the heart of them both. And whatever one thinks
about that as a vision for anthropology, the stakes it raises are unmistakably
ontological in the sense this term is deployed in this book, pertaining to
the question of what things that is, objects of anthropological attention
could be. To reiterate an observation already made in the Introduction, this
is just another way of saying that the ontological turn is at heart an meth-
odological project, which strives to take seriously the ontological effects of
engaging in ethnographic practice and anthropological knowledge- (and
concept-) making thus merging epistemology with ontology, as we saw.
This is not to say that Stratherns anthropology and the kind of ontologi-
cal turn that concerns us in this book are identical projects. Several differ-
ences, pertaining to choice of terminology and the manner (including the
directness) of writing, may be detected between the two analytics. Indeed,
we suggest in closing, what makes the relationship between Strathern and
the ontological turn awkward is the deliberately direct way in which certain
proponents of this approach have set up questions of ontology as anthro-
pological challenge. After all, as we have sought to show in this chapter,
Stratherns overarching anthropological project may be boiled down to an
inherently feminist vision for a new aesthetics of ethnographic description
(or redescription, as Ashley Lebner has recently coined it, 2016) that is
deliberately non-explicit, and systematically non-transparent, about its own
theoretical ground. Small wonder that Strathern has not wholeheartedly
embraced ontology, for doing so might be seen to constitute a breach with
the principled way in which she has always managed to defer completeness
in her work. Being too transparent about the theoretical, metaphysical and
philosophical ramifications of anthropology, might, from the perspective
of her and other feminists, such as Haraway, put hesitation, and therefore
surprise, at risk as analytical, political and ethical endpoints.
At first glance, it seems to be very much the other way around for
someone like Viveiros de Castro and other scholars associated with the
ontologial turn, ourselves included (c.f. Lebner 2016). After all, to him
and likeminded scholars, ontological questions and their philosophical
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15
There is no reason why it should not be possible to imagine an ontological turn
that systematically deploys hesitation and incompleteness and other feminist (in
the particular sense of the term discussed in this chapter) descriptive and analyti-
cal aesthetics (for a potential candidate, see Tsing 2014).
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FOUR
Natural Relativism:Viveiros de Castros Perspectivism
and Multinaturalism
The West is dead. Get over it. So goes a recent Facebook update by
Eduardo Viveiros de Castro, Brazilian anthropologist, political activist,
and father of anthropologys ontological turn. More than anyone
else associated with this turn, Viveiros de Castro has been the target
of admiration and praise, but also relentless critique and ingrained
scepticism, for tabling ontology as a matter of anthropological concern.
Small wonder, considering his provocative style. In its programmatic
content and citation-friendly form, the preceding comment is very
much characteristic of Viveiros de Castros work pithy, and posted on
social media.1 Indeed, Viveiros de Castros reputation as something of
a maverick in anthropological and other academic circles is owed not
just to the style of his interventions, but also to the way in which he
has promoted his argument about ontology in explicitly political terms.
Anthropologists, for him, are above all conceptual freedom fighters, as
he explains in a much cited (and debated) passage:
For many of us [who became adults around 1968] anthropology was and
still is an insurrectionary, subversive science; which fought for the con-
ceptual self-determination of all the planets minorities, a fight we saw as
an indispensable accompaniment to their political self-determination.
1
Viveiros de Castro has a strong web presence, with tens of thousands of followers
on Twitter and Facebook.
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2
Of course, as pointed out in previous chapters, the term ontology has been
invoked by numerous anthropologists before Viveiros de Castro, and perhaps most
notably by Hallowell (1960), to different purposes.
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Amerindian Perspectivism
The theory of perspectivism, it is widely accepted (e.g. Course 2010;
Kohn 2015),3 represents Viveiros de Castros most important and
influential contribution to anthropology. To get a proper handle on it,
and thus avoid repeating superficial accounts available in the critical
literature (e.g. Ramos 2012), we may begin by noting that perspectivism
plays a role in Viveiros de Castros thinking which is not dissimilar to
that of ceremonial gift exchange in Marilyn Stratherns work. For, much
like her concept of Melanesian dividuals (1988) is both grounded in
her own fieldwork among a specific people in the Papua New Guinean
Highlands as well as in a synthesis of a range of other anthropological
work from elsewhere in Melanesia, so Viveiros de Castros model of
3
In the words of Magnus Course, perspectivism 'has now become the dominant par-
adigm (some might even say orthodoxy) within which most Brazilian, European,
and an increasing number of North American anthropologists concerned with the
region are working ...Its influence .... lies in its ability to make sense of a wide vari-
ety of ethnographic facts' (2010:249).
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[Perspectivism is] a label for a set of ideas and practices found through-
out indigenous America and to which Ishall refer, for simplicitys sake, as
though it were a cosmology. This cosmology imagines a universe peopled
by different types of subjective agencies, human as well as nonhuman, each
endowed with the same generic type of soul . . . which determines that all
subjects see things in the same way. In particular, individuals of the same
species see each other (and each other only) as humans see themselves, that
is, as beings endowed with human figure and habits, seeing their bodily
and behavioural aspects in the form of human culture. What changes when
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passing from one species of subject to another is . . . the referent of these con-
cepts:what jaguars see as manioc beer (the proper drink of people, jaguar-
type or otherwise), humans see as blood. Where we see a muddy salt-lick
on a river bank, tapirs see their big ceremonial house, and so on. Such dif-
ference of perspective not a plurality of views of a single world, but a single
view of different worlds cannot derive from the soul, since the latter is
the common original ground of being. Rather, such difference is located in
the bodily differences between species, for the body and its affections (in
Spinozas sense, the bodys capacities to affect and be affected by other bod-
ies) is the site and instrument of ontological differentiation and referential
disjunction. (2004:6)
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The animal clothes that shamans use to travel the cosmos are not fantasies
but instruments:they are akin to diving equipment, or space suits, and not to
carnival masks. The intention when donning a wet suit is to be able to func-
tion like a fish, to breathe underwater, not to conceal oneself under a strange
covering. In the same way, the clothing which, amongst animals, covers an
internal essence of a human type, is not a mere disguise but their distinctive
equipment, endowed with the affects and capacities which define each animal.
(1998:482)
4
Magnus Course draws out the consequences with respect to linguistic theory:In
a conventional use of the term, deixis refers to the referential meaning of an
utterance being dependent on the spatial, temporal, or personal position from
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Savage Structuralism
But is multinaturalism not simply a new version of Lvi-Straussian
structuralism? Certainly this is one the criticisms that is often levelled at
Viveiros de Castros model of Amerindian perspectivism, namely that it
reproduces the very binary distinctions it is supposed to be repudiating,
and not least the arch-structuralist (or even arch-modern, Western)
distinction between nature and culture. Fuentes and Kohn put the
point judiciously: the multiplication of natures is not an antidote to the
problem posed by the multiplication of cultures. For this only sidesteps
the hard question: can anthropology make general claims about the way
the world is? (2012: 139). In his own forceful and much-cited critique,
Terrence Turner pushed further the idea that Viveiros de Castros
model reproduces the binaries of structuralism since it turn[s] Lvi-
Strausss [reduction of culture to nature] inside out through an equally
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5
A large and continuously growing body of scholarship documents the presence of
perspectivist ideas around the world. In so-called indigenous America alone, this
includes (in addition to the substantial literature mentioned in Viveiros de Castros
own writings on this topic, 1998 and 2012), Vilaa (2005, 2015), Kohn (2008, 2013),
de la Cadena (2010), Fortis (2010), Pitarch (2011), Bonelli (2012), and Uzendosky,
(2012) among others. On the purchase of perspectivism as an ethnographic as well
as a theoretical category in Inner Asian and North Asian contexts, see Pedersen,
Empson and Humphrey (2007), as well as Brightman, Grotti and Ulturgasheva
(2014), Charlier (2015), Pedersen (2001, 2011), Willerslev (2004, 2007), Stpanoff
(2009); Pedersen & Willerslev (2012); Swancutt (2012); and Willerslev and
Pedersen (2010). Other recent anthropological studies discussing perspectivist
ethnography and theory include Stasch (2009), Holbraad (2012), Bubandt (2014)
and Candea (2012). In view of the enormous ethnographic variation these studies
represent, including the fact that each is the product of complex historical and
political processes, one may question whether the invocation of the perspectiv-
ist model is equally productive in each case. It certainly would be a fundamental
misunderstanding of the ontological turn to assume that perspectivism can take
only one form. On the contrary, the purchase of this concept within a compara-
tive anthropological framework depends on its capacity to be stretched or scaled
through its encounter with new ethnographic contingencies and anthropological
matters of concern (see also Chapter 3). Take, as an example of this conceptual
stretching, the Inner Asian case. Here, several anthropologists (Pedersen 2007;
da Col 2007; Humphrey 2007; Kristensen 2007; Broz 2007; Charlier 2012; cf.
Humphrey 1996; Pedersen 2001) have shown how perspectivism involves shamans
capacity both to transgress human/non-human divides (as in the Amazon) and
embody multiple kinship and gender positions across an interhuman ontologi-
cal divide (as in Melanesia, c.f. Strathern 1998: 24960; see also Box. 3.1). Unlike
both the Melanesian and the Amazonian cases, however, social relations in Inner
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the two into each other. As he had argued already in his original exposi-
tion of Amerindian perspectivism, myth is the vanishing point where
the differences between points of view on which perspectivist cosmology
depends are at the same time annulled and exacerbated:
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6
As Viveiros de Castro puts it himself, Strathernian anthropology is the most
sophisticated theory of the relation that our discipline has produced since Lvi-
Strausss structuralism (Viveiros de Castro & Goldman 2008/9:24). More precisely,
for Viveiros de Castro, it is Stratherns refusal to render relations substantial and
observable as data out there that makes her concept of the relation so theoretically
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Anthropology as Ontology
Anthropology as Ontology
Speaking to the core agenda of this book, one could put matters very
simply:the ontological turn in anthropology came about with Viveiros
de Castro transposing systematically onto the conduct of anthropological
inquiry the ontological questions that his analysis of Amerindian
animism posed. Indeed, just as Wagner presented The Invention of
Culture as the anthropological epistemology that corresponded to the
ethnographically driven argument of his earlier book Habu, as we saw in
Chapter2, Viveiros de Castro presents the main tenets of the ontological
turn in his landmark article The relative native (2013 [2002]), as a
manner of rendering explicit what he calls the metatheoretical premises
(2013: 473) of his earlier arguments about Amerindian perspectivism.
