{"title":"Classification revisited: On time, methodology and position in decolonizing anthropology","authors":"P. Pels","doi":"10.1177/14634996211011749","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Renewed calls for decolonizing anthropology in the 21st century raise the question of what work earlier waves of decolonization since the 1960s have left undone. Some of this work should focus on the classification of human differences, which figured prominently in all phases of the discipline’s history: as a methodology in its racist phases, as an object of study during its late colonial phase of professionalization, as self-critical reflexivity in the 1980s and 1990s, and as a renewed critique in the 21st century. Can a universal methodology of studying classifications of human kinds arise from the discipline’s past of colonial stereotyping? I argue affirmatively, through an approach that recognizes time as the epistemic condition that connects past and present positions to present and future methodologies. Firstly, my analysis distinguishes the parochial embedding in colonial culture of Durkheim and Mauss’ ideas about classification from their more universal intentions. This is then developed into a threefold reflexive and timeful methodology of studying classification’s nominal-descriptive, constructive, and interventionist dimensions—a process of adding temporality to the study of classification. Subsequently, Anténor Firmin’s 19th-century critique of racial classifications, and W. E. B. Du Bois’s theory of double consciousness help to show how this threefold methodology addresses the insufficiently theorized process of being classified and discriminated against through racial categories wielded by the powers that be. These arguments radicalize the essay’s timeful perspective by concluding that we need to avoid modernist uses of time as classification and adopt the aforementioned threefold methodology in order to put time in classifications of human kinds. This reverses modern positivism’s subordination to methodological rules of the epistemic conditions posed by contingent history and shows instead that the universal goals of methodology should be understood as a future ideal.","PeriodicalId":51554,"journal":{"name":"Anthropological Theory","volume":"53 1","pages":"78 - 101"},"PeriodicalIF":1.1000,"publicationDate":"2021-06-29","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1177/14634996211011749","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Anthropological Theory","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/14634996211011749","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Renewed calls for decolonizing anthropology in the 21st century raise the question of what work earlier waves of decolonization since the 1960s have left undone. Some of this work should focus on the classification of human differences, which figured prominently in all phases of the discipline’s history: as a methodology in its racist phases, as an object of study during its late colonial phase of professionalization, as self-critical reflexivity in the 1980s and 1990s, and as a renewed critique in the 21st century. Can a universal methodology of studying classifications of human kinds arise from the discipline’s past of colonial stereotyping? I argue affirmatively, through an approach that recognizes time as the epistemic condition that connects past and present positions to present and future methodologies. Firstly, my analysis distinguishes the parochial embedding in colonial culture of Durkheim and Mauss’ ideas about classification from their more universal intentions. This is then developed into a threefold reflexive and timeful methodology of studying classification’s nominal-descriptive, constructive, and interventionist dimensions—a process of adding temporality to the study of classification. Subsequently, Anténor Firmin’s 19th-century critique of racial classifications, and W. E. B. Du Bois’s theory of double consciousness help to show how this threefold methodology addresses the insufficiently theorized process of being classified and discriminated against through racial categories wielded by the powers that be. These arguments radicalize the essay’s timeful perspective by concluding that we need to avoid modernist uses of time as classification and adopt the aforementioned threefold methodology in order to put time in classifications of human kinds. This reverses modern positivism’s subordination to methodological rules of the epistemic conditions posed by contingent history and shows instead that the universal goals of methodology should be understood as a future ideal.
21世纪对非殖民化人类学的重新呼吁提出了一个问题,即自20世纪60年代以来的早期非殖民化浪潮中有哪些工作没有完成。其中一些工作应该关注人类差异的分类,这在该学科历史的所有阶段都占有突出地位:作为种族主义阶段的方法论,作为专业化后期殖民阶段的研究对象,作为20世纪80年代和90年代的自我批判反思性,以及作为21世纪的新批判。一种研究人类种类分类的普遍方法能否从该学科过去的殖民刻板印象中产生?我肯定地说,通过一种方法,承认时间是连接过去和现在的立场,现在和未来的方法的认识条件。首先,我的分析区分了迪尔凯姆和莫斯关于分类的思想在殖民文化中的狭隘嵌入与其更普遍的意图。然后,这被发展成研究分类的名义描述性、建设性和干预性维度的三重反思性和时效性方法论,这是一个为分类研究增加时间性的过程。随后,antsamonor Firmin在19世纪对种族分类的批判,以及W. E. B. Du Bois的双重意识理论,都有助于展示这种三重方法是如何解决被权力所运用的种族分类和歧视的不充分的理论化过程的。这些论点通过得出结论,我们需要避免现代主义者使用时间作为分类,并采用上述三种方法,以便将时间放在人类种类的分类中,从而激进了文章的时间观点。这扭转了现代实证主义从属于偶然历史所构成的认识条件的方法论规则,而是表明方法论的普遍目标应该被理解为未来的理想。
期刊介绍:
Anthropological Theory is an international peer reviewed journal seeking to strengthen anthropological theorizing in different areas of the world. This is an exciting forum for new insights into theoretical issues in anthropology and more broadly, social theory. Anthropological Theory publishes articles engaging with a variety of theoretical debates in areas including: * marxism * feminism * political philosophy * historical sociology * hermeneutics * critical theory * philosophy of science * biological anthropology * archaeology