Sahlins - Goodbye To Triste Tropes
Sahlins - Goodbye To Triste Tropes
Sahlins - Goodbye To Triste Tropes
In the midst of all the hoopla about the new reflexive anthropology,with its
celebration of the impossibility of systematically understandingthe elusive
Other, a different kind of ethnographic prose has been developing more
quietly, almost without our knowing we were speaking it, and certainly
without so much epistemological angst. I mean the numerous works of
historical ethnographywhose aim is to synthesize the field experience of a
community with an investigation of its archival past. For decades now,
studentsof American Indians, Indonesia and the Pacific Islands, South Asia,
and Africa have been doing this kind of ethnohistory.But only a few-notably
Barney Cohn, Jean Comaroff, John Comaroff, and Terry Turner-have
consciously raised the point that an ethnographywith time and transformation
built into it is a distinct way of knowing the anthropologicalobject, with a
possibility of changing the way culture is thought.2 This article associates
itself with this project of historical ethnographyas a determinateanthropo-
logical genre. In particular,I would like to offer some theoreticaljustification
for a returnto certain world areas such as North America and Polynesia, areas
which have been too long slighted by ethnographers, ever since it was
* This paper was originally written for and presented as the Nineteenth Annual
Edwardand Nora Ryerson Lecture at the University of Chicago, April 29, 1992.
1 BernardS. Cohn, An Anthropologist among the Historians and Other Essays
(Delhi, 1987).
2 Ibid.; Jean Comaroff and John Comaroff, Ethnography and the Historical
Imagination (Boulder, Colo., 1992); Terence Turner, "Representing, Resisting,
Rethinking: Historical Transformations of Kayapo Culture and Anthropological
Consciousness," in Colonial Situations, ed. George W. Stocking, Jr. (Madison, Wis.,
1991), pp. 285-313.
[Journal of Modern History 65 (March 1993): 1-25]
? 1993 by The University of Chicago. 0022-2801/93/6501-0001$01.00
All rights reserved.
2 Sahlins
discovered in the 1930s and 1940s that they were "acculturated."For these
peoples have known how to defy their anthropologicaldemotion by taking
culturalresponsibilityfor what was afflicting them. The very ways societies
change have their own authenticity, so that global modernity is often
reproducedas local diversity.
II
When I was a graduatestudent-back in the Upper Paleolithic period-my
teachers were already announcingthe death of ethnography.It seemed that
Marx's prophecy to the effect that Westernhegemony is human destiny was
at hand. By the rapid improvement of the instrumentsof production and
communication,proclaimedthe Manifesto,the bourgeoisie drawsall nations,
"even the most barbarian,"into "civilization." "The cheap prices of its
commodities are the heavy artillery with which it batters down all Chinese
walls, with which it forces the barbarians' intensely obstinate hatred of
foreignersto capitulate.It compels all nations, on pain of extinction, to adopt
the bourgeois mode of production;it compels them to introducewhat it calls
civilization into their midst, i.e., to become bourgeois themselves. In one
word, it creates a world after its own image."3
The argument could well convey a sense of inevitability, since its
conclusion was already contained in its ethnocentricpremise. The effective-
ness of this ultimate weapon of cheap commodities already presupposes a
universalbourgeois subject, a self-interestedcreatureof desire acting with an
eye singular to the main chance. Yet the metaphor is even more ironic
inasmuchas the Chinese wall proves not so vulnerable. On the contrary,as a
mark of the limits of "civilization," hence a constrainton demand and the
passage of goods, the wall succeeds in its time-honored function, which
(according to Lattimore) has been rather to keep the Chinese in than the
"barbarians"out.4 And even when foreign things or barbarianbeings do
conquer, their local reproductionand meanings are soon sinicized. Western
capital and commodities do not easily make their way by demonstration
effects. The idea that they will-this same refrain about China-has been
playing in Europe for three centuries now: all those hundredsof millions of
customersjust waiting for British woolens, then cotton textiles, steel cutlery,
guns, and ships, and latterly jeeps, perfume, and TV sets. A modern
bourgeois version of the quest for El Dorado, the dreamof opening China to
Western-madeproductsstill goes on, undiminishedby the perennialfailureto
make it a reality.Except that now the attemptto discover a northwestpassage
3 Karl Marx and FriedrichEngels, Basic Writingson Politics and Philosophy, ed.
Lewis S. Feuer (GardenCity, N.Y., 1959), p. 11.
