search expand

David Graeber: There never was a West! Democracy as Interstitial Cosmopolitanism

(LINKS UPDATED 20.8.2020) Recently, the terms “Western civilisation” or “Western values” have been used in opposition to regimes mainly in the Middle East. But how fruitful is this notion of “the West”? In his keynote speech at the conference Cosmopolitanism and Anthropology, David Graeber showed that this idea is a kind of Othering: It makes artificial gaps between people that have more in common than supposed.

His deconstruction of the West resembels earlier deconstructions of the National (what traditionally has been considered as “typical Norwegian” is rather the result of migration and influences from other countries).

In his paper that he presented on the conference, Graeber writes:

If you examine these terms more closely, however, it becomes obvious that all these “Western” objects are the products of endless entanglements. “Western science” was patched together out of discoveries made on many continents, and is now largely produced by non- Westerners. “Western consumer goods” were always drawn from materials taken from all over the world, many explicitly imitated Asian products, and nowadays, most are produced in China.
(…)
As European states expanded and the Atlantic system came to encompass the world, all sorts of global influences appear to have coalesced in European capitals, and to have been reabsorbed within the tradition that eventually came to be known as “Western”.
(…)
Can we say the same of “Western freedoms”? The reader can probably guess what my answer is likely to be.

The idea of a superior “Western civilisation” is a product of colonialism. But as he says:

Opposition to European expansion in much of the world, even quite early on, appears to have been carried out in the name of “Western values” that the Europeans in question did not yet even have.

Graeber mainly used the notion of democracy as a Western concept as an example:

Almost everyone who writes on the subject assumes “democracy” is a “Western” concept begins its history in ancient Athens, and that what 18th and 19th century politicians began reviving in Western Europe and North America was essentially the same thing.

(…)

Democratic practices-processes of egalitarian decision-making-however occur pretty much anywhere, and are not peculiar to any one given
“civilization”, culture, or tradition.

We should according to Graeber treat the history of “democracy” as more than just the history of the word “democracy”:

If democracy is simply a matter of communities managing their own affairs through an open and relatively egalitarian process of public discussion, there is no reason why egalitarian forms of decision-making in rural communities in Africa or Brazil should not be at least as worthy of the name as the constitutional systems that govern most nation-states today-and in many cases, probably a good deal more so.

(…)

Rather than seeing Indian, or Malagasy, or Tswana, or Maya claims to being part of an inherently democratic tradition as an attempt to ape the West, it seems to me, we are looking at different aspects of the same planetary process: a crystallization of longstanding democratic practices in the formation of a global system, in which ideas were flying back and forth in all directions, and the gradual, usually grudging adoption of some by ruling elites.

Yet why have these procedures not been considered as “democratic.” The main reason in Graebers view: In these assemblies, things never actually came to a vote! Rather, they preferred “the apparently much more difficult task” of coming to decisions “that no one finds so violently objectionable that they are not willing at least assent”. It is this form of participatory democracy that social movements around the world are trying to revive!

Graeber also discusses the “coercive nature of the state” and the contradictions that democratic constitutions are founded on. He refers to Walter Benjamin (1978) who pointed out “that any legal order that claims a monopoly of the use of violence has to be founded by some power other than itself, which inevitably means, by acts that were illegal according to whatever system of law came before it”.

And about Ancient Greece and democracy:

It is of obvious relevance that Ancient Greece was one of the most competitive societies known to history. It was a society that tended to make everything into a public contest, from athletics to philosophy or tragic drama or just about anything else. So it might not seem entirely surprising they made political decision-making into a public contest as well. Even more crucial though was the fact that decisions were made by a populace in arms.

UPDATE: The whole text is now available in The Anarchist Library: There Never Was a West Or, Democracy Emerges From the Spaces In Between

SEE ALSO:

Amartya Sen: Democracy Isn’t ‘Western’ this text was also debated on Savage Minds

Amartya Sen: Democracy as a Universal Value (pdf) (Journal of Democracy 10.3 (1999) 3-17)

David Graeber: Reinventing Democracy

Review of Graeber’s book: Fragments of an Anarchist Anthropology

Cosmopolitanism and Anthropology – What’s the point of anthropology conferences?

