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Interview: “Anthropology Is Badly Needed In Eastern Europe”

vytis Social anthropology isn’t (yet) an established discipline in Eastern Europe. In an interview with me, Vytis Ciubrinskas explains why he thinks anthropology is badly needed.

Vytis Ciubrinskas is Head of the Center of Social Anthropology at Vytautas Magnus University in Lithuania and editor of the scientific journal “Lietuvos etnologija: socialines antropologijos ir etnologijos studijos” (“Lithuanian Ethnology: Studies of Social Anthropology and Ethnology”).

Last week, he was in Oslo and lectured at the research program Cultural Complexity in the new Norway (where I work) about identity in post-communist Lithuania.

If you visit Vytis Ciubrinskas’ website you’ll see that his Center of Social Anthropology is part of the sociology department. There’s no Department of Social Anthropology.

He explains:

– Anthropology is not established as a seperate discipline. It belongs to sociology at my university. In many East European countries, anthropology departments are either part of national ethnology, or sociology as in Poland or in the Balkans or together with sociology. This is really a bad situation.

It’s the same situation in the other Baltic countries?

– It’s the same or even worse. We already have a program in social anthropology and we have started teaching, but that’s not the case in Latvia or Estonia. In Poland, the Czech republic and Hungary, anthropology is still a very new thing.

Why?

– Because of the dominance of Volkskunde (“national ethnology” / “folklore studies”). National ethnologists are especially nationally supported: They are dealing with ethnic culture, the soul of the culture (“Volksseele, Volksgeist”). But also archaeology, history, liguistics.

– Another reason: This territory has been a closed society for almost half a century that never took account of global or foreign or cosmopolitan attitudes. Comparative perspectives were not allowed because we had “one system and one truth and one leader”. Always, “the world is wrong and we are right”.

– Anthropology is badly needed because of the prevalence of national ethnologies. These diciplines have their own established voices in the region. Their orientation is very different from that in anthropology departments in Western or Northern Europe whose professionals work in many spheres of public sectors.

– Spreading information about anthropology is very important, especially in Central and Eastern Europe where anthropology is almost unknown or is known as physical anthropology. It’s very important to question the use of self-focused ethnocultural approaches especially where issues of culture, heritage, identity, globalisation are concerned.

What do you mean by self-centered ethnocultural focus?

– Societies in Central and Eastern Europe are open now and live in a new Europe. But we still have with us the inheritance that comes from the approach of a captive mind where “local knowledge and way of life is the best”. Globalisation, multiculturalism, all kinds of new influences are taken as threats rather than challenges.

– Cultural policy bureaucrats listen to the local scholars who say: “Look, the end of the world is near. They are starting Halloween parties instead of continuing our old and deep moral tradition of All Saints and All Souls’ Day. You must pay respect to your ancestors, light a candle on the grave. This is a very important holiday, and suddenly Halloween comes with crazy parties. It’s totally unacceptable. What is to be done?”

– So if we take it seriously and signal like it’s the end of the world, it will be a very ethnocentric attitude.

– In my understanding we need real analyses of everyday life, of life-ways, of identity, of identity politics on multiculturalism and globalism and who can do that? I’m afraid not many local scholars do that because, especially in Humanities, they are very much focused on national heritage, tradition, culture, folklore. They need a comparative, a global perspective. And who can provide that? Sociologists? Psychologists? Politologists? I doubt it. Anthropologists are badly needed.

– We need comparative studies and an international team to come and do work in Lithuania. Interdisciplinary is good but international is even better.

– Lithuania is a fertile research field. Transitionalism is very interesting and important to study and is comparable to postcolonial studies which have identified significant problems in former colonial communities.

– Europe is not explored enough in anthropology. Oceania or Latin America are much better explored than Europe. European anthropology and anthropology at home should be taken more seriously than it is today.

What are the major challenges in anthropology? What should be researched?

