Identity Statement
Fashioning a
Departmental Identity at Northwestern
Timothy Earle
Anthropology News
March 1999
Pg. 14-15, 20
The dismemberment
of the Department of Anthropology at Stanford (AN, September 1998) has
shaken our sense of self. Stanford, a top-ranked, mid-sized department,
had seemed an ideal program, and its inability to resolve disciplinary
difference raises stark fears. Is Anthropology fragmenting and fading?
Can anthropology survive only in large universities, the Michigans and
the Berkeleys and the UCLAs where the four fields can survive through
size that allows each field to operate independently? Some feel that
anthropology as a discipline has been dissolving for a generation. Specialization
and rich training have increasingly isolated many practitioners at the
same time that allied disciplines of sociology, history, human biology,
and linguistics, and the women's-ethnic-area-cultural studies programs
have gobbled up our messages. Are we now redundant?
We think not. The Department at Northwestern is committed to an integrated
four-field program powered by the intellectual differences and complementary
of a holistic Anthropology. We are building sociocultural anthropology,
archaeology, biological anthropology, and linguistic anthropology as
strong intellectual fields while emphasizing bridges between them. Our
program crosses the cultural borders that have divided the humanities
and sciences, and strikes a union recognizing manifold approaches and
accepting the tensions and challenges that they bring. Within anthropology,
our common academic history and interests give a unity that may be difficult
to discern from the outside. Yet, by acknowledging the diverse theoretical
perspectives that inform research, we can fashion an evolving multidimensional
understanding of the human experience, allowing individual perspectives
to contribute without fears that one will silence the others.
FASHIONING A DEPARTMENTAL IDENTITY
Three general paths exist for departments of anthropology. One is to
grow to such a size that each subfield of anthropology can exist as
a quasi-independent discipline. Favored by many large universities,
this solution is intellectually easy: the subfields become minimally
involved with the others' faculty. This path is towards separate but
equal programs that allow, but do not encourage, cross-overs. A second
path, chosen by Chicago, Santa Cruz, San Diego, and now Stanford, is
to limit a department's intellectual range so as to lessen the tensions
within their faculties. As large and specialized programs have come
to dominate training of doctoral students, a new generation is emerging
with little commitment to the encompassing discipline of anthropology.
A third path, however, exists. Northwestern's department repudiates
any dismemberment of anthropology and has committed itself to build
an integrated program. By exercising sufficient patience with the rifts
that have grown up within modern anthropology, we can seize the advantage
of our historical breadth for a new era of multidisciplinary thinking.
Northwestern has designed its program to offer one such model for interdisciplinarity.
I
provide details on our program to illustrate how such bridging can work.
These details may show processes of departmental integration that, with
totally different contents, could be implemented by many departments
across the country. First off we recognize that we cannot "do it
all": to try to build a program that fills all anthropological
specialties is simply impossible, and I believe that Departments need
to build to strength rather than mending a tattered whole cloth. Establish
strengths in each field, build to those strengths, and seek bridges
that reinforce strengths in other fields.
At Northwestern, our goal is to have each field with one or more strengths--
areas, methodologies, and/or theoretical approaches in which we can
be recognized as among the very best. For cultural anthropology, the
foci are African ethnography, economic anthropology, urban studies,
and gender studies; for archaeology, the comparative study of the evolution
of complex societies; for linguistic anthropology, Latin America and
Caribbean ethnography, practice theory and formal analysis; for biological
anthropology, human biology. Then the strategy is to make specific hires
that bridge to other fields, as for example ongoing hiring objectives
in cultural anthropology, archaeology, biological anthropology for specialties
in Africa, Latin America, economic anthropology, and complex societies.
To embrace the dynamic tensions inherent within anthropology we must
try to maintain a balance in personnel so that groups do not feel threatened
or marginalized……
Several lines of creative tension within our Department include:
1. between spatial and temporal scales of analysis, as in micro analysis
of linguistics and practice theory, and macro-scale analysis of political
economies and archaeology;
2. between methods, as in the quantitative approaches of network analysis
and human demography, and the qualitative methods of ethnography and
life histories; and
3. between causes, as in natural processes of human biology and reproduction,
of environmental systems, of technological mechanics, and in cultural
processes of identity, sexuality, and meaning.
Intellectual tensions probably characterize most social science department,
but for anthropology they lie at the heart of our discipline and recognize
long-standing antinomies that cannot simply be transcended. Our goal
is to make hires that create affiliations across fields and thus minimize
inherent tendencies to fission. Reproduction,
for example, is neither purely "natural" nor purely "cultural,"
but involves elements of both in intricate ways that anthropology's
breadth can be used to lead the social sciences on important integrative
paths.
All intellectual projects benefit from a self-conscious sense of their
place in the history of thought, and our faculty richly represents work
in critical theory and anthropological history. At the same time that
we study the workings of complex society, we investigate the placement
of the scholar within that world. Our faculty is thus directly involved
in the archaeology of anthropological thought, discovering how the discipline
of anthropology and related social sciences affect and are affected
by broader political agendas.