4 Owen Lattimore,Inner Asian Frontiers of China (New York, 1940).
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 3
5 Nicholas D. Kristof, "Suddenly China Looks Smaller in the World," New York
Times, internationaled. (March 27, 1990), p. A5.
6 Maurice Godelier, "Is the West the Model for Humankind?The Baruya of New
Guinea between Change and Decay," InternationalSocial Science Journal, no. 128
(1991), p. 395.
4 Sahlins
7Turner, p. 304.
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 5
generous (by inventingkerekere).So when the mishes protestto the chief that
they had come out of love for Fijians and to save them, the chief objects that
it can't be so: " 'You come here and you will only buy and sell, and we hate
buying. When we ask you for a thing you say no. If a Feejeean said no, we
should kill him, don't you know that. We [of Bau] are a land of Chiefs. We
have plenty of riches. . . . We have them withoutbuying; we hate buying and
we hate the lotu [Christianity].'He concluded by begging a knife for one of
his friends, which after such a conversationI thoughtit best to refuse, which
I did as respectfully as possible."12 "Begging," an early American trader
observed, "is the besetting sin of them all & both sexes do not hesitateto Cery
Cery fuckabede as they call it." "Cery Cery fuckabede" was Warren
Osburn'simmortal 1835 transcriptionof the Fijiankerekerevakaviti,meaning
"to ask for something in the Fijian manner," a phrase that also proves that
Fijians objectifiedthe practice some months before the first missionaries and
some decades before the establishment of the Colony, although not before
centuriesof contact and exchange with people from other island groups of the
Pacific (Tonga, Rotuma, Uvea).13
There is a certain historiographythat is quick to take the "great game" of
imperialismas the only game in town. It is preparedto assume that history is
made by the colonial masters, and all that needs to be known about the
people's own social dispositions, or even their "subjectivity," is the external
disciplines imposed upon them: the colonial policies of classification,
enumeration,taxation, education, and sanitation.The main historicalactivity
remaining to the underlying people is to misconstrue the effects of such
imperialism as their own cultural traditions. Worse yet, their cultural false
consciousness is normalizing. In the name of ancestralpractice, the people
construct an essentialized culture: a supposedly unchanging inheritance,
shelteredfrom the contestationsof a true social existence. They thus repeatas
tragedythe farcical errorsabout the coherence of symbolic systems supposed
to have been committed by an earlier and more naive generation of
anthropologists.
Wiser now, we trade in our naivete for melancholy. Ethnographyin the
wake of colonialism can only contemplatethe sadness of the tropics (tristes
tropiques). Like the rusting shanty towns in which the people live, here are
bits and pieces of cultural structures,old and new, reassembledinto corrupt
forms of the Westernimagination. How convenient for the theorists of the
12
R. B. Lyth, "Tongan and Fijian Reminiscences," Mitchell Library, Sydney,
B533, pp. 74-76.
13 JosephWarrenOsbom, "Journalof a Voyage in the Ship Emerald ... duringthe
years 1833, 4, 5, & 6," PacificManuscriptBureauMicrofilmno. 223, frames 337-38
(original in Peabody Museum, Salem, Mass.).
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 7
III
In the fifteenthand sixteenthcenturies, a bunchof indigenousintellectualsand
artists in Europe got together and began inventing their traditions and
themselves by attemptingto revive the learning of an ancient culture which
they claimed to be the achievement of their ancestorsbut which they did not
fully understand, as for many centuries this culture had been lost and its
languages corruptedor forgotten. For centuries also the Europeanshad been
converted to Christianity;but this did not prevent them from calling now for
the restorationof their pagan heritage. They would once again practice the
classical virtues, even invoke the pagan gods. All the same, under the
circumstances- the greatdistanceof the acculturatedintellectualsfrom a past
that was effectively irrecoverable-under the circumstances, nostalgia was
not what it used to be. The texts and monumentsthey constructedwere often
bowdlerized facsimiles of classical models. They created a self-conscious
traditionof fixed and essentialized canons. They wrote history in the style of
Livy, verses in a manneredLatin, tragedy accordingto Seneca, and comedy
in the mode of Terence;they decoratedChristianchurcheswith the facades of
classical temples and generally followed the precepts of Roman architecture
as set down by Vitruviuswithout realizing the precepts were Greek. All this
14
Stephen Greenblatt, Marvelous Possessions: The Wonder of the New World
(Chicago, 1991), p. 152.