– 1) Studies of postcolonialism and post-communism. Westernisation is a big issue in postcolonial and post-communist societies but it has not been explored enough: How does western aid and develoment work, what kind of impact does it have on local populations?

– An example is Ida Knudsen’s researches on EU hygiene standards – how they are accepted and dealt with. It’s somewhat like being at school again with the master prompting you. It’s a new standardisation of your culture. In post-communist countries modernity as such is known. It is not bringing modernity to pre-modern societies, it’s the bringing of standards which are received or accepted in diverse ways.

– Lithuania is a good example. We have the highest rates of suicide in Europe, maybe in the whole world. We have very high rates of dependency on alcohol, attitude of fatalism, racism, frustration and passivity. This could be blamed on problems of rapid change, uncertainty, but at the same time, I think it might have more to do with the introduction of a new standard, a new way of doing things.

– It’s about changing from communism to capitalism and having capitalism not just as an open market but as recipebook. This recipe book syndrome is important to study: How it is accepted? How it is implemented? How does it undermine the old ways? What are the the social consequences?

– 2) Of course anthropology should always be aware of and interested in local knowledge and identity: What is sameness and togetherness in a particular community?

– 3) Antiglobalism. I like very much Jonathan Friedman’s idea. He says that globalism is nothing new but what we have to be aware of is the kinds of changes that take place at home. People might be globals but they have stayed more or less the same. Antiglobalism amounts to new religious movements: ecovillages, new ways of consumption. That’s all new. Globalism in not new, but antiglobalism is, and it’s very inventive.

You’re the editor of “Lietuvos etnologija” (“Lithuanian Ethnology”). What do you think of open access to scholarship so that all articles are online for free for everybody?

– It’s very important I agree, and we’re now on the way to doing that. Very soon you’ll be able to read it. But you’ll need a good Lithuanian-English dictionary. Of course, we do have summaries of all the articles in English.

You can download two papers by Vytis Ciubrinskas:

Vytis Ciubrinskas: Revival Of Tradition For Reconstruction of Identity. Lithuanian Case (pdf)

Vytis Ciubrinskas: Transnational Lithuanian identity: imagined, constructed and contested in diaspora (pdf)

MORE ANTHROPOLOGICAL RESEARCH ABOUT LITHUANIA:

Kristina Sliavaite: When Global Becomes Local: Rave Culture in Lithuania

Kristina Sliavaite: From Pioneers to Target Group: Social Change, Ethnicity and Memory in a Lithuanian Nuclear Power Plant Community

Irmina Matonytë: Elites in Soviet and post-Soviet societies

SEE ALSO:

In Central-Europe and Poland: “I think that anthropology has never been as strong as it is now…”

Doing fieldwork in Eastern Europe – New issue of Anthropology Matters

Researches neo-paganism in an overwhelmingly Catholic society

New issue of Pro Ethnologica: The Russian Speaking Minorities in Estonia and Latvia

The power of dead bodies in Eastern Europe

Book review: East to West Migration: Russian Migrants in Western Europe

Book and papers online: Working towards a global community of anthropologists

vytis

Social anthropology isn't (yet) an established discipline in Eastern Europe. In an interview with me, Vytis Ciubrinskas explains why he thinks anthropology is badly needed.

Vytis Ciubrinskas is Head of the Center of Social Anthropology at Vytautas Magnus University in Lithuania…

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How do low-cost airlines influence how people and money travel?

The International Herald Tribune writes about how European low-cost airlines “are drawing a new map of how people and money travel in Europe”. An example:

Andrzej Majewski, a Pole who works as a thoracic surgeon in Britain, catches a ride to the airport in Wroclaw on Sundays and hops a Ryanair flight to his hospital in Nottingham, England. Most Fridays he commutes home to southwest Poland. The flights cost him about $50 each way. “It takes about three hours, and I’m eating lunch at my house,” Majewski said.

“The low-cost airlines really facilitate a type of hypermobility for the public at large to do anything from leisure to business, to new careers”, Steven Vertovec, a professor of transnational anthropology at Oxford University comments.

