Friday, November 29, 2019
Europe ââ¬Â©Anââ¬Â© Anthropological ââ¬Â©Perspective
Thesis statement Ever since the end of WW2, when race-related discourse in the field of European anthropology became largely delegitimized, worldââ¬â¢s well-established anthropologists had realized that there were put at liberty of discussing anthropological matters within the boundaries of only two conceptual approaches, which can be generally categorized as ââ¬Ësocio-economicââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëethnographicââ¬â¢.Advertising We will write a custom essay sample on Europe: â⬠©Anâ⬠© Anthropological â⬠©Perspective specifically for you for only $16.05 $11/page Learn More In its turn, this explains why the bulk of recent anthropological research in Europe (especially in Eastern Europe) has been conducted primarily along both approachesââ¬â¢ methodological lines. That is; whereas, socio-economic anthropologists proceeded with executing their professional duties within the procedural framework of ââ¬Ëmodernity vs. ethnographyââ¬â¢, ethnographic anthropologists continued to research the matters of ethnography as such that remain largely unaffected by objective realities of living in todayââ¬â¢s Europe. Unlike socio-economic anthropologists, who insist that the concept of cultural/ethnographic identity should be evaluated through the lenses of political economy, most ethnographically minded anthropologists assess the concept of ethno-identify through the lenses of cultural relativism, which automatically implies that the conclusions of their research-studies could be best described as utterly subjective. This; however, does not prevent some academicians from implying that anthropological subjectivity needs to be ââ¬Ëcelebratedââ¬â¢. For example, while referring to the book Lââ¬â¢Afrique Fantome by French anthropologist Michel Leiris, in his article How many centers and peripheries in anthropology, Archetti (2006) states: ââ¬Å"Lââ¬â¢Afrique Fantome is a powerful book precisely because it is cent ered on the explicit recognition of the subjectivity of the ethnographerâ⬠(2006, p. 121). We do not subscribe to this point of view, simply because the subjectivity of a scientific research is being usually perceived as the proof of such researchââ¬â¢s fallaciousness. This suggestion; however, does not imply the methodological framework of socio-economic anthropology as being only the appropriate one. The foremost weakness of both anthropological approaches appears to be the fact that their practitioners do not seem to realize the dialectical nature of a relationship between the notion of ethnicity, on one hand, and the notion of progress, on another ââ¬â whereas, socio-economic anthropologists idealize environment, ethnographic anthropologists idealize psychology. In this paper, we will aim to provide a set of rationale-based arguments, in defense of our thesis, while pointing out to the fact that the strength of oneââ¬â¢s willingness to think of its existential ide ntity solely in terms of tribally defined ethnicity, is the foremost indication of such individualââ¬â¢s lessened eligibility to be referred to as European, in traditional sense of this word.Advertising Looking for essay on anthropology? Let's see if we can help you! Get your first paper with 15% OFF Learn More Analytical part Throughout the course of 20th century and the first decade of 21st century, the essence of socio-political and cultural dynamics in Europe never ceased being defined by two mutually exclusive tendencies: 1) The process of European countries growing increasingly industrialized, resulting in ethno-related discourses in these countries being gradually deprived of their acuteness, 2) The integrity of European socium becoming undermined from within by the rise of ethno-separatism in many Europeââ¬â¢s countries. The validity of this suggestion will become self-evident, once we admit that, throughout the course of 20th century, the pace of technol ogical progress in Europe had attained clearly-defined exponential subtleties, and once we compare the contemporary political map of Europe to what it used to be prior to 1914, and prior to 1991, respectively. How was it possible for these mutually exclusive tendencies to simultaneously affect continentââ¬â¢s geopolitical status and its geopolitical landscape? In order for us to be able to answer this question, we will have to briefly outline the basics of Europeââ¬â¢s anthropological history. Around 6000-5500 B.C., Europe experienced an invasion of Aryan tribes, the representatives of which were able to quickly assimilate what todayââ¬â¢s anthropologists refer to as Europeââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ populations. However, in Europeââ¬â¢s mountainous/island regions, the assimilation process did not proceed very smoothly, due to the lowered geographical accessibility of these areas. In its turn, this explains why the descendants of Europeââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëpre-Aryanâ⬠⢠tribes, such as Celts, Basques, native Corsicans, Southern Slavs (Bosnians), Carpathians (Ukrainian Hutsuls) and Caucasians-proper, were able to preserve their ethno-linguistic, and the most importantly ââ¬â behavioral identity. After all, even the names of corresponding regions sound phonetically similar ââ¬â Scotland, Escara (country of Basques), Corsica, Kosovo, Carpathia, and Caucasus. The findings of most recent genetic research-studies on geographical distribution of haplotypes in Europe, confirms the validity of this hypothesis ââ¬â the presence of relict chromosome Y-1 in the blood of male populations from Europeââ¬â¢s mountainous regions accounts for as much as 50%-70%. In its turn, the presence of this chromosome in oneââ¬â¢s blood, defines the extent of individualââ¬â¢s endowment with certain ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ psychological traits, such as intellectual inflexibility, tendency to indulge in violence, a hypertrophied sense of kinship (communal m indset) and an acute sense of ritualistic religiosity. The study Religious aspects of the social organization of a Castilian village, in which Freeman (1968) discusses the existential mode of Spanish (mountainous) Valdemora del Castillo villageââ¬â¢s residents, contain a following description of a particular psychological trait (violence-mindedness) that villagers consider the most virtuous: ââ¬Å"The most admired personality (in the village) is the one who ââ¬Å"shows temperâ⬠and thus ââ¬Å"defends himselfâ⬠successfully in social inter- action.Advertising We will write a custom essay sample on Europe: â⬠©Anâ⬠© Anthropological â⬠©Perspective specifically for you for only $16.05 $11/page Learn More Assertiveness is valued above timidityâ⬠(1968, p. 42). In the same article, author emphasizes the fact that villagers are being endowed with a strong sense of religiosity: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦attendance at mass approaches 100 perc ent of the villagers and is considered important by men as by womenâ⬠(1968, p. 43). It is not simply by a coincidence that the most notorious head of Spanish Inquisition, Thomas Torquemada (ethnic Basque), was simultaneously religious and physically violent. In his study Converts and consanguinity: The social organization of Moslem Slavs in Western Bosnia, Lockwood (1972) provides us with an insight onto the fact that, in terms of behavioral assertiveness, Bosnians can be well compared to Spanish highlanders: ââ¬Å"Highland peasants (in Bosnia) are regarded as country bumpkins; the members of a particular village are known as rough-and-ready fighters. To some degree at least, these stereo-types are realâ⬠(1972, p. 56). The same can be said about Bosniansââ¬â¢ endowment with a communal spirit ââ¬â just as it is the case with the rural inhabitants of Spainââ¬â¢s mountainous regions, most Bosnians think of interests of a community as such that surpass their perso nal interests: ââ¬Å"Even the elected village head is relatively powerless without the backing of his fellow villagers. Similar effects of social pressures within the village are felt in various other contextâ⬠(1972, p. 65). The reading of this particular article leaves very little doubt as to the fact that the communal mindedness represents Bosniansââ¬â¢ foremost existential trait. Rurally based Europeans with a substantial amount of ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ blood running through their veins, are also known for their intellectual inflexibility, sublimated in these peopleââ¬â¢s unwillingness to adjust to the ways of modernity. In her article Bioregulation and comida caseira in rural Galicia, Spain, Roseman (2004) points out to the fact that, after being asked by European Commission to observe additional safety regulations, the rural producers of Spanish traditional food comida caseira took it as an insult. Apparently, nothing could shake these peopleââ¬â¢s belief in rur ally produced food as being of necessarily higher quality then the food, produced and consumed by ââ¬Ëcity slickersââ¬â¢: ââ¬Å"Among members of the rural and urban working classes in Galicia, there is an often interrelated and equally longstanding essentialistic discursive contrast drawn between the healthfulness and social rootedness of ââ¬Å"home-raised foodâ⬠vis-à -vis externally produced and consumed commodities distinguished as being of questionable quality and even as constituting ââ¬Ëvicesâ⬠(2004, p. 13). Apparently, the factor of intellectual inflexibility, reflected by peopleââ¬â¢s irrational adherence to ââ¬Ëtraditionââ¬â¢, never ceases to define the workings of rural psyche, even when food-related issues are being discussed.Advertising Looking for essay on anthropology? Let's see if we can help you! Get your first paper with 15% OFF Learn More As it appears from reading Halpern and Kideckelââ¬â¢s (1983) study Anthropology of Eastern Europe, even as recent as in eighties, the anthropological