Pierre Clastres

Pierre Clastres
Born (1934-05-11)11 May 1934
Paris, France
Died 29 July 1977(1977-07-29) (aged 43)
Gabriac, France
Fields Anthropology
Institutions
Alma mater University of Sorbonne
Thesis La vie social d'une tribu nomade: les Indiens Guayaki du Paraguay (1965)
Known for
  • Society Against the State
  • Archeology of Violence
Influences
Influenced Gilles Deleuze  · Félix Guattari  · Miguel Abensour

Pierre Clastres (French pronunciation: [klastʁ]; 17 May 1934 – 29 July 1977) was a French anthropologist and ethnologist. He is best known for his contributions to the field of political anthropology, with his fieldwork among the Guayaki in Paraguay and his theory of stateless societies. Seeking an alternative to the hierarchized Western societies, he mostly researched indigenous people in which the power was not considered coercive and chiefs were powerless.

With a background in literature and philosophy, Clastres started studying anthropology with Claude Lévi-Strauss and Alfred Métraux since the 1950s. Between 1963 and 1974 he traveled five times to South America to do fieldwork among the Guaraní, the Chulupi, and the Yanomami. Clastres mostly published essays and, because of his premature death, his work was unfinished and scattered. His signature work is the essay collection Society Against the State (1974) and his bibliography also includes Chronicle of the Guayaki Indians (1972), Le Grand Parler (1974), and Archeology of Violence (1980).

Life and career

Clastres was born on 17 May 1934, in Paris, France.[2] He studied at University of Sorbonne,[3] obtaining a licence in Literature in 1957,[4][5] and a Diplôme d'études supérieures spécialisées in Philosophy in the following year.[4] He went into working with Anthropology after 1956[6] as student of Claude Lévi-Strauss, working at the Laboratory of Social Anthropology of the French National Centre for Scientific Research during the 1960s.[4][7] He was also a student of Alfred Métraux at the École pratique des hautes études (EPHE) in 1959.[8]

Clastres's first published article was released in 1962,[9] a year before Clastres went into an eight-month trip to a Guayaki community in Paraguay with the help of Métraux.[7] The Guayaki's study served as base to an article for Journal de la Société des Américanistes,[10] to his 1965 doctoral thesis in ethnologySocial Life of a Nomadic Tribe: The Guayaki Indians of Paraguay[lower-alpha 1]—,[4][5] to "The Bow and the Basket", as well as to his first book, Chronicle of the Guayaki Indians (1972).[10]

Clastres was student of the anthropologists Alfred Métraux (left) and Claude Lévi-Strauss, whose ideas influenced him.

In 1965 Clastres returned to Paraguay and he met the Guaraní—this rencontre led him to write Le Grand Parler (1974).[10] In 1966 and 1968 Clastres went into expeditions to Paraguayan groups of Chulupi people in the Gran Chaco region.[10] This experience was used to produce the essays "What Makes Indians Laugh" and "Sorrows of the Savage Warrior."[10] In his fourth travel Clastres observed the Venezuelan Yanomami from 1970 to 1971 and wrote "The Last Frontier".[11] He briefly visited the Guaraní which migrated from Paraguay to Brazil in his last mission in 1974.[11]

In 1971 he became lecturer at the fifth section of the EPHE, and was promoted to director of studies of the religion and societies of South American Indians in October 1975.[5] That same year he left his office as researcher of the Laboratory of Social Anthropology—which he occupied since 1961—after conflicts over Lévi-Strauss's theories.[5][12] In 1977 he took in part in the establishment of the journal Libre alongside the former members of Socialisme ou Barbarie Miguel Abensour, Cornelius Castoriadis, Marcel Gauchet, Claude Lefort and Maurice Luciani.[13] Later that year, Clastres, aged 43, died in Gabriac, Lozère, on 29 July, in a car accident.[2][13]

Works

Chronicle of the Guayaki Indians

Originally published in France by Plon in 1972 under the title Chronique des indiens Guayaki: ce que que savent les Aché, chasseurs nomades du Paraguay (Chronicle of the Guayaki Indians: The Knowledge of the Aché Hunter Nomads of Paraguay), it was Clastres's first book.[14] He was interested on Guayaki because there were a few researches on them since Alfredo Stroessner's dictatorship forced them to live under territorial restriction and launched a pacifying campaign between 1959 and 1962.[7][15] In the book, the author describes Guayaki culture with a focus on their cycle of life and their "daily struggles for survival."[15] He describes their mores on rites of passage, marriage, hunting, warfare, and death,[16] as well as their relation with non-Indian people and nature.[17] In 1976 Paul Auster, then a "penniless unknown", translated the book into English but it was only published in 1998 by Zone Books.[16][17] Auster translated the work because he was fascinated by Clastres's prose, which "seemed to combine a poet's temperament with a philosopher's depth of mind."[7]

Chronicle of the Guayaki Indians's literary qualities attracted novelist Paul Auster; critics, however, qualified it as a "romantic" work.

