David
Graeber has received abundant praise this year for his new book Bullshit Jobs.
It deserves the attention. For my money, though, the most intellectually
exciting thing Graeber has written in 2018 was the essay he cowrote with David Wengrow in Eurozine, on the alleged origins of inequality and how its (false)
history affects modern policy debates. “How to Change the Course of Human
History” affects no false modesty. Wedding “big history” to radical social
critique, the article offers both a new model of ethnohistorical interpretation
and hope for the future of human societies. Not a lot of scholarship like that
nowadays.
Wengrow and Graeber start by observing the sense of futility bred by modern studies of human social evolution. Jared Diamond, Francis Fukuyama, and their imitators argue that social “progress” is both a one-way street and inseparable from the increasing concentration of wealth and power. Humans allegedly began their history as small, egalitarian bands, but as they developed agriculture, cities, and the rudiments of industry they necessarily embraced forms of specialization bound to enrich some and immiserate others. Moreover, these civilizational advances trapped human beings who developed them, much as a fishing weir snares a fish. Farmers, city-dwellers, or beneficiaries of an industrial revolution cannot abandon these innovations without depriving most of their enlarged population of work or food. As with human individuals, human societies cannot return to their historical childhood, even if doing so could alleviate poverty and inequality. Kings, robber barons, and one-percenters, in this framework, become necessary evils. The only alternatives to Pareto are Malthus or Hobbes.
Wengrow and Graeber start by observing the sense of futility bred by modern studies of human social evolution. Jared Diamond, Francis Fukuyama, and their imitators argue that social “progress” is both a one-way street and inseparable from the increasing concentration of wealth and power. Humans allegedly began their history as small, egalitarian bands, but as they developed agriculture, cities, and the rudiments of industry they necessarily embraced forms of specialization bound to enrich some and immiserate others. Moreover, these civilizational advances trapped human beings who developed them, much as a fishing weir snares a fish. Farmers, city-dwellers, or beneficiaries of an industrial revolution cannot abandon these innovations without depriving most of their enlarged population of work or food. As with human individuals, human societies cannot return to their historical childhood, even if doing so could alleviate poverty and inequality. Kings, robber barons, and one-percenters, in this framework, become necessary evils. The only alternatives to Pareto are Malthus or Hobbes.
The
authors agree that this pessimistic, “realist” view of human history must
appeal to at least some readers. To argue that struggles against inequality are
futile or dangerous is to comfort the comfortable and empower the powerful.
They also demonstrate, I think very persuasively, that this argument has little
basis in historical reality. Go back to the Eurasian Pleistocene and one finds
many of the features of more hierarchical, “civilized” societies: valuable
luxury goods, like ivory beads, buried with (necessarily high-status) children,
“micro-cities” where hunting bands came together to trade and feast and
worship, and even monumental architecture, like the megaliths of Gobekli Tepe (9,000
BCE). Then come forward a few millennia to the early Holocene, and one finds
early agricultural societies who retained their egalitarian social structure,
and who, far from finding themselves caught in a Malthusian trap, were able to
replace horticulture with gathering when it suits their interests. Examine
early urban societies, like the Indus Valley culture and the Sumerians, and one
finds little evidence of armies, personal monuments, or the other trappings of
a political elite. Hunter-gatherer societies could develop gaudy hierarchies,
and farmers and city-dwellers could pull them down. Civilization was not an
antisocial trap but a social opportunity.