discourse, regarding Eastern Europe, was primarily concerned with assessing Eastern Europeââ¬â¢s demographical dynamics within the conceptual frameworks of ââ¬Ëmodernity vs. traditionââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëethnicity vs. another ethnicityââ¬â¢. According to the authors, it is namely the fact that Eastern Europeans (especially the ones from regionââ¬â¢s mountainous areas) have traditionally been known for the strength of their genetically predetermined tendency to proceed with trying to adjust their lives to purely formalistic religious and social rituals, which accounts for Eastern Europeââ¬â¢s social, political, economic and intellectual backwardness: ââ¬Å"East Europeââ¬â¢s experience as political-economic periphery not only promoted ethnic sentiment but, in corollary fashion, was also a chief factor in the regionâ â¬â¢s underdevelopmentâ⬠(1983, p. 389). In their article Europeanization, Borneman and Fowler (1997) had a made a perfectly legitimate point, while stating: ââ¬Å"The multiethnic, autocratic East-Central European states have been at a permanent disadvantage vis-ââ¬Ëa-vis their West European counterpartsâ⬠(1997, p. 492). As Hegel had once put it ââ¬â Slavs occupy on Europeââ¬â¢s map more space than they do in Europeââ¬â¢s history. This explains why people from Europeââ¬â¢s Nordic countries have traditionally kept Eastern Europeans in low regard. In his article Cultures and communities in the anthropology of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, Wolfe (2000) states: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦a number of commentators have ââ¬Å"written offâ⬠Russia because of its essentially ââ¬Å"Eastern,â⬠communal, and slavish mentalityâ⬠(2000, p. 201). Thus, there can be few doubts as to the fact that the qualitative essence of oneââ¬â¢s mentality cann ot be thought of as merely the reflection of a variety of different environmental factors that had affected the process of his or her upbringing ââ¬â the way in which people address existential challenges is being biologically rather than socially predetermined. The soundness of earlier statement is best illustrated by contemporary particulars of EUââ¬â¢s functioning as a quasi-state. In his article Identity and borders: An anthropological approach to EU institutions, Abà ©là ¨s (2004) had gone a great length, while pointing out at the reasons why, within todayââ¬â¢s boundaries, EU can never exist as a stable geopolitical entity, based upon the ideals of secularism and science-based rationale (the existential virtues of clearly Nordic origin). According to the author, the rationale-driven mentality of North Europeans is being simply inconsistent with passion-driven mentality of Southern Europeans: ââ¬Å"â⬠¦there is often a north/south divide in the (European) Commis sionâ⬠¦ countries generally in the north would be Britain, Ireland, Finland, Sweden, Austria, the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, Luxemburgâ⬠¦ those in the south would include France, Spain, Italy, Greece and Portugalâ⬠(2004, p. 18). Whereas, most citizens in Nordic countries think of EU as a ââ¬Ëcommon houseââ¬â¢, meant to equally provide various benefits to all of its residents, in exchange for these residents actively contributing to houseââ¬â¢s well-being, many citizens in Southern and Eastern European countries regard EU as somebody elseââ¬â¢s rich household, the owners of which are being obligated to share riches with less-fortunate ones, in exchange for nothing. This is the reason why recent years saw the emergence of a so-called ââ¬Ëeuro-skepticismââ¬â¢ within EU, which is best defined as citizensââ¬â¢ growing awareness of the fact that the continuous existence of EU is its present form might actually be pointless. In her study The boundarie s of Europe: Deconstructing three regional narratives, Leontidou (2004) says: ââ¬Å"European integration, even as incomplete as it started, was once a major event, but now euro-philia gives way to euro-scepticism in several regions and member states, as often shown in plebiscitesâ⬠(2004, p. 610). The rise of ââ¬Ëeuro-skepticismââ¬â¢ is also being concerned with the process of EUââ¬â¢s socio-political policies growing ever-more absurdist. As it was pointed out in Shoreââ¬â¢s (2004) article Whither European citizenship?: ââ¬Å"Each year the EU spends over Euro 500 million on its cultural policy, which aims to promote the richness and diversity of Europeââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ëshared cultural heritageââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (2004, p. 33). Yet, it is highly doubtful that either of European Commissionââ¬â¢s high ranking bureaucrats would be able to comprehensively explain why it is necessary to spend money on promotion of ethnographic diversity within the Union, if the values of such ââ¬Ëdiversityââ¬â¢ directly confront the officially proclaimed purpose of EUââ¬â¢s creation ââ¬â the building of a secular