(LINKS UPDATED 20.8.2020) Recently, the terms "Western civilisation" or "Western values" have been used in opposition to regimes mainly in the Middle East. But how fruitful is this notion of "the West"? In his keynote speech at the conference Cosmopolitanism…

Read more

Deep Thoughts – new anthropology blog by Denise Carter

Is there life after a PhD? and Internet Nicknames – what’s in a name? are the titles of the first entries in a new anthropology blog by Denise Carter.

She has recently completed her PhD in Social Anthropology at the University of Hull, UK. Many might know her as frequent poster in anthropology email-lists. She’s particularily interested in internet and its effect on our daily lives. Her doctoral research is an ethnographic account of my three years living and working in a virtual community.

>> continue to Denise Carter’s blog

Her blog is included in the overviews over anthropology blogs http://www.antropologi.info/blog/ and http://www.antropologi.info/feeds/anthropology

Is there life after a PhD? and Internet Nicknames – what’s in a name? are the titles of the first entries in a new anthropology blog by Denise Carter.

She has recently completed her PhD in Social Anthropology at the…

Read more

Skrev magisteroppgave om fanatiske fugletittere

De slipper alt, slenger seg i bilen og kjører over hele landet for å se en sjelden fugl. Per Samuelson (Lunds Universitet) har skrevet en magisteroppgave i sosialantropologi om ekstreme fugletittere i Club 3000, skriver Norrbottens Kuriren.

Mange av de 2.500 medlemmerne i Club 300 har gjort fugletitting til en sport og livsstil:

Artjakten kräver en personsökare och piper den om en udda fågel, då ger man sig i väg på ett ”drag”. Omgående.

(…)

– De är schyssta, normala killar, hävdar Per Samuelson.
Men de drivs av en passion.
– De är väldigt passionerade, och vissa av dem är mer passionerade än andra. Det tar sig en del extrema uttryck, som att springa ifrån 50-årsfesten eller jobbet. Jag känner till skådare i Skåne som flugit upp till norra delen av Tornedalen för att eventuellt se blåstjärtar, säger Per Samuelson.

(…)

Passionen kan bli tärande.
– Tävlingsinslaget gör att de måste åka på varje drag, de måste se varje ny fågel – annars halkar de efter. Det kan uppfattas som en mörk del.

Fugletittingen er også noe sosialt. Per Samuelsson har oppdaget endringer når det gjelder kjønn:

– Det kan vara en manlig fristad. Men på senare år har det kommit in allt fler tjejer i verksamheten och jag tror att det stereotypt manliga så småningom kommer att mattas av.

>> les hele saken i Norrbotten-Kuriren

>> last ned hele oppgaven (pdf)

De slipper alt, slenger seg i bilen og kjører over hele landet for å se en sjelden fugl. Per Samuelson (Lunds Universitet) har skrevet en magisteroppgave i sosialantropologi om ekstreme fugletittere i Club 3000, skriver Norrbottens Kuriren.

Mange av de 2.500…

Read more

Rapport: Diskriminering innen utdanningssystemet motvirker integrering

Utdanningssystemet er ekskluderende. Det forsterker skillene mellom svenske elever (oppfattes som “normale”) og innvandrerelver (sett på som “unormale” og “problematiske”). Denne strukturelle diskrimineringen motvirker integreringen av elever med minoritetsbakgrunn. Dette fastslår den nylig publiserte statlige utredningen “Utbildningens dilemma: demokratiska ideal och andrafierande praxis”.

I Dagens Nyheter oppsummerer utrederne Masoud Kamali og Lena Sawyer (antropolog) rapporten. Her noen utdrag:

Tyvärr finns det en tendens hos lärarna att, oftast omedvetet, konstruera en idealtypisk och normativ “svenskhet” i form av “den svenska eleven” som oftast ställs i motsatsförhållande till elever med invandrarbakgrund. Något som leder till att elever med invandrarbakgrund gestaltas och kategoriseras som problem.