Although its literary qualities have been what attracted Auster,[7] the work has been criticized as "romantic".[16][18] Anthropologist Clifford Geertz said Clastres had a "Rousseauian primitivism, the view that 'savages' are radically different from us, more authentic than us, morally superior to us, and need only to be protected, presumably by us, from our greed and cruelty."[16] Bartholomew Dean, writing for the journal Anthropology Today, declared, "Clastres' ahistoricism, rhetorical romanticism, and museumifaction sadly obscures the ongoing challenges facing indigenous peoples like the Guayaki."[18]

In opposition to Geertz and Dean, David Rains Wallace said it was an "unsettling" work because it "is not quite the nostalgic view of primitive life that now prevails in literary circles."[17] Wallace asserted Clastres's "might have misinterpreted" the Guayaki's relation with nature because "he was predisposed to see stronger oppositions between culture and nature" as a Structuralist. However, he wrote "Whatever the validity ... of Clastres' interpretation of Guayaki thought, his evocation of their lost lives has great charm, an attraction that arises automatically from our civilized fascination with wild people who seem so strange at first, dodging naked through the forest, but who prove to be so much like us in feelings if not in thought and habits."[19]

In Anthropology Today, Jon Abbink explained the historical context in which Clastres wrote the book and argued, "in presenting them as 'indgines' with specific cultural values and identity, he has also tried to ground their presence and their historical rights".[20] Abbink also refused the idea it had not a critical perspective; Clastres's focus on the problems Western society could bring to the Guayaki is against "the arrogant idea ... that they should be reformed in our image and respond to our models of social and economic life".[20]

Society Against the State

Considered his major work[21][22] for introducing the concept of "Society against the State",[23] La Société contre l'État. Recherches d'anthropologie politique was first published by Les Éditions de Minuit in 1974.[24] When it was first translated by Urizen Books in 1977 as Society Against the State: The Leader as Servant and the Human Uses of Power Among the Indians of the Americas, however, it did not received major attention.[25] In 1989, Zone Books republished it as Society Against the State: Essays in Political Anthropology.[26] It is a collection of eleven essays: "Copernicus and the Savages", "Exchange and Power: Philosophy of the Indian Chieftainship", "Independence and Exogamy", "Elements of Amerindian Demography", "The Bow and the Basket", "What Makes Indians Laugh", "The Duty to Speak", "Prophets in the Jungle", "Of the One Without the Many", "Of Torture in Primitive Societies", and the title article "Society Against the State".[27]

"Exchange and Power" was originally published in the journal L'Homme in 1962.[9] In the same journal were published "Independence and Exogamy" in 1963,[5] "The Bow and the Basket" in 1966,[28] "Elements of Amerindian Demography" and "Of Torture in Primitive Societies" in 1973.[29][30] "What Makes Indians Laugh" was originally published in Les Temps modernes in 1967,[10] and "Copernicus and the Savages" was published in Critique in 1969.[29] "Prophets in the Jungle" and "Of the One Without the Many" were both published in L'Éphémère in 1969 and 1972 respectively.[29] In 1973, "The Duty to Speak" was released on Nouvelle Revue de Psychanalyse.[29]

Le Grand Parler

In France, Le Grand Parler. Mythes et chants sacrés des Indiens Guaraní was published by Éditions du Seuil in 1974.[29] The book was never officially translated into English; Moyn calls it The Great Speech: Myths and Sacred Chants of the Guarani Indians,[21] while The Routledge Dictionary of Anthropologists referred to it as The Oral Treasury: Myths and Sacred Song of the Guarani Indians.[22] Clastres had the help of Paraguayan ethnologist León Cadogan to come in contact with the Guaraní and to translate his ethnographic material.[21] In the book, the focus was towards the "beautiful words" in the paeans they used to worship their gods.[10][21]