Within the Department at Northwestern two point of convergence make
connection and collaboration feasible across the fields:
1. Dedicated to original field research. A research focus on world
issues and cases gives an immediate common ground for discussion. The
inherent complexity of human worlds demands an eclectic understanding
of such issues as reproduction, economy, political strategies, and cultural
production that we study. The Department's geographical area and theoretical
foci encourage bridging themes to emerge.
2. Focus on the Anthropology of Complex Societies. The study of complex
societies offers not only a broad range of topics for study by members
of all fields, but above all, a linkage with one another organized around
the study and explanation of the longue duree of societies and cultures
whose consideration illuminates our condition in the present. Expansive
common grounds for intellectual interchange and debate include colonialism/world
systems, human health and reproduction, agricultural change, and cultural
production.
At different temporal and spatial scales, with different methodologies,
and with contrasting theories, the anthropology of complex society studies
how such human groups organize, operate, and change. These investigations
immediately draw our attention to economic relations, social power,
identity, and culture as a highly dynamic phenomenon. To illustrate
how substantive themes emerge to use the different field strengths,
we list three integrative, research problems that our faculty is now
pursuing:
Intergenerational processes of biological and cultural change. Research
focuses on the internal dynamics of the household and how they articulate
with economic and political forces. We study how household members solve
basic problems of survival and replacement. Solutions involve cultural
and social factors wrapped around the biological requirements of hunger,
health, sexuality, and reproduction. Within households individuals meet
daily contingencies, and these actions then have long-term intended
and unintended consequences.
The human landscape: processes of intensification, building, degrading,
and signification. At scales that vary from the space of a family's
home to broad 'natural' environments, humans build their physical world
to provide needed resources, to structure social relations, and to imbue
action with meaning. The landscape contains aspects of 'nature' operating
outside of human control, but the specific nature of those processes
is transformed and directed by human labor. The different uses and meaning
of the landscape fit together in creative and lasting ways that channel
(restrict and promote) forms of social change. Interactions among different
scales of space and time provide for the interface of the different
fields of anthropology.
Cultural practice, material production, and the use of ideology in
the institutionalization of power. This theme links ideology (strategically
created cultural forms) to an external world of performance and objects.
United are actions, spaces, and artifacts in the construction of history
and meaning. We focus on how ideological change takes place both in
the long-term and in the short-term. What is being represented and the
form of its
representation affect its social significance. This leads us to unite
concerns for performance, production, information, and institution in
the operation and continuity of human social action.
Themes can be quite flexible so that hiring can cross borders in surprising
and creative ways to keep our discipline's cutting edge integrative
and holistic, a vision unlike any other discipline in academe.
The operational objective is evident: to construct means by which a
broad anthropological identity can be conceptualized and presented locally
in the world of the departments. At Northwestern five strategies are
being used:
Hiring. Search committees are composed of representatives from several
fields and charged with searching creatively for bridging relationships
based on the established goals of the fields.
The first-year seminars. Incoming graduate students take a year-long
seminar sequence that socializes them as an anthropological cohort.
The seminars draw out the primary contributions that each field makes
to the broader discipline and identify likely grounds for collaboration.
Bridging seminars. Graduate students take a bridging seminar that discusses
how collaboration across fields of anthropology enriches our understanding
of specific anthropological issues. Topics focus on specific integrative
themes. This year’s topic will be “Economic Anthropology
from Ethnographic and Archaeological Perspectives” led by Timothy
Earle (archaeologist) and Karen Tranberg Hansen (a cultural anthropologist).
Previous years seminars have included “ The Anthropology of Food
and Nutrition, led by William Leonard (a biological anthropologist)
and Mary Weismantel (a cultural anthropologist), which surveyed various
anthropological approaches to the study of food, looking at the ways
in which biology and culture interact to influence variations in food
consumption patterns and nutritional well-being, “Everyday Life”,
led by Cynthia Robin (archaeologist) and Jack Sidnell (linguistic anthropology),
“The Media of Culture” led by Timothy Earle (archaeologist)
and William Hanks (linguistic anthropologist), and “World Systems
in Anthropological Perspectives”, led by Robert Launay (cultural
anthropologist) and Gil Stein ( archaeologist).
Colloquia series. Departmental colloquia can focus on a variety of
field specific and integrative themes. The idea is to invite top anthropologists
working on issues relevant to a series' theme to give both a formal
presentation and to hold open discussions on the topics under consideration.
We have been conducting lecture and workshop series tied to biological
anthropology and linguistic anthropology. By discussing some of the
most exciting field specific research directions, these series are helping
to rebuild these fields within our department.
Collaborative research. Both faculty and graduate students are encouraged
to design field-research collaborations that cross established subfield
lines. We desire an ethic of integrated research, in which the specialized
skills of individual scholars can complement each other for a full and
rich understanding of the issues under study. Graduate student committees
are expected to include members from multiple fields.
By building intellectual interchange into the daily practice of our
department, we anticipate that the frontier of a new four-field anthropology
can be explored and developed as a model for our discipline and for
the social sciences more broadly. Such is our goal.
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