(…)

En del lärare och övrig skolpersonal kopplar i praktiken demokratin till att vara en uteslutande “svensk” egenskap. Det bygger på det etablerade vi-och-dom tänkandet där elever med invandrarbakgrund betraktas som “förändringsobjekt” som “saknar” nödvändiga egenskaper för att kunna verka i ett demokratiskt samhälle och ta till sig den “svenska värdegrunden”.

(…)

Även deklarationen om en “mångkulturell skola” har i många fall motverkat sitt syfte. Genom en “mångkulturell policy” reduceras eleverna med invandrar- och minoritetsbakgrund till “kulturella varelser” och tilldelas specifika “kulturella egenskaper” som förstärker föreställningen om dessa elever och deras familjer som väsenskilda grupper med “annorlunda” och “primitiva” kulturer.

(…)

Ett ytterligare problem är lärarnas och skolpersonalens ignorering av elevernas erfarenheter av diskriminering och rasism i skolan. Tystnaden om diskriminering och rasism i skolan är ett viktigt redskap för vidmakthållande av de etniska orättvisorna i samhället.

>> les hele saken i Dagens Nyheter

>> last ned hele rapporten

OPPDATERING (2.5.06):

Antropolog Mikael Kurkiala har skrevet en kritisk kommentar:

Ska vi förstå integrationens svårigheter krävs det avsevärt mycket mer nyanserade modeller och begrepp än den teoretiskt sett både primitiva och banala vi och dom-modell som Kamali oförtröttligt återupprepar i rapport efter rapport.

>> les hele kommentaren i Nyckeln till Uppsala

SE OGSÅ:

Hvordan kartlegge og forebygge indirekte diskriminering?

Norske verdier, islam og hverdagsrasismen

Intellektuelle i eksil: Diskriminering hindrer integrering

Integrering: “Barnehagene kan gjøre mer skade enn gavn”

For mer kosmopolitisme – ny bok: “Verdensborgeren som pædagogisk ideal”

Ogsaa vi, naar det blir krævet … Ny bok om skolebøker og nasjonsbygging

Utdanningssystemet er ekskluderende. Det forsterker skillene mellom svenske elever (oppfattes som "normale") og innvandrerelver (sett på som "unormale" og "problematiske"). Denne strukturelle diskrimineringen motvirker integreringen av elever med minoritetsbakgrunn. Dette fastslår den nylig publiserte statlige utredningen "Utbildningens dilemma: demokratiska…

Read more

Antropolog: Gravsteder er et nytt område for selviscenesettelse

Åtte venner har skaffet seg felles gravsted i Danmark. Det er uvanlig å bli begravet med andre enn familien. Gravskikker endrer seg. Antropolog Gitte Lunding Johansen mener, at gravsteder er et nytt område for selviscenesettelse, skriver Politiken.

Antropologen jobber på Kulturcenteret Assistens Kirkegård i København.
Hun er i gang med et forskningsprojekt og har vært i kontakt med andre venner fra et bofellesskap, som kan tenke seg å bli begravet sammen. Hun sier:

»Visse mennesker har de ideer og overvejelser, fordi familien har fået en anden rolle. Et eller andet sted er det også led i en selviscenesættelse. Vores holdning til døden og indretning af gravsted, og hvem vi vil begraves med, spejler, hvad vi i øvrigt gør i livet. Jeg tror, at det bliver et nyt fokusområde at have holdninger til døden«.

>> les hele saken i Politikken (Link oppdatert)

SE OGSÅ:

Gitte Lunding Johansen: Nye tendenser i kirkegårdskulturen – med afsæt i Assistens Kirkegård

Her hviler familiens rødder. Det sidste fælles hvilested for slægten er på vej til at forsvinde

Kirkegårdsvandring: En rejse på tværs i Danmark blandt rørende og forunderlige mindesmærker for de elskede og savnede

Forsker på ritualer og omsorg ved død på sykehuset

Begravelser på norsk-pakistansk vis

Åtte venner har skaffet seg felles gravsted i Danmark. Det er uvanlig å bli begravet med andre enn familien. Gravskikker endrer seg. Antropolog Gitte Lunding Johansen mener, at gravsteder er et nytt område for selviscenesettelse, skriver Politiken.

Antropologen jobber på Kulturcenteret…

Read more