In this way, Viveiros de Castros Amazonianization of anthropology
consists in extending into the heart of anthropological thinking and
theorizing the core tenet of Amerindian perspectivism, namely, the idea
that differences between perspectives are to be seen in ontological rather
than merely epistemological terms. This merely is important. As we
have sought to make clear from the outset of the book, the point of the
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others, the idea that ontological differences can be projected onto the
world, even as they multiply it by the units of analysis anthropologists
habitually think of as cultures, societies and so on, ratifies the basic
premise that perspectivism concertedly denies: namely, that perspec-
tives differ from each other with respect to a world (now a multi-
ple one, to be sure), located out there, somewhere beyond them. If
one leaves this basic idea intact, multinaturalism turns into a sort of
conceptual car-crash, with each perspective (here still conceived as
new placeholder for something equivalent to what weve always called
culture) projecting a world of its own. In this way, the kinds of dif-
ferences anthropologists habitually imagine as cultures are hardened
and pluralized into a sort of perverse shackle of isolated alterity, or
even an ontological apartheid (Laidlaw 2012), and subjected to the
usual charges of essentialism, exoticism, reification, domination and
all the other insults anthropologists consign themselves to trading for
as long as they persist in thinking of their task as that of representing
(taking a perspective on) the world (be it the human, social, cultural
or indeed natural world).
Viveiros de Castros analogy between anthropology and perspectiv-
ism works altogether differently. The multinaturalism of his anthro-
pology resides in ontologizing not the differences anthropology has
posited between cultures (or other such territorialized placeholders, be
they narratives, imaginaries or what-have-you). Rather, what for him
constitutes the key site of ontological difference are the divergences of
perspective that are internal to the activity of anthropology itself, namely
the perspective of the anthropologist and that of the people he studies, or
as Viveiros de Castro puts it figuratively, the native. Now, before rushing
to conclusions about the problems conjured by this term and its ques-
tionable historical and political baggage, it is important to note that, for
Viveiros de Castro, the difference between anthropologists and natives
lies not, as he puts it, in the so-called nature of things (2013:475). On the
contrary, this difference is nothing other than a feature of anthropological
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7
This, if you like, is the anthropological cogito, put in the starkest possible terms:I
think, therefore you are (qua subject of my inquiry, of course). Indeed, the formula
could also be reversed:you are, qua subject of my inquiry, therefore Ithink. Which
is to say, you, the native, force me, the inquirer, to shift my thinking in new ways,
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is that what a gift is in either case is actually different, as per the per-
spectivist formula. A mere object (for the anthropologist) and an object
imbued with a spirit (for the native) are two different things. So, the diver-
gence between the perspectives upon which the very notion of anthro-
pological inquiry is premised is irreducibly ontological (as opposed to
just epistemological, although it is of course that too).
Since this is really the heart of Viveiros de Castros argument
indeed, it is the heart of the ontological turn let us dwell for just a
little longer on the standard misconception that all this could be under-
stood as an attempt to reify as ontological the differences between cul-
tures. For the misunderstanding is itself instructive. Its chief mistake
is that it swallows up Viveiros de Castros reflexive concern with the
relationship between anthropologist and native, as the constitutive
perspectives of anthropological inquiry, by glossing it as an exemplar
of the ontological differences between the wider cultures to which
these perspectives supposedly must belong. Thus the set-up of anthro-
pological inquiry becomes the dependent variable, if you like, of an
encompassing model of cultural divergences that, on its part, takes the
role of independent variable.8 By contrast, Viveiros de Castros idea is
that, within the economy of anthropological inquiry, the independent
variable must be the structure inherent to that very activity, namely the
mutually defining perspectives of the anthropologist and the native,
as per the ground rules laid out previously. But then the notion of
cultural divergence, along with the whole conceptual infrastructure
that constitutes the regime of multiculturalism, gets relegated to the
position of dependent variable. It becomes but one of the forms that
can be projected within the economy of anthropological analysis, be
8
The effect of this, as we have seen, is to break up the immanent relationship between
the anthropologists and the natives perspective as defining tropes of the anthropo-
logical language game, and render it as a divergence between mutually transcendent
cultures, and between flesh-and-blood anthropologists and natives, assumed to exist
out there in the world.
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We could thus say . . . that the Melanesian concept of the dividual person
(Strathern 1988) is as imaginative as Lockes possessive individualism; that
understanding the Amerindian philosophy of chieftainship (Clastres 1974)
is as important as commenting on Hegels doctrine of the State; that Mori
cosmology is equivalent to the Eleatic paradoxes and Kantian antinomies
(Schrempp 1992); that Amazonian perspectivism presents a philosophical
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challenge of the same order as Leibnizs system . . . And when it comes to what
matters most in any given philosophical elaboration, namely its capacity to
create new concepts, then without any desire to take the place of philosophy,
anthropology can be recognized as a formidable philosophical instrument in
its own right, capable of broadening a little the otherwise rather ethnocen-
tric horizons of our philosophy. (Viveiros de Castro 2013: 4878; references
and emphasis in the original)
Thus the paradigm shift (for that is what it is, in the strictest sense)
of moving away from the standard anthropological obsession with
measuring up to the epistemic standards of science (e.g. as social sci-
entists concerned with representations) and towards a traditionally
philosophical love of the concept is not just an attempt to release the
disciplines potential for conceptual creativity. It is also, and by the same
token, an attempt to get anthropology out of its central methodological-
cum-existential concern, namely the perennial question of how to
describe, interpret, explain, analyse, speak to, from or for the people
we study without smothering them with our own ways of thinking and
acting this being the anxiety underlying the worries with ethnocen-
trism, exoticism, essentialism and all the other dirty words of the dis-
cipline, with which we framed the overall argument of this book in the
Introduction. For Viveiros de Castro the significance of this problem is
above all political. At stake is really how seriously we, as anthropolo-
gists, are prepared to take the people whose lives we seek to elucidate. To
see this, we now turn to the key methodological consequences of mul-
tinaturalist anthropology, with reference to what Viveiros de Castros
calls the method of controlled equivocation (2004) his way of taking
people seriously.
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Readers may recognize these examples from, not just Stratherns work, in mutual
dialogue with that of Nancy Munn (1986) and Roy Wagner, but also Annelise
Riles (2001), James Leach (2003), Adam Reed (2004), Tony Crook (2007), Melissa
Demian (2007), Andrew Moutu (2013), and Alice Street (2014) among many other
of her ex-students working in different parts of Oceania.
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describe it using the closest synonyms you can find for it in your own
conceptual vocabulary. To stay with the example, when the Maori
exchange objects giving one ceremonially, expecting one in return,
you may say they are exchanging gifts. Gifts, let us assume, is the term
whose extension comes the closest to coinciding with the exchanges you
wish descriptively to identify. But of course you soon find out that there
are limits to the synonymy, and this is when things get interesting. For
while gift, as you understand it, refers to certain objects of exchange, the
Maori (according to Mauss) also hold that they contain spirits. So, given
that objects as we ordinarily understand them are the kinds of things
that do not contain spirits, the Maori seem here to be holding a pretty
odd view on gifts. . . But note that this oddness corresponds exactly to the
degree in which it exceeds the extensional limits of the notion of gift the
anthropologist takes as his point of departure. And this is where anthro-
pological analysis of the familiar, cross-cultural translation type kicks
in:How might we explain the odd Maori idea that gifts contain spirits?
Does it help with the smooth functioning of society? Is it a local expres-
sion of some universal economic process? Or perhaps of a universal cog-
nitive processes? Alternatively, is it a metaphor of some sort, symbolic of
something or other? At any rate, might we not try to make sense of it in
relation to other local ideas and practices, interpreting it in its cultural
context?
This, of course, is the stuff of heated and in many ways defining the-
oretical debates within anthropology, and generation after generation
of students have been taught the history of the discipline as a series of
choices between the different options these debates mark out. However,
for Viveiros de Castro, what all these otherwise contrasting theoretical
positions have in common is the basic move of projecting onto the native
a sense of mystification, not to say error, that should properly belong to
the anthropologist (and here, of course, we are talking of the native not
as a deictic position within the economy of anthropological inquiry, but
rather as an objectified flesh-and-blood person out there, whom the
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Conceptual Self-determination
Having sought to clarify the principal tenets of Viveiros de Castros
anthropological project, we are now in a position to understand the
full significance of his somewhat pompous-sounding call for the
conceptual self-determination of the worlds peoples (2003), with which
we started this exposition. There is, of course, a strong dose of irony
in the statement. The call to self-determination, not least in the name
of peoples, has more than a tinge of Enlightenment high spirits about
it, and these are precisely the kinds of traditions of political thinking
under which a multinaturalist anthropology puts a bomb, in Latours
memorable expression. Still, the irony is the point (Skafish 2014:11). The
difference it makes to call for the conceptual self-determination of the
peoples is that each of the notions that this reflexive sentence enunciates
is put up for wholesale redefinition. What people might be, in what
their self-determination might consist, and what, indeed, a concept
might become, are precisely the quintessentially ontological questions
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11
A charge that often rides on the idea that Viveiros de Castros project of concep-
tual decolonization is not sufficiently political is that it exoticizes its subject mat-
ter, thus marking anthropologys latest return of the primitive (Bessire & Bond
2014:442). Eduardo Kohns commentary on this line of critique puts the rationale
of Viveiros de Castros own position well:Anthropology surely has a nostalgic rela-
tion to the kinds of alterity that certain historical forces (which have also played a
role in creating our field) have destroyed. To recognize this is one thing. It is quite
another to say that for this reason there is no longer any conceptual space alter
to the logic of this kind of domination. For this would be the final act of coloni-
zation, one that would subject the possibility of something else, located in other
lived worlds, human and otherwise, to a far more permanent death (2015:320).
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The rejoinder makes best sense in terms of the foregoing (and to Viveiros
de Castro absolutely central) distinction between the internal economy
of anthropological inquiry, on the one hand, and the world at large as we
know and live in it, on the other. Fighting for indigenous peoples rights,
identifying and struggling against injustices, holding the powerful to
account these are activities of the world we live in. As it happens,
Viveiros de Castro himself is particularly involved in them, not least as
an activist for indigenous peoples rights in Brazil. But while this may
make him a good person, as it were, it doesnt automatically make him
a better anthropologist. Indeed, to try to define the political stakes of
anthropological inquiry by imagining for it a role within this image of
the world a world already conceived and fully populated with peoples,
nation-states and world institutions, unequal distributions of power,
exploitative economic arrangements, and replete with human suffering
is to ratify the conceptual premises of just that world, trumping with it the
radical potential inherent in anthropology as a mode of inquiry, namely
that of imagining, and conceptually elaborating, ethnographically
motivated alternatives to it. The goal with which Viveiros de Castro tasks
anthropology is indeed more modest than that of changing that world.