Archeology of Violence

Recherches d'anthropologie politique, posthumously published in France by Éditions du Seuil in 1980, was first translated into English by Semiotext(e) in 1994 as Archeology of Violence.[21][31] The book collects the chapters of a work Clastres started writing before his death—the two last chapters of Archeology of Violence[32]—and Clastres's last essays.[33] Ranging from articles about ethnocide and shamanism to "primitive" power, economy and war,[33] it is composed by twelve essays: "The Last Frontier", "Savage Ethnography", "The Highpoint of the Cruise", "Of Ethnocide", "Myths and Rites of South American Indians", "Power in Primitive Societies", "Freedom, Misfortune, the Unnameable", "Primitive Economy", "The Return to Enlightenment", "Marxists and Their Anthropology", "Archeology of Violence: War in Primitive Societies", and "Sorrows of the Savage Warrior".[34]

"The Last Frontier" and "The Highpoint of the Cruise" were originally published in Les Temps modernes in 1971.[35] "Savage Ethnography" and "Of Ethnocide" were published in L'Homme in 1969 and 1974 respectively.[29] For Flammarion's Dictionnaire des mythologies et des religions (1981), Clastres wrote "Myths and Rites of South American Indians".[36] Interrogations was the journal in which "Power in Primitive Societies" was released in 1976.[29] "Freedom, Misfortune, the Unnameable" was written for a scolary edition of Étienne de La Boétie's Discourse on Voluntary Servitude.[37][38][39] "Primitive Economy" was the title given to the preface Clastres wrote for the French edition of Marshall Sahlins's Stone Age Economics.[36] "The Return to Enlightenment" was released in Revue Française de Science politique in 1977.[29] Both "Archeology of Violence: War in Primitive Societies" and "Sorrows of the Savage Warrior" were published in Libre in 1977,[29] and "Marxists and Their Anthropology" was published on the same journal in 1978.[40]

Thought

Initially a member of the Union of Communist Students with influences from the libertarian socialist group Socialisme ou Barbarie,[41] Clastres became disenchanted with Communism after the raising of Stalinism and abandoned the French Communist Party in 1956,[23] seeking for a new point of view.[1] In François Dosse's words, for Clastres and other adherents of Lévi-Strauss's Structural anthropology, "it was a matter of locating societies that had been sheltered from the unitary map of Hegelian Marxist thinking, societies that were not classified in Stalinist handbooks."[1] Although initially adept of Structuralism, Abensour wrote that "Clastres is neither Structuralist, nor Marxist."[11] Similarly, Eduardo Viveiros de Castro declared Society Against the State and Archeology of Violence can be considered "the chapters of a virtual book that could be named Neither Marxism nor Structuralism."[42] For Clastres, in Viveiros de Castro's words, "both privileged economic rationality and suppressed political intentionality."[42]

According to Samuel Moyn, Clastres's first article, "Exchange and Power", "exhibited a vestigial structuralism" that he would abandon on subsequent essays.[21] On "Marxists and Their Anthropology" Clastres criticised structuralist perspective on myth and kinship because it ignores their place of production—the society.[43] He said that, for structuralism, kinship only has the function to prohibit incest. "This function of kinship explains that men are not animals, [but] does not explain how primitive man is a particular man." It neglects that "kinship ties fulfill a determined function, inherent in primitive society as such, that is, an undivided society made up of equals: kinship, society, equality, even combat."[44] On myths, Clastres said, "The rite is the religious mediation between myth and society: but, for structuralist analysis, the difficulty stems from the fact that rites do not reflect upon each other. It is impossible to reflect upon them. Thus, exit the rite, and with it, society."[45]

With Structuralism's crisis in the later 1960s, Marxist anthropology became an alternative to it.[40] Clastres, however, was critical of it because Marxism was developed on the context of capitalist societies and anthropologists were using it to analyse non-capitalist societies.[46] On Clastres's perspective, according to Viveiros de Castro, "historical materialism was ethnocentric: it considered production the truth of society and labor the essence of the human condition."[42] However, it is not true for primitive societies since they live in a subsistence economy, in which not only they do not have to produce an economic excess but they refuse to do it.[47] In opposition to Marxist's economic determinism, for Clastres, politics was not superstructure; instead it was sui generis, which enabled Amerindian societies to refuse power and statehood.[48] Clastres wrote,

When, in primitive society, the economic dynamic lends itself to definition as a distinct and autonomous domain, when the activity of production becomes alienated, accountable labor, levied by men who will enjoy the fruits of that labor, what has come to pass is that society has been divided into rulers and ruled ... Society's major division ... is the new vertical ordering of things between a base and a summit; it is the great political cleavage between those who hold the force ... and those subject to that force. The political relation of power precedes and founds the economic relation of exploration. Alienation is political before it is economic; power precedes labor; the economic derives from the political; the emergence of the State determines the advent of classes.