8 Sahlins
IV
Hula schools (halau hula) have been flourishing in Hawaii since the early
1970s. Many function under the patronageof Laka, the ancient goddess of
hula, are led by inspired teachers (kumu), and observe various rituals of
trainingandperformance.Hula schools are a significantelement of what some
participantsare pleased to call "the Hawaiianrenaissance."'5
Nothing essentialized here. All sorts of differences between schools in
styles of music and movement, in rituals, in assertions about what is modem
and what is "Hawaiian." Many argumentsturnon implicationsof opposition
to the culture of the Haole (White man). Yet the hula as a sign of
Hawaiianness, of the indigenous, was not born yesterday nor merely as the
construction of the Hawaiian Visitors Bureau and prurientHaole interests.
The hula has been functioningas a mode of culturalco-optationfor more than
150 years-a significance, moreover, that was already inscribed in the
meanings of hula performancesbefore the first White men set foot in the
islands. For that matter, these first Haole visitors, Captain Cook and
Company, were entertainedby a great deal of lascivious-seeming hula.
"The young women spend most of theirtime singing and dancing, of which
they are very fond," observed David Samwell, minorWelsh poet and surgeon
of the Discovery, duringCook's stay at Hawai'i Islandin early 1779.16 Cook's
stay coincided with the Makahiki, the festival of the annual return of the
originalgod and deposed king Lono, come back at the New Yearto renew the
earth-or, in anotherregister, to repossess the wife and kingdom taken from
him by an upstartrival.'7 The visitation of Lono was ritually mediated and
popularlycelebratedby hula dancing, especially the sexually arousingdances
15
For a general history of the hula, see Dorothy B. Barrere,Mary KawenaPukui,
and MarionKelly, Hula: Historical Perspectives,Bishop Museum, Pacific Anthropo-
logical Records no. 30 (Honolulu, 1980).
16 David Samwell, "Some Account of a Voyage to the South Seas," in The Journals
of CaptainJamesCookon His Voyagesof Discovery:The Voyageof the "Resolution"and
"Discovery,"1776-1780, ed. J. C. Beaglehole, pt. 2 (Cambridge,1967), p. 1181.
17
See MarshallSahlins, Islands of History (Chicago, 1985).
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 9
of young women. Of course, not all Hawaiian hula was of this sort, but
Samwell collected two hula chantsin 1779 thatwere sufficientlyamorous.The
women would thus attract the god -if their performance did not actually
signify a Frazeriansacredmarriage.But then, towardthe end of the Makahiki,
the reigning king sacrifices Lono, sending him back to Kahiki, the overseas
homeland and ancestralsource of life, a removal that capturesthe benefits of
the god's passage for mankind.
Humanizing and appropriatingLono's seminal powers, the women's hula
expresses a general function of their sexuality, which is to mediate just such
translationsbetween god and man- or, in Polynesian terms, between the
states of tapu (tabu) and noa (free). Hence the essential ambiguityof women
from a certain theological point of view: their powers of defiling the god
amountedto conditions of the possibility of human existence. Hence also, as
the party of humanity,their powers of culturalsubversion. Birth itself was a
form of this same capacity to bring the divine into the human world,
especially the bearing of a royal child. Accordingly, chiefly births were
famous occasions for hula, as were the arrivalsand entertainmentsof noble
voyagers. And all these hula performances,including the annualseductionof
Lono, would have the same broad finality, the domesticationof the god. But
note that within this frame the particularvalues varied from the restorationof
an indigenous and beneficentking, the tragic figure of the dispossessed Lono,
to the neutralizationof the stranger-king,the classic figure of the usurper-
the one who does Lono in.
Thus the historic function of the hula: its recurrentappearancethroughtwo
centuriesof Haole dominationin defense of the ancien re'gime,and specifically
of a Hawaiiankingship whose powers had been contested early on by a holy
allianceof piouschiefly convertsandpuritanicalAmericanmissionaries.Adapt-
ing the Protestantethic to Hawaiianprojectsof authority,the chiefs had learned
to forwardtheircommercialinterestsat the king's expense. Based on traditional
conceptionsof sacredpower, on the establishmentof links to Kahiki, this com-
petition among rulingchiefs in the mediumof commercialprowess greatlyex-
acerbatedthe "impact" of the WorldSystem on Hawaiianculture.The historic
effects of capitalismwere not directlyproportionalto its materialforce, a simple
matterof physics. The huge debt amassedby the chiefs is rathera measureof
the impetus given by the creative powers of mana to the destructiveforces of
capital. The compradorandforeign agents of the WorldSystem played the leg-
endarypart of the "sharks who travelinland," rapaciousstrangersfrom over-
seas, and they turnedthe king into a historic version of Lono.