Anthropology cannot, for example, roll back the forces of colonialism
and postcolonialism surely that takes political activism (indeed
action) of an altogether different order of force and scale. What it can
do, however, is operate in that direction in its own immediate ambit,
namely the economy of anthropological inquiry itself, to promote the
12
The paragraph cited here was part of Viveiros de Castros contribution to this
co-authored text. We shall be drawing on the parts we wrote ourselves in the
Conclusion to thisbook.
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FIVE
Things as Concepts
What purchase does the ontological turn have on the study of what
anthropologists and archaeologists call material culture that is,
material objects, artefacts or, simply, things? Conversely, how might
the study of things extend the line of thinking that the ontological turn
develops, allowing its argument to encompass more than anthropologists
traditional (and defining) focus on human beings and their social and
cultural comportment? Might things, like people, provide a vantage
from which to transform the infrastructure of anthropological thinking?
Indeed, can one take things as seriously as people? What might that
mean, if anything, and what would it entail?
This chapter addresses these questions with reference to a growing
body of literature that is located at the interface between the ontological
turn in anthropology and debates in social theory more broadly, con-
cerning the role of material objects and other non-human entities, which
have been conducted under labels such as posthumanism, thing the-
ory, new materialism, Object-Oriented-Ontology or, indeed, the mate-
rial turn (e.g. Barad 2007; Bryant 2011; Bryant, Srnicek & Harman 2011;
Bogost 2012; Morton 2013). Within anthropology itself, the book that has
dealt most explicitly with these questions is the edited volume Thinking
Through Things: Theorizing Artefacts Ethnographically (2007), in which a
group of younger scholars (including ourselves) sought to transpose some
of the insights of, among others, Wagner, Strathern and Viveiros de Castro
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1
To our knowledge, the first time the tag ontological turn was used with reference
to this line of anthropological thinking was in this text, where the work of Wagner,
Strathern and Viveiros de Castro (along with work of Alfred Gell and to some
extent also Latour and Ingold) was branded as a quiet revolution within the disci-
pline (Henare etal. 2007:7).
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are embedded in the causal nexuses through which actors detect human
intentions, whether real or imagined (1998: 33). For example, the mines
buried in Cambodia are indexes of Pol Pots deadly intentions, in the
sense that those unlucky enough to encounter them are caught up in
a causal chain connecting the mines back to Pol Pots violent decision
to place them there (1998: 2021). The mines themselves have agency,
then, inasmuch as peoples cognitive propensity to trace this causal chain
extends Pol Pots intention to kill onto the mines themselves, rendering
them constitutive of his deadly power: the mines embody and enact the
intention to kill, so in that sense they are agents. Or, to take one of Gells
less harrowing examples, a car that refuses to start also has agency inas-
much as it is imagined to be obstinate when we are in a hurry (1998: 22).
While there may in fact be no ghost or other form of intentionality in, or
behind, the machine, the very fact that we can imagine the situation in
this way allows the car to have a power over us, and hence in that sense
the car has agency too.
To be sure, the idea that things can be understood as possessing agency
in the same sense as humans do, for which Gells book is so widely cited,
sounds a lot like a posthumanist reshuffle of the distinction between
humans and non-humans. Nevertheless, there is some ambiguity as
to how far agency really attaches to things themselves in Gells model.
Indeed, in reading the book, one is never quite sure how seriously Gell
wants us to take the, after all, rather scandalous notion that things can
be ascribed with intentions (Pinney & Thomas 2001; Layton 2003; see
also Knappett & Malafouris 2008; Bille 2013). Thus, agency for Gell is
only ever an indirect attribute of things, its origins lying ultimately with
a human agent, whether real or imagined, whose intention the thing in
question only indexes hence, for example, the significant distinction
Gell makes between the secondary agency of (non-human) indices and
the primary agency of the (human) intentions they are deemed causally
to index (Leach 2007; cf. Gell 1998: 1721). Things, for Gell, cannot really
be agents, if by that we mean anything more than the kind of attribution
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Yet, Latours quest is not free from ironies of its own. For in order to avoid
emancipating things anthropomorphically, by way of their association with
humans as per Miller or Gell, Latour seems to end up defining them, in
what looks like a revisionist move, as associations (assemblages, collectives,
networks). Imaginative and radical as this move is, from the perspective of
the present argument its begs a critical question:how far, if at all, does the
dignity, respect and agency conferred on the actants of a posthuman net-
work or collective rub off on the things that a humanist metaphysic would
call things? Does Latours revision of the ontological constituents of the
world get us any closer to answering the question of how far the status of
things themselves, as such, might be raised, allowing them to make a differ-
ence in themselves to the ways in which we conceptualizethem?
Of course, from a Latourian point of view, these questions are either
meaningless or foolish. There is no thing in itself , other than in the
modern chimera. To raise the very question of things capacity to make
a difference as such is to engage in an act of modern purification.
Nevertheless, something important tends to get if not lost, then at least
muted, in the Latourian translation of things into collectives, and the
ontological censorship that it entails. Namely, we would argue, the very
qualities that seem most peculiar to things as one ordinarily conceives
of them, and in particular the aspects of things we would ordinarily
tag is their material qualities, such as those studied by material scien-
tists. Indeed, one can object that in principle Latours basic ontological
premise, namely the symmetry of treating the entities that a modern-
ist metaphysics purifies as persons or things as hybrid relations of per-
sons and things, renders any interest in the most thing-like aspects of
artefacts harder to pursue.2 Qualities one would ordinarily call material
are in principle in deep ontological entanglement with the (also) human
2
One might here add that much the same holds for what could be seen as the most
human-like aspect of humans, such as strong emotions, intense desires and other
affects not exactly topics that seem to have inspired, or lend themselves to, STS-
inspired analysis (though see Suzuki2015).
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3
Granted, it would be inaccurate to say that these elements do not play an important
role in Latours often highly sophisticated empirical analyses, as well as those of
his followers. For example, Latours refutation of the technological determinism of
saying that guns kill people does not stop him from emphasizing the particular
forms of agency that a guns technical characteristics the mechanics of detona-
tion, velocity, accuracy and so on contribute to the man-with-a-gun assemblage.
Nevertheless, the net effect of Latours ontological amalgamation of such charac-
teristics with the people they act to transform tends to render them as corollaries
of projects and concerns that a lay non-Latourian account would interpret as dis-
tinctly human. To be sure, this tendency may be a contingent characteristic of the
particular questions on which Latourian analyses have been put to work, rather
than a direct consequence of the conceptual premises of Latours model. Indeed,
in his detailed exposition of Latours argument, philosopher Graham Harman (a
main exponent of the speculative realist approaches we examined in Chapter1)
raises the prospect of a Latourian network comprising only what he calls object-
object relations, such that, for example, one could study the manner in which fire
analyses cotton during combustion (2011).
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Thinking ThroughThings
Plotted onto the trajectory of increasingly radical attempts to erase
the human/thing divide, TTT could be placed at the far posthumanist
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4
Note that the pronoun we here should under no circumstances be understood
as a cultural, social, historical or geopolitical designation. In line with the over-
all argument of this book, which holds the ontological turn as a strictly meth-
odological proposal concerning the reflexive relationship between objects and
terms of anthropological description, the word we refers strictly to the position
of the anthropologist as analyst dealing with ethnographic materials. While hardly
redundant for other purposes no doubt, questions regarding where the we might
come from, whether it is male or female, Western or not, and so on, miss the point
we (the authors now!) are making.
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Thinking ThroughThings
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RethinkingThings
TTT takes us a long way towards the kind of engagement with the thing
that we are looking for in this chapter. Indeed, it may even seem that,
taken together, its two central methodological steps thing-as-heuristic
and concept=thing take us all the way there, effectively opening up
the space for things themselves, as one encounters them in any given
ethnographic situation, to make a contribution in their own right to the
way in which we conceive them analytically to help dictate, in other
words, their own terms of analytical engagement. Nevertheless, such a
conclusion would be too hasty. For where exactly, one may ask, does this
argument leave us with respect to the thingness of things? How far does
the methodological argument of TTT make a virtue of those aspects that
are most characteristic of things as we ordinarily think of them, namely
their material properties?
It is telling that the sometimes flamboyantly programmatic pro-
nouncements of TTTs Introduction made little mention of the material
properties of things. At any rate, the way material attributes featured in
the ethnographic accounts of peoples own ways of thinking through
things in the chapters that followed was left largely unspecified in the
Introductions otherwise overtly methodological argument. Instead,
bearing out the volumes subtitle (theorizing artefacts ethnographi-
cally), all the emphasis was on the ethnography of things, and par-
ticularly the ethnography of the people to whom things matter in such
diverse ways. So we may ask: If what motivated TTTs approach is the
fact that in varied instances people speak of or act with things in ways
that contradict our assumptions about what a thing might be; and if,
furthermore, it is just those ways of speaking about, and acting around,
things that are supposed to provide the content of their potentially
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It emerges, then, that TTTs claim to raise the status of the thing along the lines
discussed previously is open to a critique that is analogous to the one advanced
earlier in relation to Latour. Latour, we saw, emancipates the thing by entangling
it ontologically with persons subsuming both under the terms of his revisionary
ontology of networks comprising people-and-things. TTT does something similar,
though now at the level of analytical methodology. It raises the status of the thing
by entangling it heuristically with all that the people concerned with it say and do
around it, subsuming things and their ethnographic accounts under the terms of a
revisionary methodology. Indeed, just as a Latourian might object that to demand
an emancipation of the thing as such is flatly to deny the significance of Latours
ontology of collectives, so one might want to contend that such a demand similarly
contradicts TTTs methodological injunction of concept=thing. As far as TTT
is concerned, things as such just are what our ethnographic descriptions of them
define them to be. But our question here is precisely whether things, heuristically
defined, might be able to contribute to their own conceptual variation.
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it.6 At issue, to coin a term, are the things conceptual affordances (cf.
Dant 2005: 7082).
