Anthropology:
Abandon All Truth Ye Who Enter
by Philip Carl Salzman
The Daily Caller
July 19, 2016
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In the decades after WWII, anthropologists carried out ethnographic
field research in the Middle East inspired by a scientific spirit to
discover the cultures of the region and their dynamics. Among those who
produced sound, grounded research were Fredrik Barth on the Basseri
nomads, William Irons on the Yomut Turkmen, Lois Beck on the Qashqa'i
confederation, William Lancaster on the Rwala Bedouin, and A. S. Bujra on
Yemen. I had the privilege of carrying out field research among the
Baluchi tribes of Iran.
However, anthropologists, including those studying the Middle East,
gradually moved away from a scientific perspective toward a more
subjective and politicized view. They were influenced in part by Edward
Said, who in Orientalism (1978) argued that Western accounts of
the Middle East were fabrications invented to justify imperialist
invasion, colonial imposition, and oppression of local peoples. This
"postcolonial" view blames Western imperialism for myriad
problems worldwide, a view which neglects the cultures and agency of
people around the globe.
This intellectual revolution has infected anthropology (among many
fields) with a dangerous, self-contradictory nihilism that rejects the
possibility of objective Truth toward which we may move and posits many different
truths held by different peoples — all equally valid. Yet they behave as
if their belief in many truths must be treated as The Truth that must not
be questioned.
Anthropologists insist on the relativity of knowledge, except when it
comes to their own statements, which they take to be The Absolute Truth.
One should not, however, expect anthropologists who believe in
"many truths" to encourage a diversity of opinion within their
university departments. Intellectual homogeneity is enforced, with
Marxism, postcolonialism, and radical feminism the principal approved
paths to enlightenment. Classical liberal beliefs in markets, liberty,
and individual rights are verboten.
So, today, is the once-regnant faith in science itself rejected as the
best way of uncovering the truth about anthropologists' subjects. Witchcraft,
oracles, ancient religious systems, voodoo, and just about any
pseudo-science that denies the validity of Western systems of thought are
championed as equally valid paths to knowledge in fields from botany to
medicine. Of course, anthropologists still employ the latest products of
scientific research and live as affluent Westerners, but they do not
claim that the way they live conforms to their beliefs.
This abandonment
of objective methodologies underscores anthropologists' belief that their
discipline is not the science of humankind as upheld by its original
practitioners, but a subjective, political commitment to a
"praxis" that will liberate the world's oppressed. The result
is deplorably partisan, faux "anthropological" accounts by
notoriously partisan writers, such as Palestine, Israel, and the
Politics of Popular Culture, edited by Rebecca L. Stein and Ted
Swedenburg, and Nakba: Palestine, 1948, and the Claims of Memory,
by Ahmad
H. Sa'di and Lila
Abu-Lughod. Yet past and current "praxis" in such places as
the USSR, Eastern Europe, the People's Republic of China, North Korea,
Cambodia, and Cuba, and its consequences for the people concerned, holds
little interest to anthropologists.
The same moral and intellectual incoherence underlies anthropologists'
insistence that they do not study culture and cultures since these are
invalid concepts from a bygone age. Rather, anthropology's mission is the
study of victims and their oppressors. Among the many
"victims," Palestinians are awarded pride of place, their
century of violence against Jews and their public commitment to refuse
any compromise or cooperation with others notwithstanding. Israeli Jews,
on the other hand, are often characterized by anthropologists, using
"postcolonial" Leninist terminology, as "settler
colonialists" even though Jews are the indigenous population of
Israel, including Judea and Samaria (the so-called West Bank), are agents
of no metropolitan home country, and originate as much from the Middle
East, Asia, Africa, and Russia as from Europe and North America.
Such is the inevitable result of contemporary anthropology, which has
jettisoned the objective, scientifically-grounded study of humankind's
cultures in favor of advocating for selected "victims" of
supposed Western perfidy. The outcome of this abandonment of the search
for Truth is not a plethora of "truths," but a regnant false
Truth that reduces scholarship to advocacy and demands blind adherence to
approved yet false narratives. If anthropologists hope to restore the
integrity of their field, they must abandon their intellectually flaccid,
morally corrupt habits and readopt the scientific objectivity toward
their subjects that marked their discipline from its inception.
Philip Carl Salzman is a professor of anthropology at McGill
University and a fellow at the Middle East Forum. This essay was
sponsored by Campus
Watch, a project of the Middle
East Forum.
This
text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is presented as an
integral whole with complete and accurate information provided about its
author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
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