By the same culturallogic, the period of Lono's return,the Makahiki,was
transposedby royal partisansinto-a festival of rebellion. For decades after it
had ceased to be celebrated according to the customary rituals of world
renewal, the Makahiki season became the occasion for improvised renewals
10 Sahlins
18
See the accounts of royal revolts in Marshall Sahlins, Historical Ethnography,
vol. 1 of PatrickV. KirchandMarshallSahlins, Anahulu:TheAnthropologyof History
in the Kingdomof Hawaii, 2 vols. (Chicago, 1992).
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 11
For its own part, the World System, as culture, is no less arbitrary.But its
familiarity allows us to maintain the delusion of a transparentand disen-
chanted order, singularly constructedby our materialrationality,our human
disposition to "rational choice."
However, material forces and circumstancesalways lead a double life in
human societies; they are at once physical and meaningful. Without ceasing
to be objectively compelling, they are endowed with the symbolic values of
19 Mark
Twain, "The Sandwich Islands," in The CompleteEssays of MarkTwain,
ed. Charles Neider (GardenCity, N.Y., 1963), p. 24.
12 Sahlins
VI
VII
However, to conceive of a simple opposition between the West and the Rest
is in many ways an oversimplification. Colonial history is not well served
either by its representationas a Manichaeanshowdown between the indige-
nous people and the imperialist forces, to see which one will be able to
culturallyappropriatethe other. A numberof anthropologists-among them
Bruce Trigger,Ann Stoler, John Comaroff, and Greg Dening-have taughtus
to reconfigure the usual binary opposition as a triadic historical field,
including a complicated interculturalzone where the culturaldifferences are
workedthroughin political and economic practice.20"The beach," as Dening
calls it- though it could as well be the plantation or the town-where
"native" and "stranger" play out their working misunderstandingsin
creolized languages. Here are complex "structuresof the conjuncture,"such
as the alliances that cross ethnic boundariesand correlateoppositions within
the colonial society to political differences among the local people. Think of
how often the rivalrybetween Protestantsand Catholics has been enlisted by
Latin Americans or Pacific Islanders to the service of their own historic
disputes. I have already mentioned something of the like in Hawaii. A
recurrent conflict between the king and aristocratic chiefs, traditionally
waged as the acquisitionof foreign cum divine powers, was in the nineteenth
century joined to the bitter jealousies in the Haole community between
20
Bruce Trigger, "Brecht and Ethnohistory,"Ethnohistory22 (1975): 51-56; Ann
Stoler, Capitalismand Confrontationin Sumatra'sPlantation Belt, 1870-1929 (New
Haven, Conn., 1985); John Comaroff, "Images of Empire, Contests of Conscience:
Models of Colonial Domination in South Africa," American Ethnologist 16 (1989):
661-85; Greg Dening, Islands and Beaches: Discourse on a Silent Land, Marquesas
1774-1880 (Melboume, 1980).
14 Sahlins
VIII
Disease and destructionhave too often followed, but they were not the means
of access to the local people's desires or of the deployment of their labor to
trade.Not thatthe islanders(any morethanthe Chinese) gave Westernerscause
to congratulatethemselves on the "demonstrationeffects" of theirclearly su-
periorgoods, since the demandsof the local peoples were soon enoughselective
ratherthaneclectic and involved ratherexotic senses of utility. Thus the flour-
ishing nineteenth-centurycommercein spermwhale teeth in Fiji and Hudson's
Bay blanketsin NorthwestAmericaas well as Chinese silks andEnglishbroad-
cloths in Hawaii. Here was a period of indigenous "development," as I shall
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 15
21
MarilynStrathern,"Artefactsof History:Events and the Interpretationof Images,"
in Cultureand Historyin the Pacific, ed. JukkaSiikala(Helsinki, 1990), p. 25.
16 Sahlins
Ix
22
Marshall Sahlins, "The Economics of Develop-Man in the Pacific," Res 21
(Spring 1992): 12-25.