To see the significance of this it pays to consider a little further
the consequences of reversing the concept = thing formula to give
thing = concept. As we have explained, with its two-step methodol-
ogy, TTT grounded conceptual experimentations in ethnographic
contingency. Having emptied the notion of the thing of any con-
ceptual presuppositions about what may count as a thing in the first
place, we then fill it back up with alternative conceptualizations drawn
from the ethnographic data we find around it, which in turn provide
the reflexive empirical source for subsequent acts of anthropological
6
The present argument about the conceptual affordances of things, as we shall be
calling them, is meant as a contribution to the reflexive line of thinking we detect
in (and as) the development of the ontological turn, which concerns the ways
in which the ethnographic materials anthropologists study (in this case things)
can have an effect on the terms in which they are studied. In TTT this agenda
was sometimes run together with what we would now treat as a separate (though
related) one, namely the much better-explored question of how material artefacts
influence the ways in which the people that engage with them think about them, or
conduct conceptual operations in general. We have in mind here the longstanding
and inter-disciplinary literature on the material conditions of possibility of mental
processes, centring on such topics as material, extended or distributed cognition
(e.g. Hutchins 1995; Clark & Charmers 1998; Clark 2008; Menary 2010; Malafouris
2013), the relationship between thought, skill and environment (e.g. Gibson 1979;
Lemonnier 1992; Ingold 1997, Conneller 2011), the materiality of memory and the
imagination (e.g. Munn 1986; Kchler 2002; Sneath etal. 2009; Bille, Hastrup &
Flohr 2011; Chumley and Harkness 2013), and more. Undoubtedly, the argument
that follows here about how things can contribute to their own analysis by virtue
of their (heuristically identified) material properties could be brought to bear on
the broader anthropological conversation about the role of things in conceptual
processes more generally, and we shall be making some remarks in this regard in
our case-studies that follow. Note, however, that, in line with our point about the
ontological turns figure/ground reversal between anthropology and the world
in the previous chapter, transposing our argument in this way onto a broader con-
cern with how things relate to peoples concepts would have to first involve a con-
tingently reflexive interrogation of what things, people and concepts (all now
deemed as flesh-and-blood constituents of the world, rather than heuristic place-
holders for the constituents of anthropological analysis) might amount to in any
given ethnographic situation.
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Ach has other, related, meanings also, which Holbraad explores in his TTT chap-
ter (2007:2012).
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mark with their fingers on the powder that is spread in the surface of
their divining board, which are called oddu, and are said to be divinities
in their own right. Then, on the basis of this ethnographic information,
Holbraad went on to show that the notion of a powder that is power
emerges as a solution to a version of the age-old theological conun-
drum, familiar in the anthropology of religion (e.g. Keane 2007):appar-
ently transcendent deities are rendered immanent on the surface of
the divining board, allowing those present in the divination to relate to
them directly. So the power of powder in If resides in the manner in
which it effectively, and very practically, solves what we may think of
as an Afro-Cuban equivalent to the (perhaps more familiar) Christian
problem of presence (Engelke 2007), namely that of allowing otherwise
absent divinities to become present (in this case on the surface of the
divining board).
So far, then, so ethnographic:an understanding of the notion of power
in If, and particularly of its connection to powder, is built up by taking
seriously what the practitioners have to say on the matter. Note, however,
that this ethnographic account serves only to set up the central analytical
challenge posed by If practitioners understanding of ach, namely that
something as seemingly prosaic as powder is deemed to have the power
to render the divine present. Indeed, if this reminds us of the notoriously
intractable problem of divine transcendence in Christian theology, then
the matter-of-fact, entirely practical way in which ach powder solves
this for the diviners appears all the more puzzling. It is at this point,
then, that the basic move of the ontological turn becomes pertinent.
How do we conceptualize the problem of transcendence to make sense
of powders power to solve it? What might divinities that can be rendered
present in this way be? In what way, and in what sense, is powder able to
make all this happen?
It is just at this point, we suggest, that Holbraads analysis takes a turn
away from the ethnography of what diviners say, zooming in instead on
the powder itself , to focus on its material properties. Yet, in Holbraads
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Talismans as Thought
Talismans as Thought
In Northern Mongolia, many people and households are in possession
of talismans of shamanic spirits.8 As elsewhere in the Mongolian cultural
zone, these artefacts are called ongod (or sometimes ongon shten).
Barring possibly the notion of shaman itself (b), ongon is the most
important and most complex concept in Mongolian shamanism. Much
like the notion of ach in Cuban If, ongod in Mongolia refers both to
shamanic spirits in their invisible, transcendental form and to their
multiple visible manifestations as talismans and other material forms.
Indeed, shamanic spirits may take almost any shape, ranging from derelict
ruins of communist infrastructure to the flow of gossip in a community
(Pedersen 2011:2014). But their most common materialization is in the
form of owners (ezed) of mountains and other sacred places (including
the burial sites of deceased shamans), in the bodies of wild animals
(bears, foxes, deer etc.), and, not least, in the form of talismans.
A typical talisman consists of multi-coloured cotton strips, ceremo-
nial silk scarves (hadag), leather strings, odd pieces from tools, weapons
or similar metal artefacts, as well as bits and pieces of fur, teeth, bones,
claws and beaks from different wild animals; all pieced together to form
a complex bundle of diverse materials. Some talismans are kept inside
the home, as in the case of lineage talismans and household talismans;
others, such as hunting talismans, are kept outside. People interact with
their talismans in similar ways and mostly for the same reasons: they
pray to and present offerings to them when noteworthy events happen or
are about to happen in their lives (e.g. if someone falls ill, or if a member
8
What follows draws on Pedersens TTT chapter (2007) and recent writings on
Mongolian shamanism (2011,2014).
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9
As Joe Ellis puts it, the shamanic gown is an extremely complex and heterogene-
ous piece of clothing [. . .where] each single element, every addition to [it], every
stitch, h[olds] significant meaning (2015: 589). So, Ellis goes on to suggest in an
argument that draws on our work, the nature of the shamanic gown . . . directly
affords a theoretical account of the shamanic gown (2015: 57). Yet, he contends, to
fully harness this potential of allowing objects to speak (2015: 57), it is necessary
to take issue with what he identifies as two problems with the ontological turn,
namely its extremely synchronic account of the power of objects and the fact
that it assumes an underlying ontological regime (2015: 56; c.f. Bille 2015). In the
re-analysis of Mongolian shamanic artefacts that follows, we shall see how engag-
ing with these two objections will allow us to better understand what analysis or
thinking becomes once it is experimentally reimagined as a property of certain
things.
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done that, we can then turn to the overarching question of whether and
how these artefacts may be said to constitute forms of analysis in them-
selves talismans, then, as thought. Indeed, as we are going to see, to ask
what talismans theorising themselves might mean will involve probing
deeper into the material properties of these artefacts, putting the thing =
concept formula to new use in this context.
We may start by explaining how the shamanic gown provides people
attending the curing ritual with a kind of map of the local distribution
of misfortune, and how in that respect it serves as a talisman of thought
for members of the community. Recalling that each misfortune cured
by the shaman is knotted onto his or her gown during the ritual, this
artefact gives people in the audience momentary access to knowledge
otherwise hidden to them. Through a temporary reversal of what is vis-
ible and invisible, inner and outer, the performing shaman exposes the
otherwise hidden intentions (sanaa) or inner layers (davhar) of fellow
human beings and bodies. While the victims of witchcraft and mali-
cious gossip (hel am) are always present at rituals as clients afflicted with
harm (horlol), the local perpetrators of the witchcraft may well not be.
Nevertheless, the effect of their dark intentions (har sanaa) is rendered
visible in the new knots that are on each such occasion fastened onto the
shamansgown.
In that sense, the performing shaman is an ordinary person turned
inside out. By literally wearing his or her clients misfortunes on the
skin as he dons the gown, the shaman reveals what cannot otherwise
be gauged from a persons appearance, namely a hidden propensity for
greed, envy and violence (interestingly, the point of possession is marked
by shamans making vomiting sounds, as if their insides were turned
inside out as the ongod enter). Indeed, it is said that shamans have two
bodies an ordinary human body and extraordinary, shamanic body
(b biye). Small wonder, then, that people tend to take such a close
interest in memorizing all recent changes made to shamans gowns dur-
ing sances, for this provides them, due to the detailed symbolism of the
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the effigies of them that people keep and attended to, for otherwise the
ongod would simply not be able to continue being what they are sup-
posed to be, namely phenomena that are defined by an ever increasing
degree of complexity and multiplicity. At the same time, and crucially,
peoples offerings to their talismans, as well as the knots that clients add
to shamans gowns during sances, may be understood as attempts to
depict, within the visible dimension of material things, the occult move-
ment of the shamanic spirits across the invisible realm of the so-called
skies (tenger).
Talismans thus emerge as simultaneously material residues of and
immanent preconditions for the shamanic spirits transcendental capac-
ity to move, not unlike the hazy trace left behind from atomic particles
shot through a gas chamber. Indeed, there is a sense in which the spir-
its are change in a particular register, more than they can be described
as discrete entities that are imbued with the propensity to change
in a certain way, in a sense that comes close to the one outlined ear-
lier in relation to the divinities of If in Cuba (see also Holbraad 2012).
Accordingly, it could be argued that the only way to see the spirits is
through their absence, for their peculiar mutable essence can only be
gauged from the gap, or interval, between any two material iterations.
Thus spirits may be said to be distributed across (as opposed to in) time.
Because of their inherent capacity to differ from themselves (and not
just differ from other things), time is, so to speak, hardwired into the
ongod temporality and transformation is internal to their very form
of being more than simply constituting a larger external and historical
context within which these phenomena are subject to change.10 Like a
material myth that keeps telling itself, each talisman is comprised of an
10
To be sure, the present account of Mongolian shamanism hardly qualifies as his-
torical according to the established genre-criteria of historical anthropology. For
this to be so, we would need to consider the larger political-economic context of
postsocialist Mongolia and its impact on the shamanic micro scale (see Pedersen
2011; cf. Geschiere 1997; Comaroff & Comaroff 1998). Yet, as Lvi-Strauss argued
in his famous critique of Sartre (1962), humans engage with or indeed do time in
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11
While, as we have explained, this is not our primary concern in the present
argument and in this book as a whole, a similar (but not identical) point can
be made with respect to local peoples conceptualizations. Certainly, Pedersens
ethnography leaves the sense that, were it not for these artefacts and their capac-
ity to make the spirits (in)visible, also his Mongolian interlocutors knowledge
of the shamanic cosmos would have been different and possibly impaired.