But not everyone is happy with Europeans’ mobility. People in countries served by budget airlines complain that British bachelor and bachelorette parties are taking over Eastern European cities like Riga.

“I know about guys who go to Prague for a weekend of cheap beer, prostitutes and fighting. “People there really complain about it — and that’s due to low-cost airline”, Vertovec says.

>> read the whole story in the IHT (link updated)

The article is good PR for RyanAir as it is not mentioned that somebody has to pay for the low prices

Vertovec is director of the Oxford Center on Migration Policy and Society. The center has published lots of working papers online. I’ve written about one of them before “No Pizza without Migrants”: Between the Politics of Identity and Transnationalism by Susanne Wessendorf.

The International Herald Tribune writes about how European low-cost airlines "are drawing a new map of how people and money travel in Europe". An example:

Andrzej Majewski, a Pole who works as a thoracic surgeon in Britain, catches a ride to…

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Doctoral thesis: Towards a transnational Islam

Young muslims are moving from an Islam based on the culture of their homeland to an increasingly transnationally embedded Islam of Muslims from many different countries and cultures. That’s one of the findings in the doctoral thesis by Norwegian anthropologist Christine M. Jacobsen that is now no longer available online. (UPDATE 26.3.2020)

Contributing to an emerging “anthropology of Islam in Europe”, she writes, her thesis is concerned with exploring continuities and discontinuities in religious identities and practices in a context of international migration and globalization. She has conducted fieldwork among youth and students who participate in two Islamic organizations in Oslo.

The situation of belonging to a minority group, she writes, means that young Muslims cannot take their religion for granted, and that they must engage in the redefinition of identity/difference and of Islamic traditions. And in this redefinition, young Muslims increasingly aspire to engage directly with Islamic texts in order to “choose” which position or interpretation to adhere to. They increasingly engage in discussion and debate on issues that were previously mainly an area of scholarly debate.

In order to make this thesis relevant to the broader comparative field of studies of Islam in Europe, Jacobsen draws on insights from studies of young Muslims elsewhere in Europe.

She criticizes the prevailing methodological nationalism in studies on immigrants and migration (the paradigm of the nation-state as the principle organizing unit of society). She writes:

Discussions about integration often ignore distinctions related to e.g. class, generation, gender, and urban processes, and tend to reify the distinction between “Us” (the Norwegian society representing Norwegian values) and “Them” (being the foreigners that must be integrated). Often, such discussions proceed without questioning the premises upon which our understanding of “integration” depends, and the way in which integration is part of a nation-making process.

In research that is based in political-administrative and methodological nationalist perspective, immigrants and the cultural and religious forms they represent tend to be constructed as “social problems” and “deviance” that need to be solved and brought into order through governing processes (Lithman 2004).

An example is the issue of arranged marriage:

Depending on the perspective adopted, arranged marriage might appear as an issue of deviancy among immigrants or as a part of how a majority of mankind organizes its social life. The consequences for anthropology as cultural critique are obviously important. When immigrants and the social and cultural forms they represent are constructed as “social problems” and “deviance”, they can neither allow worthwhile and interesting critiques of “our own society”, nor enlighten us about other human possibilities, to paraphrase Marcus and Fischer.

Within this nationalistic perspective, Islam is usually approached in terms of how it hinders or facilitates the “integration” of “Muslim immigrants” into “Norway” (or other European societies, “the West”). Studies of Muslims in Europe based on what Lithman calls “wonderment over society” seem to be less frequent, she writes:

When framed within the perspective of a nationalist methodology, this endeavour necessarily must result in ethnocentrism. Furthermore, this perspective has certain consequences not only for the description of the social and cultural aspects involved in migration, but also for its moral evaluation and as a basis for policy making.

She prefers “methodological relativism”:

Even though it is impossible to exclude all value-assumptions from research, I find striving towards considering different practices and traditions on their own terms worthwhile. If not, it is difficult to grasp the meaningfulness of social and cultural practices to the people that engage in them, or to see them as alternative ways of organizing human life, rather than just as deviance from a norm.