Clastres, "Society Against the State"[49]

In refusing both Structuralism and Marxism, Clastres, in Moyn's words, "presented his own 'political anthropology' as the more plausible sequel or complement to structuralist analysis."[40]

On power and coercion

In his 1969 article "Copernicus and the Savages" Clastres reviewed J. W. Lapierre's Essai sur le fondement du pouvoir politique, in which he said primitive societies were societies without power based on Max Weber's "conception of power as monopoly of State".[50] Clastres, however, argued that power does not imply coercion nor violence, and proposed a "Copernican revolution"[50] on political anthropology: "In order to escape the attraction of its native earth and attain real freedom of thought, in order to pull itself away from the facts of natural history in which it continues to flounder, reflection on power must effect a 'heliocentric' conversion."[51]

In another essay, "Exchange and Power", he argued that South American Indian chieftains were powerless chiefs; they were chosen on the basis of their oratorical talent.[52] And while they have the exclusive right to be polygamous, they have to be generous and offer gifts to their people.[52] However, it was not an exchange: they give and receive each independently; Clastres wrote, "this relationship, by denying these elements an exchange value at the group level, institutes the political sphere not only as external to the structure of the group, but further still, as negating that structure: power is contrary to the group, and the rejection of reciprocity, as the ontological dimension of society, is the rejection of society itself."[53] Clastres then concluded that "the advent of power, such as it is, presents itself to these societies as the very means for nullifying that power."[53] In Le Grand Parler, he argued that "the society itself, not its leader, is the real site of power" and then they can avoid the concentration of power.[22]

On torture and war

On their struggle against the State, on keeping their society an egalitarian one, however, they use violent methods: torture and war.[54] Moyn said that Clastres "reinterpret[ed] the violence in primitive society as internal and essential to its selfimmunization against the rise of the state" and "compare[d] it favorably to the grandiose horrors of the statist, modern world."[30] To the first topic, he dedicated "Of Torture in Primitive Societies"; Clastres did not think on it as cruel practice and using Soviet Union penal tattoos on Anatoly Marchenko as example, Clastres affirmed: "It is proof of their admirable depth of mind that the Savages knew all that ahead of time, and took care, at the cost of a terrible cruelty, to prevent the advent of a more terrifying cruelty."[55] Instead he argued torture in rites of passage had the function of prohibiting inequality:

The law they come to know in pain is the law of primitive society, which says to everyone: You are worth no more than anyone else; you are worth no less than anyone else. The law, inscribed on bodies, expresses primitive society's refusal to run the risk of division, the risk of a power separate from society itself, a power that would escape its control. Primitive law, cruelly taught, is a prohibition of inequality that each person will remember.

Clastres, "Of Torture in Primitive Societies"[30]

For its perspective on war, Archeology of Violence was said to be "an anti-Hobbes book" (left).[56] However, it also criticized Engels's perspective on the origin of the State,[57] and his idea of State as the ultimate destiny of society.[58] It would lead it to be described as "more anti-Engels, a manifesto against the forced continuism of World History".[56]

On a similar fashion, Clastres argued that war could not be seen as problem but that it had a political reason.[59] He pointed it was not a constant state of war like the Hobbesian proposition but that it occurred only between different groups.[60] He argued that internal war was purposeful and kept the group segmented, non-hierarchized;[60] according to Viveiros de Castro: "perpetual war was a mode of controlling both the temptation to control and the risk of being controlled. War keeps opposing the State, but the crucial difference for Clastres is that sociality is on the side of war, not of the sovereign."[56] Clastres stated:

For [Hobbes], the social link institutes itself between men due to "a common Power to keep them all in awe:" the State is against the war. What does primitive society as a sociological space of permanent war tell us in counter-point? It repeats Hobbes's discourse by reversing it; it proclaims that the machine of dispersion functions against the machine of unification; it tells us that war is against the State.

Clastres, "Archeology of Violence: War in Primitive Societies"[61]

On the State

For Clastres, primitive societies possessed a "sense of democracy and taste for equality," and thus intentionally avoid the arise of a State.[53] And that is why this societies are not merely characterized as societies without a State, but societies against the State.[53] Viveiros de Castro explained the meaning of "Society against the State" as "a modality of collective life based on the symbolic neutralization of political authority and the structural inhibition of ever-present tendencies to convert power, wealth and prestige into coercion, inequality and exploitation."[42] By affirming it, Clastres criticised both the evolutionist and Marxist ("especially Engelsian") notion that the State would be a necessity and the ultimate destiny in all societies.[48][58] For him, the State does not emerge because of the complexification of productive or political forces but because it rises when a community reaches a certain number of members.[62]