Graeber and Wengrow's thought-provoking article made one observation that particularly appealed to me: that societies can develop seasonal, cyclical hierarchies of rank and authority, and that we most commonly associate these shifting modes of social organization with Native Americans. At certain times of the year, usually spring and summer, the Inuit, Lakotas, and Pacific Northwest nations dispersed into small bands in order to fish and hunt. In the colder months, they assembled into large-scale winter meeting houses, massive hunting encampments, and chiefly towns, there to exchange gifts and contract marriages. Among the Inuit, the mobile hunting bands were patriarchal and the winter meetings more egalitarian; among Indians in western North America, the reverse held true. In each case, however, neither cities (or large-scale settlements, if you prefer) nor rulers were permanent parts of the physical and social landscape. This cyclical social pattern also pertained in the Ohio Valley during the Hopewell era (200 BCE to 500 CE). As I learned while writing my recent book, the Hopewell people lived most of the year in dispersed settlements, but assembled part of the year to hold ceremonies and build mounds and monuments for their elite. Their elite may have had considerable economic power, but according to Matthew Coons, commoners appear to have had the means to challenge their authority. The Hopewell culture lasted rather longer than later Native American cultures which built more permanent cities and towns and had less challenge-able ruling classes, like the Mississippian city-states exemplified by Cahokia. Given that the problems Cahokia encountered - resource exhaustion and an increasingly self-absorbed leadership - grew out of its fixed geographic location and fixed hierarchy, the more flexible arrangements of the Hopewellians may have contributed to their comparative longevity.*
* The Mississippian culture as a whole actually lasted for about six centuries, but larger cities had significantly shorter lifespans, about 200 years or so in Cahokia's case. The Ancestral Puebloan culture (900-1300 CE) of western New Mexico is perhaps a better comparative example.
Thanks for saying.
ReplyDeleteSo this is what I don't understand: were the Hopewell/Adena centres actually occupied part of the year or were they just ceremonial centres? I'm actually working on some of these same questions as it happens right now.
The strange thing about both Hopewell and Cahokia is that the people who made them mostly lived in isolated single-family or double-family settlements. Really tiny. This seems to completely vanish later in North American history when you get groups that look more like the familiar bands and tribes: It makes you wonder if people in Hopewell spent most of their time with the same 5-6 people, then would assemble periodically for gigantic feasts, pageants, etc, with maybe thousands of people. It's so different from what's documented later.
But i agree that Hopewell flexibility seems to be more sustainable.
The main thing we're writing about though is how the sequence of events completely defies all the evolutionary schemas later applied. There is nothing remotely like a movement from bands to tribes to chiefdoms to states. There seems this weird Hopewell thing without even bands, people alternating between isolated families and much larger theatrical polities, then you get take-off into Cahokia, where the first city is by far the biggest, explodes into something like a fully-fledged state or empire, then it breaks down into chiefdoms, then those collapse into something like tribes (more like polis-sized cosmological republics in most cases I'm aware of). The missing element would seem to be politics. It's pretty clear later "tribal" republics were reacting against Cahokia or at least the Mississippians in general. Some had pretty explicit myths (like the Cherokee Ani-Kutani). Yet it never occurs to most scholars that social movements with their own ideologies can exist in places where no Europeans are involved.
DG
Thank you for your comment. Hopewell ceremonial sites feature what appear to be temporary dwellings, so we can surmise that people lived there part of the year to undertake maintenance, organize ceremonies, and redistribute goods, then dispersed to their smaller homesteads for the rest of the year. Sources here are my own PEOPLES OF THE INLAND SEA (2018), 16-17, and the essays by Paul Pacheco ("Why Move? Hopewell Sedentism Revisited") and Bradley Lepper ("Ceremonial Landscape of the Newark Earthworks") in Martin Byers and DeeAnn Wymer's HOPEWELL SETTLEMENT PATTERNS, SUBSISTENCE, AND SYMBOLIC LANDSCAPES (Florida, 2010, 37-55 and 97-127.
ReplyDeleteCahokia is a pretty unique place, comparable only to the contemporary Ancestral Puebloan culture in the Southwest. It does seem to have made a big impression on subsequent Native American politics in eastern North America. Like you, I suspect that this was as often as not a negative impression, but Charles Hudson notes (KNIGHTS OF SPAIN, WARRIORS OF THE SUN, 1997) that the chiefdoms encountered by Soto's entrada in 1539-43 bear a very strong resemblance to the Mississippian culture: subordinate castes, temple mounds, large and apparently permanent towns. Some of these chiefdoms (e.g. Mabila) also seemed pretty fragile, insofar as a single adverse military encounter with Soto's men was sufficient to destroy their prestige and trigger a collapse.
Big fan of your work, by the way. DEBT: THE FIRST 5,000 YEARS was the most intellectually exciting book I've read in the last half-dozen years, and my wife and I both loved BULLSHIT JOBS.