>> Download the thesis Staying on the straight path: Religious identities and practices among young muslims in Norway by Christine M. Jacobsen (BORA, Bergen Open Research Archive)

For those who read Norwegian: I’ve interviewed Christine M. Jacobsen a few weeks ago, see Doktorgrad på unge norske muslimer: På vei til en transnasjonal islam

LINKS UPDATED 26.3.2020

SEE ALSO:

Andreas Wimmer and Nina Glick Schiller: Methodological nationalism and beyond: Nation building, migration and the social sciences (pdf)

Why the French Don’t Like Headscarves

Muslims in Calcutta: Towards a middle-class & moderation

What does it mean to be Muslim in a secular society? Anthropologist thinks ahead

Islam in Morocco: TV and Internet more important than mosques

Lila Abu-Lughod: It’s time to give up the Western obsession with veiled Muslim women

Young muslims are moving from an Islam based on the culture of their homeland to an increasingly transnationally embedded Islam of Muslims from many different countries and cultures. That's one of the findings in the doctoral thesis by Norwegian…

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Why the French Don’t Like Headscarves

(LINKS UPDATED 11.1.2021) “Why the French Don’t Like Headscarves: Islam, the State and Public Space” is the title of a new book by American anthropologist John R. Bowen. For nearly three years ago, the French government banned headscarves and similar clothing that indicates religious affiliation from public schools.

Bowen writes in the introduction:

French public figures seemed to blame the headscarves for a surprising range of France’s problems including anti-Semitism, Islamic fundamentalism, growing ghettoization in the poor suburbs, and the breakdown of order in the classroom. A vote against headscarves would, we heard, support women battling for freedom in Afghanistan, schoolteachers trying to teach history in Lyon, and all those who wished to reinforce the principles of liberty, equality and fraternity.

He explains:

France has a long-standing tradition of state control and support of religious activity despite its modern laws concerning secularity. We often have the misconception that the state stays out of religious affairs. In fact, the French government pays the salaries of all teachers in private religious schools, it organized a national Islamic body, and it and city governments put a lot of money into building churches and mosques.

But because the Republican political tradition that developed out of the French Revolution of 1789 targeted the privileges of the Catholic Church, many French citizens developed a certain allergy to religions’ symbolism in public, and particularly in schools, a battleground between the Church and the Republic.

From that research, he’s working on another book, titled “Shaping Islam in France,” to be published in 2008, which will examine how French Muslims strive to build a base for their religious lives in a society that views these practices as incompatible with national values.

>> read the whole article on the website of Washington University in St.Louis

>> John R. Bowen: Muslims and Citizens. France’s headscarf controversy (Boston Review February/March 2004)

>> John R. Bowen: Pluralism and Normativity in French Islamic Reasoning (pdf)

>> John R. Bowen: Beyond Migration: Islam as a Transnational Public Space (pdf)

>> John R. Bowen: Does French Islam Have Borders? Dilemmas of Domestication in a Global Religious Field (pdf)

SEE ALSO:

Lila Abu-Lughod: It’s time to give up the Western obsession with veiled Muslim women

France: More and more muslims observe Ramadan

(LINKS UPDATED 11.1.2021) "Why the French Don't Like Headscarves: Islam, the State and Public Space" is the title of a new book by American anthropologist John R. Bowen. For nearly three years ago, the French government banned headscarves and similar…

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For free migration: Open the borders!

Given the continuing massive disparities in wealth between Europe and Africa, immigration is unlikely to stop anytime soon. Remittances sent by migrants are the second most important income source for many countries in the south. Border control is expensive and ineffective. So why not open the borders? Free migration for all?

In his blog On distance, Anthropologist and journalist Joshua Craze discusses some arguments for free migration – to be published in Cafe Babel.