Indeed, there are reasons to believe that talismans were crucial transmitters
of shamanic knowledge during seventy years of Communist repression when
Mongolian shamans were stigmatized, and often murdered (Pedersen 2011:119
22; see also Buyandelger 2013). Perhaps more than any other feature of the
shamanic universe, it was the continual presence and peoples use of these arte-
facts that made and still today makes it possible to be a client, and indeed
practitioner, of shamanism without being in possession of an elaborate body
of knowledge about the spirits and the shamanic cosmos as a whole. After all,
a distinctive feature of these artefacts seems to be that they do not require an
extensive repertoire of shared meanings (a shamanic cosmology or culture) on
the part of the people who engage with them to work and make sense. Instead
of being carriers of deep symbolic meanings which is how religious talismans
have often been analysed by anthropologists these peculiar bundles of het-
erogeneous substances comprise everything that one needs to know about the
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shamanic spirit and the world of shamanism more generally. In this sense, to
borrow a formulation from Strathern (1988), these artefacts may be conceived
of as indigenous forms of analysis in their own right not, to be sure, analy-
sis as anthropologists know it, but what an analysis might have looked like had
anthropology happened to have been a central concern of the people studied
(more than, say, getting cured). Indeed, when Northern Mongolian shamans
are possessed by spirits, this is all that people see:what they see is what they
know. People do not have letalone need access to an underlying ontological
regime (Ellis 2015:56)to partake in the ritual. All that they need to know is that
each hadag knotted to a manjig is another misfortune/curing made visible, and
all remaining cosmological components and dimensions fall into place on their
own (Pedersen 2011:1802).
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and Technology Studies (STS), one could explore whether the entan-
glement between humans and non-humans that lies at the heart of STS
methodology might also contain within it a pragmatological compo-
nent. Transposing the fundamentally heuristic premise of our argument,
we could then venture to isolate the conceptual difference that materials
make to STS analyses without thereby reinstating the ontological divide
between humans and non-humans that STS so productively denies.
Similarly, perhaps, one could explore the mileage pragmatological analy-
ses might have in archaeology, a field in which the need to derive analyti-
cal insights from things in themselves, with characteristically minimal
human input, is perhaps most acute. In this way our argument about
pragmatology could seek to contribute to recent attempts to adumbrate
the implications of the ontological turn for archaeology, most notably by
Benjamin Alberti (e.g. 2014a and see Chapter1).
Taking the thought a step further:could one try to imagine an inde-
pendent, thing-centric discipline called pragmatology, in which things
material properties would form the basis of conceptual experimentations
that would be unmediated by any human projects whatsoever? What
might such a discipline look like? Ian Bogost has recently raised a simi-
lar question, although his answer is slanted more towards conveying the
experience of conceiving things beyond human mediation, to develop
what he calls an alien phenomenology (2012). In light of our concern
with the conceptual effects of things, perhaps theoretical physics would
come closer to what we have in mind, since so much of it seems to take
the form of radical conceptual experimentations in the service of under-
standing the material forms of the universe. Still, this also has problems,
partly due to physicists still encompassing demand for naturalist expla-
nation a demand that would therefore need to be disentangled from
our pragmatological concern with conceptualization (see Introduction).
At any rate, there is no a priori reason to limit the comparison to physi-
cists takes on matter, to the exclusion of those of, say, chemists, biolo-
gists, engineers or, indeed, artists, sculptors or musicians.
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Perhaps the best comparison would be with some form of abstract art.
Speaking very broadly, might we say that the labour of the abstract artist
consists in producing an object that congeals in concrete form a set of
conceptual possibilities? As they are exhibited in a gallery, are Malevichs
Black Square, Kandinskys Picture with a Circle, or the grid-like forms
that Rosalind Krauss finds recurring in works of twentieth century mod-
ernism (1986) not in some pertinent sense concretions of concepts? If
this is a fair way of imagining (at least some) abstract art, then pragma-
tology could be conceived as performing the same procedure in reverse.
Accordingly, the pragmatologists work of postplural abstraction con-
sists in producing conceptualizations that express in abstract form a set
of concrete realities. Pragmatology, then, could be considered as a form
of conceptual expression. Art backwards,even.
All this, of course, is to go out on a limb. Still, however indulgent, we
would suggest that these kinds of speculations serve to illustrate the
spirit (if not the kind) of experimentation that we see as a prime char-
acteristic of the ontological turn. Indeed, our attempt in this chapter
to transpose the core approach of the ontological turn onto the study
of things is itself an example of the kind of methodological experi-
mentation this manner of anthropological thinking seeks to pursue.
By dwelling at the limit of the ontological turn, the engagement with
things as such that we have explored has spun the ontological turn
itself in a new direction, from ethnography to pragmatology, in the
very act of trying to extend it. In the next chapter we continue in the
same spirit of experimentation to explore what happens when one sets
up for reflexive reconceptualization one of the ontological turns own
basic premises, namely the idea of the relation. Where might the onto-
logical turn go if it were to turn on itself?
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SIX
After the Relation
Throughout this book we have seen that the concept of the relation has
been central to the distinct form of anthropological thought that eventually
developed into the ontological turn (Wagner 1977b; Strathern 1988,
1995a, 2014a; Viveiros de Castro 2004, 2014). In the work of Strathern, in
particular, the relation is explicitly identified as the indispensable mode
of anthropological inquiry, while for Viveiros de Castro this is rendered
as a (in fact, the) form of ontological transformation. In this final chapter
we raise the question of what would happen if we targeted the radically
reflexive and abidingly experimental attitude that, as we have argued, is
fundamental to the ontological turn, at the concept of the relation itself.
Can we think of an ontological turn after the relation? And what might
such a post-relational move look like?
In posing these questions, we wish to contribute to a debate that
has been picking up steam within certain quarters of mostly European
anthropology over recent years concerning what might be the limits of
the relation as an anthropological concept and analytics (Corsn-Jimenez
2007; Rio 2007; Stasch 2009; Humphrey 2009; Candea 2010a; Pedersen
2012b, 2013b; Gatt 2013; Candea, Cook, Trundle & Yarrow 2015).1 One of
1
Among the handful of anthropologists who have explicitly explored what might
come after the relation as a concept, Alberto Corsn-Jimenezs approach resem-
bles our own most closely. The trouble with the Melanesian model, he suggests, is
that proportionality [is] a constant, and it is therefore assumed that people always
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the most concerted attempts to address this question has been made by
Michael Scott. Indeed, one of Scotts main concerns in formulating his
poly-ontology (see Chapter 1) has been to counteract what he sees as
the undue dominance of the Melanesian Model of Sociality, which he
ascribes to Roy Wagner and Marilyn Strathern. He writes:
The concept of intrinsic relations or multiplicity the idea that entities are
relational internally as well as externally is an indispensable insight dis-
parately argued and collectively established within anthropology, especially
by Wagner, Strathern, Latour, and Viveiros de Castro. Yet this insight has
prompted an unwarranted assumption responsible for the theoretical asym-
metry between relations and entities that I have found problematic since
I first began working with Arosi . . . Morten Pedersen has already asked
what might come after the relation [2012a:69]. By this Itake him to be ask-
ing what will succeed the nondualist meta-cosmology in anthropological
theory? My answer would be that we need a meta-cosmology with double
vision . . . able to treat relations and entities as fully coeval and equally avail-
able as viable premises for both anthropological practice and indigenous
ontology. (2014:50)
Our aim in this chapter is to heed this call to explore what might
come after the relation in its capacity as one of the most abiding and
primordial concepts of the ontological turn. Unlike Michel Scott,
however, we shall not do this by formulating a double theoretical
perspective that is complementary or more precisely strabismic with
relate in the same fashion . . . A full model of proportional sociality . . . is one that
takes into account the different ways in which people inflect and qualify their rela-
tionships [. . . and] the factors by which the stretching out of the social takes place
(2007: 1934). No matter whether this depiction of the Melanesian model is fair or
not (Willerslev & Pedersen 2010), Corsn-Jimenezs call for a sustained focus on
social and cultural practices of apportionment is astute. After all, unlike relations,
which only tell you how to disaggregate, apportionments tell you what to disag-
gregate into . . . the apportionment is the form the relation takes when it emerges
as a consequence; or to say it somewhat differently, when it works as a propor-
tion (2007: 187). For a more recent, and quite different, attempt to delineate and
explore the ethnographic and theoretical terrain of a post-relational anthropology,
see Candea et al. 2015.
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By strabismic, Scott refers to his recent proposal for a necessary methodological
indecision between relationism and essentialism in the anthropological study of
ontological questions (2014). Thus, for Scott, ontologically inclined anthropolo-
gists need to adopt a dual vision due to the fact that relationalism and essential-
ism cannot be reconciled in a unified theory without always giving relations the
upperhand.
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This is not the place to engage in detail with Moskos bold but controversial
(Robbins 2010; Barker 2010; Scott 2015a: 6489; see also Vilaa 2011;
Mosko 2015) attempt to extend the NME model to Melanesian converts,
who, on his interpretation, are Christian dividual persons in the
Strathernian sense, emerging from the conversion of one dividualist form
of personhood, agency, and sociality into another (Mosko 2010: 232).
Suffice it to say that Mosko is suggesting that Christian Melanesians are
just as relationally constituted as non-Christian Melanesians, for, rather
than constituting an independent, autonomous, and thus essentially
non-social moral being, as Dumont and Robbins would have it
(cf. Robbins 2004: 292), individuality on this account is simply one
enactment of personal dividuality and relational partibility among many.
As Mosko puts it, the inner, indestructible and sacred but indivisible
soul of the converted (in)dividual is only one component of the plurally
constituted total Christian penitent, who comprises at minimum inner
immortal soul, will, and faith as well as a mortal body, outer devotions
to God, good works directed to fellow communicants, and so on
(2010:220).
At first glance, Moskos goals look identical to ours, namely to extend
the relational analytics associated with New Melanesian Ethnography
into uncharted ethnographic and theoretical territory. And also like us,
Mosko takes Christian conversion to be the perfect test case for carry-
ing out this analytical experiment due to the marked individualization
that is widely reported to be one of its key sociological outcomes. Still,
the problem with this kind of analysis is that it seems not to correspond
with how many Melanesian Christians themselves describe the process of
conversion, namely as a radical break with the cultural norms and moral
values of the past; a rupture that involves highlighting the individual
agency of each believer and her relationship to God at the expense of
heterogeneous relationships with a plethora of human and non-human
agents, which Christian converts are so deliberate about leaving behind
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at least in our three cases there does appear to be a logic of Evangelical self-
hood that is making itself felt in otherwise diverse processes of conversion.
3
In addition to this and other ethnographic reservations about Moskos argument
(Robbins 2010; Barker 2010), his NME revisionism seems to suffer from poten-
tial theoretical problems too. For in suggesting that the dividual is an aggregate
of detachable things (like sin, faith etc.), which is anchored on an impermeable
and indestructible atomistic essence called the soul, the dividual ceases to be a
relational concept in the (postplural) Strathernian sense and appears instead to
become reduced to a small-scale pluralism. (We thank Michael Scott for this point;
see also Scott 2015a.).
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This is a logic that ties a growing emphasis on the inner self to a devaluation
of the bodily contribution to selfhood. This focus on the inner self is further
linked to a decreased (though never wholly absent) moral interest in the
state of social relations in favor of one placed on the inner self, particularly
as it is known by and related to God (2014: 586).