23
Lisette Josephides, The Production of Inequality: Gender and Exchange among
the Kewa (London, 1985), p. 44.
18 Sahlins
XI
26
Lamont Lindstrom, "Kastom: The Political History of Tradition on Tanna,
Vanuatu,"Mankind13 (1982): 316-29.
27
F. Allan Hanson, Rapan Lifeways (Boston, 1970), p. 62.
20 Sahlins
XII
The first fifty years of capitalist develop-man in Fiji, roughly from 1800 to
1850, achieved unprecedented levels of cannibalism, thus confirming a
certain totemic nightmarethat has haunted the Westernimagination at least
since Saint Augustine articulatedit: that if human venality is unleashed, the
big fish will eat the little fish. But modern academic hawkers of the World
System have given too much credit to the tradein Europeanmuskets for local
sandalwood and beche-de-mer (sea cucumbers)as the reason for the interre-
lated developmentsin warfare,cannibalism,and state formationin nineteenth-
centuryFiji.30The firepowerof the musket and the labor requirementsof the
30
R. GerardWard, "The Pacific Beche-de-mer Trade with Special Reference to
Fiji," in Man in the Pacific Islands, ed. R. GerardWard(Oxford, 1972), pp. 91-123;
cf. Eric Wolf, Europe and the People without History (Berkeley and Los Angeles,
1982), pp. 258-59. On issues of Fijian history raised here, see FergusClunie, Fijian
22 Sahlins
Weaponsand Warfare,Bulletin of the Fiji Museum, no. 2 (Suva, Fiji, 1977); David
Routledge, Matanitui:The Strugglefor Power in Early Fiji (Suva, Fiji, 1985).
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 23
XIII
Proof? Levi-Strauss talks about the chemist who, having carefully synthe-
sized sodium chloride in the laboratoryand confirmed its composition with
the standardtests, just to make sure it's salt, tastes it. A good proof of the
historic value of the whale teeth is that, ethnographically,you can taste it.
Not only because whale teeth continue to organize Fijian life-marriage
alliances, respects to chiefs, or any "heavy" kerekere of goods or
persons-and not only because the ritualized formulas of their exchange
remainbarely alteredexpressions of a transactionin divine benefits. There is
also the extraordinarilyhigh price of whale teeth in the pawnshopsof Suva,
the capital city. The power of the whale tooth appears in its historic
transformations.
Not far from Suva, in the village of Cautata,Poate Matairavulaa few years
ago showed me a small wooden chest, set in the farthest corner of the rear
right-hand bedroom of his "European-style" house. The space was the
modern equivalent of the most tabu part of the old Fijian house (the loqi),
where the head of the family slept with his wife and reproductiveforms of
wealth were stored, including seed yams and the weapons that procured
cannibalvictims. The wooden chest, Matairavulaexplained, was the "basket
of the clan" (kato ni mataqali), holding the collective treasurein whale teeth.
Passing with the leadershipof the clan, the chest was a palladium. So long as
it is intact, Matairavulasaid, the vanua the land, includingthe people -will
be preserved. In 1984, Matairavulawas showing me an example of an old
"basket of state" (kato ni tu-),the likes of which (so far as I know) have not
been anthropologicallynoticed from this part of Fiji since Hocart's report in
1910 of the reminiscencesof an old man from Namata,a village nearCautata.
Matairavula'sfurtherexplanationscontinuedto echo these ancient memo-
ries. As chief of the clan himself, he could not go into the chest and take out
whale teeth. That was for the herald, the "face of the land" (matanivanua),
representative of the collectivity vis-a-vis the chief. A few days later,
Matairavulaand I and a few othermen were on the ceremonialgroundof Bau,
together with the Cautata herald who was carrying a large whale tooth
24 Sahlins
XIV
In a genial argumentof the Essay ConcerningHuman Understanding,John
Locke says that we necessarily know things relationally, by their "depen-
dence" on other things.31 However absolute and entire the objects of
perceptionmay seem to us, they "are but Retainersto otherparts of Nature."
Their observable qualities, actions, and powers "are owing to something
without them; and there is not so complete and perfect a part, that we know,
of Nature,that does not owe the Being it has, and the Excellancies of it, to its
31
John Locke, An Essay ConcerningHuman Understanding,4.6.11.
Goodbye to Tristes Tropes 25