One of the most prominent lobbies to back the idea of opening up all our frontiers is the free-market right:

Free marketeers point out that in 2005 over a third of Europe’s regions were facing a declining labour force. Immigration, they argue, fills this need, and it also fills skills shortages (in both low and high skilled jobs) that will allow our economy to grow.
(…)
Such proposals may seem like a further extension of the dominion of the market: it would be businesses who effectively control the borders they have long since bypassed. However, in another sense such proposals are essentially a vanguard action; they preserve existing notions of citizenship, and immigration follows the model of the German guest worker, or gastarbeiter. (…) They priveledge capital’s need for labour and do not address the humanitarian problems of immigration. As Max Frisch noted of the Turkish gastarbeiter: ‘We called for a workforce, but we got humans.’

The political left forms the other part of the open borders movement:

Raffaele Marchetti argues that we shouldn’t think about open borders in terms of how it can benefit us, but in terms of the universal right to free movement. Why should Europeans be allowed to holiday wherever they want while Africans cannot even come to Europe to work?

Such a proposal has a number of humanitarian advantages. You stop people trafficking and the attendant loss of life and human rights violations, as people would be able to enter the country legitimately. Then there is the massive financial cost of maintaining Fortress Europe which would be saved. A recent report by the International Organisation of Migration shows that five OECD countries spent two-thirds as much on border controls as they did in official development assistance. Removing this boundaries would also mean removing the massive humane cost of people trying to scale the wall and cross the sea to get to Europe.

>> read the whole text by Joshua Craze

Strangely enough, I’ve written a piece about the same topic at the same time (in Norwegian), inspired by an article about a new book by political scientist Jonathon Moses (Norwegian University of Science and Technology). In International Migration: Globalization’s Last Frontier he argues for free mobility.

He adds an economic and historic perspective and shows that free migration helps fighting poverty in a much more effective way than free trade (and development aid).

On his website you can download – among others:

Exit, vote and sovereignty: migration, states and globalization
Increased mobility is shown to improve the responsiveness of governments to citizen demands. In a world characterized by relatively free mobility for other factors of production (and their owners), labor/voters appear to be handicapped by being prisoners of territory.

The Economic Costs to International Labor Restrictions: Revisiting the Empirical Discussion

Two (Short) Moral Arguments for Free Migration

For a good summary for see also Kevin H. O’Rourke (2003): The Era of Free Migration: Lessons for Today

Both Kevin H. O’Rourke and Jonathon Moses remind us of the fact that borders are a relatively new phenomenon and therefore claims for open borders are not unrealistic. According to the book Norsk innvandringshistorie (Norwegian immigration history), the Norwegian government decided in 1870 that borders are outdated, something that belong to despotic regimes.

But O’Rourke stresses in The Era of Free Migration: Lessons for Today the important role of the national state. Labour market regulation (e.g. minimum working ages, the prohibition of night work, limits on the working day or factory inspections) and social insurance (e.g. accident compensation; or unemployment, sickness or old age insurance) are neccessary, otherwise native workers’ living standards would inevitably be eroded by mass immigration (wage dumping / social dumping)

SEE ALSO:

Research: How migration fights poverty

Migration and development – a report from Tonga

Raffaele Marchetti: Migration needs global regulation based on the principles of free movement and universal justice

Liza Schuser: Keeping alive the possibility of a free migration, “open borders” policy is an investment in everyone’s future

Chukwu-Emeka Chikezie: Africans’ initiative, symbolised by diaspora remittance flows, is the key to liberation (part of a larger debate at Opendemocracy.net)

More Global Apartheid? (The South African system came to an end just as the rest of the world was reinventing it in new forms.)

Why borders don’t help – An engaged anthropology of the US-Mexican border

“Anthropologists Should Participate in the Current Immigration Debate”

See also more articles by Joshua Craze in Cafe Babel and SaudiDebate

Given the continuing massive disparities in wealth between Europe and Africa, immigration is unlikely to stop anytime soon. Remittances sent by migrants are the second most important income source for many countries in the south. Border control is expensive and…

Read more