4
According to Rio, the relation as a solitary analytical apparatus for discussing soci-
ality quickly limits itself to a narrow vision of the social (2007: 27). Thus, we need
another perspective that is complementary to ideas concerning the relation, which
come specifically out of New Guinea social ontologies . . . [a perspective which] . . .
enables us also to discuss what exists socially on the outside of relations (2007:
278).
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it did a concerted effort on her side to study the Bible and try to under-
stand the word of God, the sacrifice of Christ, and the omnipresence
of the Holy Spirit. Nevertheless, taken together, they were also events
that gave rise to a radical and irreversible shift in Undraas make-up as
a social, moral and spiritual person. For her double shift to a new reli-
gion and a new occupational status was accompanied by a hardened
rhetoric in response to some of the claims made on her by different peo-
ple around her, ranging from potential suitors to recent acquaintances
who wanted to become part of her life. Eventually, around 2012 when
Pedersen last saw her, Undraas life had become stabilized, or one might
even say frozen, in the same pattern:her business was prospering (with-
out making her rich) and her relations with various (male) relatives and
acquaintances was still strained without having been completely severed.
Meanwhile, Undraas attitude to the plethora of spiritual entities com-
prising Mongolias shamanic cosmos (Pedersen 2011; Buyandelger 2013)
also underwent a dramatic change. Like so many other young Mongolians
during the chaotic years of postsocialist transition (Pedersen &
Hjer 2008; Hjer & Pedersen forthcoming), Undraa had spent much of
her adult life years seeking in vein to establish a safe distance between
herself and what she perceived as the omnipresent spirits encroaching
on her from all sides, not the least during the many long nights when
worries about the well-being of her family, or the accusations made by
friends, prevented her from sleeping. Like several other new converts
that Undraa eventually befriended after joining the Church, she had
therefore been searching desperately for ways to suppress a perceived
over-abundance of black (har) forces, which were so diffuse and mani-
fold that she would sometimes find her mind and body overtaken by
darkness, as she putit.
Indeed, it soon became clear that Undraas conversion to Christianity
to a large extent was the result of her own experiences with evil spirits
and other harmful influences (nldl). Nevertheless, and much as in
the Urapmin case described by Robbins (2004a), this did not lead her or
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As Undraa on several occasions told Pedersen, when Mongolians told him (as
many people did) that they didnt believe (idgehgi) in spirits, this did not mean
that they doubted their existence. On the contrary, she stressed, people expressed
disbelief in spirits precisely because these entities were so much on their minds
that they wanted to reduce the spirits capacity for inflicting harm via, say, acts of
witchcraft or sorcery (see Hjer 2009). So you see, Undraa instructed Pedersen
in no uncertain terms when people here tell you that they dont believe in the
spirits, they do it because they dont want a part of the shamanic thing with curses,
counter-curses, and so forth. For if you dont believe in the shamanic spirits, then
you will also be left alone bythem!
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Note how this line of argument relies on an identification between the concepts
of relationality and sociality: to relate is to be social, and vice versa. While this
fetish of connectivity (Pedersen 2014) where connections between people (and
between people and tings) are treated as ideal relations is tacit in much soci-
ological and anthropological theorizing, it is not always present in the work of
leading anthropologists of Christianity. For example, in his more recent writings,
Joel Robbins makes it clear that there are not necessarily less relations out there
after conversion; the point is rather that these relations are valued differently (see
Robbins2015).
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been waiting for, namely the emotional address to the guests in which
Undraa made it known to all present, humans and non-humans, that she
was now a Christian believer and a child ofaGod.
It is no coincidence that Undraa hesitated so long before finding her-
self ready and worthy to announce her faith in God, her parents and
everyone else. Indeed, it is hard to find a person more systematically
self-scrutinizing and self-critical than Undraa. Over the fifteen or so
years that he has known her, and especially following her conversion
to Christianity, Pedersen was often left with the impression that much
of what she considered to be the most significant events in her life took
place inside her, in what might with a nod to Meillassoux (2008; see
Chapter 1)- be called the great indoors of sustained solitary introspec-
tion (cf. Rapport 2007; Pandian 2010). That Undraa was not alone in
thinking like this and in wanting to communicate it to others became
clear in an interview with another female convert. Asked by Pedersen
where the Holy Spirit (ariun sns) might be located inside believers or
outside them the woman responded:
Inside, inside, inside (dotor, dotor, dotor)! Because I feel that its inside when
I talk to God or pray for something. Exactly inside, faith starts exactly on
the inside. When faith grows, the inside gets bigger. It has something to
do with the Holy Spirit. We pray and God fills us up with Holy Spirit from
the top of our head to end of our toes. We want to live like God, but we
cant actually be God. But because we want to live how its written in Bible
and live like God to fill ourselves with Holy Spirit, we want to grow bigger.
If there is little Holy Spirit here in my heart, it will cover my whole body.
Covering the whole body means we will be like God, give everything to
God and live Gods life.
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introspection (2007: 545; see also Asad 1993). And crucially, this
elevation of introspection as a privileged form of moral and episte-
mological agency happens at the expense of prior social relationships
to different human and non-human agents; not necessarily in the
sense that relationships to other people (and, as we as saw, to other
spiritual beings) ceases to exist or matter, but because such exterior
relations from now on seem to become inflected and encompassed by
an interior relation to God. There is a sense, then, in which conver-
sion involves a Strathernian process of figure-ground reversal where
outer agency swaps place and status with inner agency. Or, in Scotts
words, in conversion, the Holy Spirit calls people out of participa-
tion in sin, thus individuating them to some degree. But it does so
in order to bring them into new relations that are not merely social
but ontologically transformative, new relations of participation in the
very being (body) of Christ (2015a: 646). To be sure, the point is not
that there are necessarily fewer social relations than before, or that
social relations cease to matter. But the point is that these relations are
modelled on and measured against the internal self-relations. Indeed,
Undraa clearly seemed to conceive of social relations as secondary
in the sense of being inferior to the ideal self-self as well as self-God
relations from which they were perceived to derive. As she explained
to Pedersen:
As the inside grows bigger, there will be an effect on the outside. This
effect will be shown in our actions. If I have little faith and little Holy
Spirit, then I wont help people that much and I will find it hard to honest.
But when Holy Spirit fills up in me and gets bigger inside me, I will have
more faith and as soon as I have very strong faith, I wont do dishonest
things. Something like this. People [missionaries] come from America
and people [missionaries] who are from Mongolia go to the countryside
and work among shamans and Kazaks [Mongolias Muslim minority].
When [these people convert] their inside part gets bigger, they forget
about themselves, have more heart for people. Their actions change,
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they may leave their work, change their lives, change everything. It is very
big change in life, right?
7
No presumption is made here that a concept of an inside and by implication
a concept of a corresponding outside necessarily exist prior to the discourses
and the process of conversion. As Robbins, Schieffelin and Vilaa suggest in their
comparative study of conversion in Melanesian and Amazonian contexts (2014), it
is possible to argue that in many cases Christianity creates the very inside it then
populates.
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Before closing this first part of the chapter, let us try to specify the two cen-
tral steps that were involved in making the preceding analysis. This will
also clarify why it makes sense to call it post-relational and not just rela-
tional: why setting up the problem in a particular way allowed us to for-
mulate a more-than-relational solution to it, namely the post-relational
8
Clearly, Foucaults account of the modern subject as a site of increasing self-
reflexivity, self-monitoring and self-cultivation seems to resonate with the gen-
eral line of argument suggested here. Indeed, Foucault sometimes referred to the
introspective nature of this ethical work as self-relational (Binkley & Capetillo
2009:367; Taylor 2014: 1289; cf. Foucault 1985), just as he explicitly traced its
genealogy back to Christianity and its different transformations in the history of
European thought (see also Asad 1993; Laidlaw 2004: 92119; Scott 2015a). But,
to our knowledge at least, he did not in any strict sense tie this interior relational
swelling to a concurrent reduction of exterior relations to human or non-human
others by theorizing these new self-relations as a folded or obviated external social
relations.
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It may be objected that, already from a conventional NME perspective, persons are
understood to be both intrinsically and extensively relationally constituted. Thus,
for Strathern, Melanesian dividuals are composed of relations and nothing but
relations, which are then either elicited or eclipsed in different aesthetic forms in
the course of social life (1988; see Chapter 3). Yet if this is the case, then how does
the concept of the self-relational individual differ from more standard models of
internal relations? For the reasons mentioned in the chapter introduction that the
point of the ontological turn is to conduct its analyses by means of concepts derived
from ethnographic specificities a full answer to this question can necessarily only
be provided in a future, more comprehensive ethnographic exegesis of Christian
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Several unresolved issues remain. For one thing, how might our account
of the Christian subject as a self-relational figure reverberate with more
established psychoanalytical and poststructuralist relational theories
of the subject, such as for instance Lacan and Foucault? (See note 8.)
Furthermore, one might ask exactly how the present approach differs
from, say, the recent attempt to reinstate Gabriel Tardes theory of mon-
ads to what Latour and others (Candea 2010b; Latour et al. 2012) take to
be its rightful place at the heart of social theory and philosophy after all,
the self-relational subject would, on the face of it, seem to be a rather neat
candidate for a theological monad in that Tardean sense. Nevertheless, as
we hope to have demonstrated in this first part of the chapter, the concept
of the relation has not run out of steam. For the moment that it is remem-
bered that the relation was never meant to be a feature of ethnographic
localities and societies in Mongolia, Melanesia or elsewhere, but above all
indeed strictly an internal property of the way in which a particular
mode of anthropological thinking conducts itself (see Chapters 3 and 4),
it also becomes clear why it makes sense experimentally to extend and
thus reinvent it in the way we have illustrated here. In the process, we
hope to have shown how such a move forward for the ontological turn
can also gain traction on wider anthropological debates, such as, in this
case, the one on the anthropology of Christianity.
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[Scientific] knowledge, it is not a direct grasp of the plain and the visible
against all beliefs in authority, but an extraordinary daring, complex and
intricate confidence in chains of nested transformations of documents that,
through many different types of proofs, lead away toward new types of
visions which force us to break away from the intuitions and prejudices of
common sense. (Latour 2010a 122)
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[I]f, when hearing about religion, you direct your attention to the far away,
the above, the supernatural, the infinite, the distant, the transcendent, the
mysterious, the misty, the sublime, the eternal, chances are that you have
not even begun to be sensitive to what religious talk tries to involve you
in.. . . In the same way as . . . love sentences should transform the listeners in
being close and present or else are void, the ways of talking religion should
bring the listener, and also the speaker, to the same closeness and to the
same renewed sense of presence or else they are worse than meaningless.