On the other hand, his vision of the primitive societies without conflict was deemed "romantic" by critics such as Marcus Colchester and Moyn.[48][63] Moyn wrote, "Many took Clastres's own words"—as in the affimation that Amerindian societies "could predict the future" and avoid State—"to convict him of primitivism."[64] Moyn asserted:

Clastres's romanticized vision of society against the state not only failed to fulfill the primary need of his (but not only his) time—a theory of democratization in which society and state are complementary—but imposed an obstacle to its fulfillment. ... [T]he most evident political implication of Clastres's arguments—though at the time and since they have proved attractive to anarchists—is a kind of paralyzed mourning. It intended to break fundamentally with Marxism, but Clastres's work nevertheless shared the implication of Marxist theory that the institutionalization of freedom is to be found anywhere but through reform of the lineaments of freedom in what already exists. It ruled out Marxist utopianism as excessively continuous with the present statist order, only to replace it with primitivist nostalgia or exoticist longing.

Moyn, "Of Savagery and Civil Society"[63]

Legacy

He was a major influence for Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari's Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus.[65][66]

Selected works

See also

References

Notes

  1. The title used is the translation by Bowman in The Routledge Dictionary of Anthropologists. Its original title is La vie social d'une tribu nomade: les Indiens Guayaki du Paraguay.[4]

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 Moyn 2004, p. 57.
  2. 1 2 BnF.
  3. Dykes 2005, p. 122.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 Gaillard 2004, p. 310.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Cartry 1978, p. 44.
  6. Plot 2013, p. 51.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 Moyn 2004, p. 61.
  8. Monnier 2003, p. 22.
  9. 1 2 Moyn 2004, p. 58.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Abensour 2007, p. 52.
  11. 1 2 3 Abensour 2007, p. 53.
  12. Glowczewski 2011, p. 87.
  13. 1 2 Delacampagne 1997, p. 103.
  14. Gaillard 2004, p. 310-311.
  15. 1 2 Dean 1999, p. 9.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Geertz 1998, p. 69.
  17. 1 2 3 Wallace 1998, p. 1.
  18. 1 2 Dean 1999, p. 10.
  19. Wallace 1998, p. 2.
  20. 1 2 Abbink 1999.
  21. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Moyn 2004, p. 62.
  22. 1 2 3 Gaillard 2004, p. 311.
  23. 1 2 Viveiros de Castro 2010, p. 10.
  24. Plot 2013, p. 67.
  25. Geertz 1998, p. 72.
  26. Clastres 1989.
  27. Clastres 1989, "Contents".
  28. Abensour 2007, p. 90.
  29. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Cartry 1978, p. 45.
  30. 1 2 3 Moyn 2004, p. 67.
  31. Clastres 2010.
  32. Clastres 2010, p. 326.
  33. 1 2 MIT Press.
  34. Clastres 2010, "Contents".
  35. Abensour 2007, p. 318.
  36. 1 2 Abensour 2007, p. 319.
  37. Plot 2013, p. 22.
  38. Curtis 2000, p. XV.
  39. Curtis 2000, p. XXXII.
  40. 1 2 3 Moyn 2004, p. 63.
  41. Gottraux 1997, p. 205.
  42. 1 2 3 4 Viveiros de Castro 2010, p. 12.
  43. Abensour 2007, p. 54.
  44. Clastres 2010, p. 223.
  45. Clastres 2010, p. 224.
  46. Abensour 2007, p. 54-56.
  47. Clastres 1989, p. 195.
  48. 1 2 3 Barth et al. 2010, p. 237.
  49. Clastres 1989, p. 198.
  50. 1 2 Moyn 2004, p. 64.
  51. Moyn 2004, p. 65.
  52. 1 2 Moyn 2004, p. 59.
  53. 1 2 3 4 Moyn 2004, p. 60.
  54. Moyn 2004, p. 66-67.
  55. Moyn 2004, p. 68.
  56. 1 2 3 Viveiros de Castro 2010, p. 13.
  57. Moyn 2004, p. 77.
  58. 1 2 Clastres 2010, p. 167-168.
  59. Moyn 2004, p. 69-70.
  60. 1 2 Moyn 2004, p. 70.
  61. Clastres 2010, p. 277.
  62. Dosse 2010, p. 261.
  63. 1 2 Moyn 2004, p. 78.
  64. Plot 2013, p. 56.
  65. Viveiros de Castro 2010, p. 34.
  66. Bogue 2007, p. 149.

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

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