society, where details of society membersââ¬â¢ ethno-cultural affiliation would cease to represent any importance, whatsoever. The actual reason why the ââ¬Ëcelebration of diversityââ¬â¢ had attained an official status in EU is simple ââ¬â without being given a legal instrument of exploiting society in which they live, Europeans endowed with ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ mentality and ââ¬ËEuropeansââ¬â¢ that had recently immigrated from a Third World, would have turned Europe into the battleground of everybody against everybody long ago. The fact that they are fully capable of doing it is being illustrated by the phenomena of Basque/Irish/Corsican terrorism, and by racial riots (initiated by representatives of racial minorities) that now break out in large European cities on almost daily basis. The irony lies in the fact that, if any body ââ¬â it is namely the members of Europeââ¬â¢s ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ ethnicities that are being more psychologically ââ¬Ëequippedââ¬â¢ to resist the process of Europeââ¬â¢s continuous Islamization, as compared to what it is the case with ââ¬Ëproperââ¬â¢ Europeans. The reason for this is simple ââ¬â even though Nordics leave enemy no chance, when it comes to engaging it at great distance, they do realize themselves quite powerless, when it comes to engaging the enemy at ââ¬Ëclose rangeââ¬â¢, especially when being required to play by enemyââ¬â¢s rules. For example, Switzerland has traditionally been taking pride in having one of the strongest armies in the world, capable of defeating just about any enemy imaginable. Yet, as of today, the population of Muslims in Switzerland accounts for 600.000.000 ââ¬â in other words, the invading army of foreigners is already inside the Switzerland, while Swiss military continues to remain on lookout for th e enemy from outside. When being confronted by Muslims, ââ¬Ëproperââ¬â¢ Europeans retreat, while striving to appease uninvited guests. The same cannot be said about ââ¬Ërelictââ¬â¢ Europeans, whose psychological qualities allow them to successfully confront communally minded and violent invaders at ââ¬Ëclose rangeââ¬â¢ by proving themselves being even more communally minded and violent. Conclusion Even today, the subject of anthropological research cannot be discussed outside of euro-centrism as the intrinsic worldview, professed by even those Europeans who do not understand the actual meaning of this term. And, the manner in which euro-centric mind perceives surrounding reality is best described as dialectical ââ¬â that is, such mind never ceases searching for the links between causes and effects. Therefore, it would only be natural for European anthropologists to strive to combine ethnography-based and socio-economy-based methodological approaches into a sing le one, which would be concerned with anthropologists taking into account both: the particulars of a studied populaceââ¬â¢s biological constitution and such populaceââ¬â¢s place on the ladder of socio-cultural and scientific progress. It is only when anthropologists will recognize that biology does matter, within the context of defining peopleââ¬â¢s ability to act as facilitators of progress, that anthropology will once again attain the status of ââ¬Ëuseful scienceââ¬â¢. References Abà ©là ¨s, M 2004, Identity and borders: An anthropological approach to EU institutions, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Archetti, E 2006, How many centers and peripheries in anthropology, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Borneman, J and Fowler, N 1997, Europeanization, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Freeman, S 1968, Religious aspects of the social organization of a Castilian village, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view .php?id=147 Halpern, J Kideckel, D 1983, Anthropology of Eastern Europe, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Leontidou, S 2004, The boundaries of Europe: Deconstructing three regional narratives, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Lockwood, W 1972, Converts and consanguinity: The social organization of Moslem Slavs in Western Bosnia, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Roseman, S 2004, Bioregulation and comida caseira in rural Galicia, Spain, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Shore, C 2004, Whither European citizenship? : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 Wolfe, T 2000, Cultures and communities in the anthropology of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, : https://moodle.nuim.ie/2010/course/view.php?id=147 This essay on Europe: â⬠©Anâ⬠© Anthropological â⬠©Perspective was written and submitted by user Madyson Walker to help you with your own studies. You are free to use it for research and reference purposes in order to write your own paper; however, you must cite it accordingly. You can donate your paper here.
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