(Latour 2010a:105)
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10
Note that for this argument to stand it is not necessary to settle, whether theologi-
cally or ethnographically, the vexed question of how far and in what way, if at all,
Christianity can be defined as a religion of transcendence (e.g. see Cannell 2006;
Lilla 2008; Robbins 2012; cf. Scott 2005). Much as was the case with our earlier
discussion of conversion as rupture, the present argument runs merely on the
premise that some of the time, in some ethnographic instances, on certain theo-
logical renditions, and in some senses, transcendence does feature.
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this task fully. Our objectives are more narrow and more tentative: we
wish to use the example of Christian transcendence, and the challenge
it presents to the relational framework of Latour (because he shares it
with the ontological turn) as an opportunity, first of all, to show that a
post-relational move is indeed possible indeed, it is required and,
furthermore, to illustrate what such a move could look like by sketching
out one way it could be made to work.
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[I]n the cases of both science and religion, freeze framing, isolating a media-
tor out of its chains, out of its series, instantly forbids the meaning to be car-
ried in truth. Truth is not to be found in correspondence either between
the word and the world in the case of science, or between the original [e.g. a
transcendent God] and the copy [e.g. an image of Him, or a statement about
Him] in the case of religion but in taking up again the task of continuing
the flow, of elongating the cascade of mediations one step further. (Latour
2010a:12223)
This question of flow, we would like to suggest, goes to the heart of the
matter regarding the relationship between relation and negation. Inasmuch
as Latours network of relations is constituted by transformations, it
follows that the priority of differential relations over self-identical entities
in Latours relationism should be supplemented by the logical priority
of motion over rest: the cascade of mediations which lie at the heart of
Latours analysis is not only a relational field but also a motile one (see
also Holbraad 2012). This is important because, as we suggest, it renders
explicit a sense in which negativity can be conceived as constitutive of
transformative relations, though this sense is appropriately different
from that of negation as it is ordinarily construed in a representationist
framework. In the programmatic, sketchy spirit of our illustration, and
with apologies to the logicians (as well as to those who dislike their
formalism), let us render the thought in purely formal terms.
Consider an ontological transformation from Ato B.As a transfor-
mation of A, B is not just related to A(viz. A B) but is also the prod-
uct of it, i.e. the two are related by a vector (i.e. A B). Now we may
ask: how might this vectoral relation be distinguished from another
(e.g. how might the vector running from Ato B be distinguished from
another one running from Ato C)? The question seems hard to answer
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actualization. Human beings are what they are because of what they are-
not-yet, the yet here being that of salvation, perhaps the hope of the
immanence of God, or of communion.
Indeed, such an analytical rendition would serve also to reflect
the irreducibly hierarchical relationship between humans and a God
that they deem to be transcendent. The transformation from rela-
tively simple potentials to relatively complex actualizations (complex
because they are achieved by way of the additive, positive relation of
conjunction) is asymmetrical, as we saw, and can in fact be conceived
as a form of ascent: vectors conjoined with vectors, conjoined with
further vectors, and so on. Sticking to the schematic, purely abstract
image that this motile language paints, God Himself might even be
conceived as the plenum of full actualization: what happens perhaps
never when all potential transformations that could ever take place,
do so.
By taking Gods transcendence His constitutive distantiation from
humanity seriously, in this last section we have sought to show what
a quintessentially post-relational analytical move might involve, pro-
viding a thoroughly experimental sketch of what a reconceptualiza-
tion of the relation could look like. By rendering Latours networks of
relations God-like, if you like, (as opposed to the other way around),
his analytic scheme is changed from a horizontal or, as it is some-
times said, flat chain of mediations making myriad differences to
each other into an intensive hierarchy of more or less transcendent
positions. Thus the concept of the relation ceases to be what it was
before: by suggesting how a new manner of conceptualizing relations
can be motivated by the non-relational character of Christian faith,
the relation effectively becomes a vector just as relational, but appar-
ently agile enough conceptually to deal with the challenge of nega-
tion that Christian transcendence seems to imply. Crucially, this is
neither a backward move nor a compromise with respect to the meth-
odological and theoretical orientation that Latours analysis, as well as
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11
One may ask to what this apparent lack of parsimony might be owed. Should
we take the similarities between ontological turn-style analyses as an indication
that the ethnographic situations that precipitate them are not, after all, as differ-
ent from each other as we might imagine? Are there perhaps basic continuities
between otherwise vastly different peoples, which are then reflected in the ana-
lytical continuities between their conceptualizations by anthropologists? Wagners
seemingly sweeping contention that tribal, peasant and religious people in general
take invention to be the basic human task, as we saw in Chapter2, may serve as
an example of this way solving the problem. Or might we say instead that respon-
sibility for the problem lies with ourselves as analysts rather than with the eth-
nographic world, and admit that what we are confronting here is some order of
failure of conceptual imagination on our own part? This would be dismal, since
it would effectively amount to the ontological turn admitting that its prime task,
that of creating the conditions for ethnographic differences to make a difference,
had effectively failed. So we might prefer to adopt a third view, saying that the
problem lies neither with a lack of alterity in the world, nor with a lack of imagi-
nation on the part of the anthropologist in her attempt to derive concepts from
it, but rather in the relationship the ontological turn posits between these two
levels ethnographic variety and its conceptualization. Maybe, according to this
view, the concepts that emerge out of our ethnographic engagements tend to seem
similar because they are somehow tainted or otherwise influenced by the very
manner or method by which they are derived. Maybe the ontological turn itself is
just too noisy or powerful, generating concepts from here, there and everywhere,
but somehow, and perhaps only to a certain extent, in its ownimage.
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1
By deconstruction we refer to forms of cultural critique that aim to debunk dif-
ferent kinds of hegemonic reifications, essentialisms and, indeed, metaphysics and
ontologies. We thus use the term advisedly, because anthropologists have used it
in this more vague and generic way since the 1980s. Take, as an example of this
notion of (de)construction, the following observation (which, incidentally, pre-
figures some of the concerns of the ontological turn) by Michael Taussig from
his influential book Mimesis and Alterity:With good reason postmodernism has
relentlessly instructed us that reality is artifice yet, so it seems to me, not enough
surprise has been expressed as to how we nevertheless get on with living, pretend-
ing . . . that we live facts, not fictions . . . When it was enthusiastically pointed out . . .
that race or gender or nation . . . were so many social constructions, inventions, and
representations, a window was opened, an invitation to begin the critical project
of analysis and cultural construction was offered . . . a preamble to investigation
[which], by and large, [has] been converted instead into a conclusion e.g. sex is a
social construction, race is a social construction, the nation is an invention, and
so forth . . . The brilliance of the pronouncement was blinding. Nobody was asking
whats the next step? What do we do with this old insight? If life is constructed, how
come it appears so immutable? How come culture appears so natural? If things
coarse and subtle are constructed, then surely they can be reconstructed as well?
(1993:xv-xvi).
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Conclusion
be coming together in the ontological turn were far from new. Instead
of representing a radical rupture from earlier analytical approaches, the
turn to ontology from the 1990s onwards had deep links with key figures
in the history of anthropological theorizing, going back as far as Mauss,
Sapir, Hallowell, Radcliffe-Brown and Lvi-Strauss, as well as influential
ideas from the disciplines more recent past, in particular in relation to
the work of Wagner, Strathern and Viveiros de Castro, but also the writ-
ings of Bruno Latour, Donna Haraway, Tim Ingold, Alfred Gell, Bruce
Kapferer, Terry Evens and Anna Tsing, among others. Indeed, return-
ing to our student frustrations, this was another major attraction of the
ontological turn when we first learned of it during our graduate years:
the fact that the scholars associated with it dared to not just mention, but
actually use, some of the very authors and concepts from the three clas-
sic traditions of anthropology, which had been dismissed so categori-
cally by influential anthropologists in the 1980s.
This is not to say that postmodernism generally and the crisis of rep-
resentation in particular were not important and indeed necessary. As
we have persistently argued in this book, the ontological turn would
probably never have happened, and certainly not have taken the super-
reflexive form it has, were it not for the decisive role that the crisis of
representation played as its theoretical and methodological precursor.
Still, the sometimes earth-scorching way in which key figures from the
anthropological past were dismissed and denounced was hardly pro-
ductive or inspirational, let alone particularly scholarly. Which again
explains the sense of relief we experienced when we first read Roy
Wagner, Marilyn Stratherns and Viveiros de Castros work. For a change,
Lvi-Strauss and Dumont were not being relegated to the rubbish bin of
obsolete and reactionary theory; and, for once, Radcliffe-Browns and
Hallowells ideas were being taken seriously instead of being reduced to
targets of ridicule andscorn.
While this aspect of the trans-Atlantic traffic in anthropological ideas
and perspectives remains to be documented in full historical detail, we
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Conclusion
have in this book sought to trace the core theoretical developments and
trajectories that eventually coagulated into the ontological turn. Indeed,
as we have wanted to show, the ontological turn may be described as the
strange theoretical beast that is born when one takes those visible aspects
of social life that the structural-functionalists called social relations and
treats them as if they were imbued with the same symbolic properties
and efficacies as the hidden meanings unearthed by Lvi-Strauss and
Foucault, or, in a different way, the patterns of meaning deciphered by
Boas and Geertz. After all, is that not what Wagners theory of obvia-
tion and Stratherns relational ethnography boil down to: a sort of hyper-
structuralism, on which everything is treated as if it belonged to a single
yet endlessly self-differentiating totality? To take the ontological turn is,
for analytical and other experimental anthropological purposes, to treat
all things as if they were subject to perpetual self-differentiations. Doing
so means that the concepts by which a given ethnographic encounter is
analysed must be in an ontological continuity with this encounter, as if
everything subject to anthropological study pertained to one myth-like,
intensive universe.
But if the ontological turn is nothing but the realization of an old post-
structuralist desire to set free theoretical promises dormant within clas-
sic structuralist and symbolic anthropology, then why does it bear this
ungainly label? Just how, many anthropologists keep asking themselves
with varying degrees of shock, incredulity and impatience, can ontol-
ogy, with its heavy freight of philosophical baggage, be of any use to us
anthropologists? Our response to this question has been that it is precisely
because of its philosophical connotations that the term ontology is apt
for formulating a new way forward for anthropology, towards what we
consider to be its natural position as a savage alternative to philosophy.
What we wish to achieve in using the philosophical concept of ontol-
ogy (as if concepts could be owned by particular disciplines bestowed
with a unique right to deploy and define them) is the exact opposite
of the transcendental truth-goal of traditional metaphysics. Instead
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2
For the same reason, we can only agree with Sarah Green in her observation that
any anthropological definition is inevitably an intervention . . . This includes
claims to any inherent (fixed) lack of fixity, of course for example, claims that
everything, including any difference, is constantly in flux (or in a state of continual
variation, say), as often appears in scholarship influenced by Deleuze. In saying
that all definitions of difference are also interventions, I am not making such a
claim (which would require me to define what difference is, in order to establish
what is constantly in flux). Rather, my interest is in the political implications of
asserting that difference has one meaning rather than another; and Itake that to
be an ethnographic approach toward the question of meaning, rather than a defi-
nitional one. Difference does have meaning; it simply cannot be stated in advance
what that meaning might be, or what are its implications (2014:23; cf. Holbraad
2012; Blaser 2013; Scott2014).
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the form a less sceptical and less negative but, we argue, no less criti-
cal method for generating forms of thinking that are always in per-
petual re-construction. Far from representing an anachronistic return
to the depoliticized pleasures of grand theory and armchair speculation
(though see Willerslev 2011), then, the ontological turn is acutely mind-
ful of and respectful towards postcolonial theory and the postmodern
collapse of grand narratives, for it treats these as necessary points of
departure for its ethnographically derived concepts and interventions.
Post-critical Anthropology
So to take the ontological turn is to open oneself up to (and embrace
the uncertainties and potential risks of) the possibility that there might
be more than one mode of anthropological critique (and therefore,
as we shall explain in the following section, more than one form of
anthropological politics also). This might explain why, from the vantage
point of prevailing, Marxist-inspired ideas of anthropological critique,
the ontological turn can easily look cerebral and disengaged, if not
frivolous, sometimes indulgent, or downright irresponsible, and even
dangerous. Indeed, how could it be otherwise, given that the general
orientation towards theoretical reflexivity, analytical experimentation
and conceptual innovation we have sought to delineate in this book often
has involved a quite deliberate questioning of some of the most deeply
held epistemological-cum-ontological assumptions that underwrite the
human(ist) scientific project, including the prevailing notion that proper
cultural analysis involves the interpolation of critical distances towards
ones object of study by situating in a broader political-economic and
ideological context.
Of course many anthropologists, and often with good reason, rely on
this more established concept of critique in their writings. In fact, it may
be maintained that the classic anthropological project of cultural critique
(Hart 2001) has been reduced to sceptical distance since the emergence
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Post-critical Anthropology
3
We use the term post-critical in the sense suggested by Casper Bruun Jensen in
his recent comparison of certain alternative strategies for critique within anthro-
pology and STS (2014b; see also Bargus-Pedreny, et al. 2015). Here, critique
does not take as its point of departure, or for that matter depends on, a gen-
eral theory or . . . a methodology, a normative framework, or a political project
(2014b: 362). Rather, it constitutes both the limit and the creative condition of
possibility of [postcritical] theories and methods that they cannot provide more
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Post-critical Anthropology
Again, this is of course not to say that one cannot engage in critical
sociological thinking as an anthropologist (in the same way as
anthropologists have found inspiration in and drawn on the work of,
for instance, social historians, cognitive psychologists, or analytical
philosophers). It is only to suggest that, in doing so, one is not
intervening in a manner that could perhaps be described as distinctively
anthropological.
But how is this concretely done how to animate forces and potentials
lying dormant at our midst, in Hages words? Here, we need to remind
ourselves that all ethnographic descriptions, like all cultural translations,
necessarily involve a certain element of transformation or even disfigura-
tion. As we discussed in Chapter 4, anthropological interpretations may
thus be conceived of as controlled equivocations (Viveiros de Castro
2004), which, far from transparently mapping one discrete social order
or cultural whole onto another, depend on more or less deliberate and
reflexive productive misunderstandings (Tsing 2005) to perform trans-
lations and comparisons, not just between different contexts, realms,
and scales, but also within them. This is what distinguishes the onto-
logical turn from other anthropological approaches: not the assump-
tion that it enables one to take people and things more seriously than
other analytical approaches, but the ambition, and more importantly the
capacity, to take things, if you like, too seriously (Pedersen 2013c). This,
as we have argued in Chapter 3, goes to the heart of the Strathernian
project of postplural comparison: the fact that a given anthropological
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5
It follows that, rather than intervening ironically or sceptically by standing, or
pretending to stand above the world, anthropology, on its post-critical variant,
intervenes via lateral extensions or prototypes of it (Maurer 2005; Miyazaki
2013; Corsn-Jimenez 2015). It could even be argued that, instead of making its
interventions via the interpolation of critical distances, the ontological turn is
imbued with the capacity for forging critical proximities that comically render
the world into different distortions of itself (Pedersen 2013c; Nielsen & Pedersen
2012). Comedys critical potential, after all, has well-described by cultural theorists
(e.g. Bakhtin 1965; Mbembe 1992; Bergson 1999), and an argument can be made
that the time has come to go beyond the ontological joke (J. Schmidt 2015: 22) by
systematically investigating the manner in which the powerful logic of the ludic is
intimately connected to the mechanisms by which certain kinds of anthropologi-
cal thinking operate (Pedersen & Nielsen 2015, forthcoming; M. Schmidt 2015; see
also Wagner 2001).
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6
The present section is largely an abridged version of Holbraad, Pedersen & Viveiros
de Castro (2014), drawing heavily on our own contributions to this co-authored
text, but not on the parts Viveiros de Castro contributed.
7
Although discussions of ontological politics are relatively new to anthropology
(though see Verran 2001; Blaser 2009; Whatmore 2013), STS scholars have used
the expression for some time now (Thompson 1996; Mol 1999; Law 2004; Pickering
2011).
293
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Conclusion
persons and things could alter from themselves. The politics of ontology
is the question of how persons and things could alter from themselves,
precisely because the concept of self-difference is intrinsic to the man-
ner in which anthropological analysis is done. Again, this is the key les-
son from Wagner and Strathern, as well as Viveiros de Castro, of which
one should not lose sight when articulating what the ontological turn is
about, including why it has emphatically nothing to do with essences,
cultural differences or anything of the sort; in fact quite the contrary.
As a sort of reverse deconstruction, the ontological turn performs its
interventions, not by making the world less real by taking it apart and
thus exposing the processes that made it into what it is, but by adding to
it taking it too seriously and thereby making it more or differently
real. Again, critique here happens, not as sceptical acts of debunking,
but by performing analytical operations that turn things into what they
could be, but still are not.
This, as we have argued in this book, is what the ontological turn is:a
technology of description for experimenting with what in Chapter5 we
called the conceptual affordances present in a given body of ethnographic
materials. Articulating the study of what could be in this way implies a
peculiarly non- or anti-normative stance, which has profoundly political
implications in several senses. First, subjunctively to present alternatives
to declarations about what is or imperatives about what should be is
itself a political act to the degree that it breaks free of the glib relativism
of merely reporting on alternative possibilities (worldviews), and pro-
ceeds to lend the otherwise (Povinelli 2012) full ontological weight as a
real alternative.
Secondly, when such conceptual experimentations are precipitated
by ethnographic exposures to people whose own lives are, in one way
or other, pitted against the reigning hegemonic orders (state, empire
and market, in their ever-volatile and so often violent comingling),
the politics of ontology can be aligned deliberately with the politics
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of the peoples who occasion it. We saw one way in which this can
work in Chapter 4 in relation to Viveiros de Castros explicit attempt
to connect the ontological turn with a political programme for the
decolonization of anthropological thought and its implications for
the conceptual self-determination of the peoples we study (see also
Blaser 2013; de la Cadena 2015). Indeed, as we suggested in our criti-
cal engagement with this way of doing (political) ontology, its experi-
mental gesture may be extended also to the very definition of what
the political itself could be in any given ethnographic situation a
postcritical distortion of the concept of politics itself. Certainly, rais-
ing such questions would be a further way to render anthropological
analysis not merely logically contingent upon, but also morally imbri-
cated with, the political dynamics in which the people anthropolo-
gists study are embroiled, including the political stances those people
might themselves take.
Finally, the political promise held by ontologically oriented approaches
in anthropology and cognate disciplines can be conceived, not just in
relation to the degree to which such approaches are in affinity with (or
even actively promote) particular political objectives, or with the abid-
ing need for a critique of the state of the world and the forms of thought
that underpin it, but also in relation to their capacity to enact a form of
politics that is entailed in their very operation. Conceived of in this man-
ner, the ontological turn is not so much a means to externally defined
political ends, but, in a certain sense at least, a political end in its own
right. Recapitulating, to some extent, standing debates about the politi-
cal efficacies of intellectual life (e.g. the ambivalent stance of Marxist
intelligentsias to communist parties calls to political militancy in the
twentieth century), the question is whether ontologically oriented analy-
ses render political the very form of thinking that they involve, such that
being political becomes an immanent property of the mode of anthro-
pological thought itself. If so, then the politics of the ontological turn in
295
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Conclusion
anthropology resides not only in the ways in which it may help promote
certain futures, but also in the way that it figurates the future (Krijer
2015) in its very enactment.
The major premise of such an argument might border on a cogito-
like form of self-evidence: to think is to differ. Here, a thought that
makes no difference to itself is not a thought: thoughts take the form of
motions from one position to another, so if no such movement takes
place then no thought has taken place either. Note that this is not an
ontological credo (e.g. compare with Levi Bryants recent [2011] ontic
principle, which is similar, but cast in the philosophical key of meta-
physical claim-making). Rather, it is offered as a statement of the logi-
cal form of thinking a phenomenology in Simon Critchleys (2012: 55)
sense that is, moreover, self-evident insofar as it instantiates itself in its
own utterance. The minor premise, then, would be the (more moot) idea
that to differ is itself a political act. This would require us to accept that
such non-controversially political notions as power, domination, or
authority are relative stances towards the possibility of difference and its
control. To put it very directly (crudely, to be sure), domination is a mat-
ter of holding the capacity to differ under control to place limits upon
alterity and therefore, ipso facto (viz. by internal implication from the
to-think-is-to-differ premise above) upon thought also.
If these two premises were to be accepted, then it follows that a cer-
tain kind of politics becomes immanent to the ontological turn. For if
it is correct to say that the ontological turn turns, precisely, on trans-
muting ethnographic exposures reflexively into forms of conceptual
creativity and experimentation, then one can also say that it is abidingly
oriented towards the production of difference, or alterity, as such, with
all the epistemological and ethical challenges and responsibilities that
follow from making this claim (cf. Green 2014; Hohm 2014; Salmond
Forthcoming). Regardless (at this level of analysis) of the political
goals to which it may lend itself, anthropology is ontologically political
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