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Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Hannah Berwian: Entry no. 4 (Taussig)

“To make the strange familiar, but to make the familiar strange" is a central theme of anthropology. Horace Miner, in his 1956 essay on the Nacirema succeeds in this task so well that few people notice that his descriptions of strange body rituals and exotic practices is nothing but an abstracted depiction of the American society and culture. Through his article Miner aimed to criticize the standard way of scientific representation and how it distorts reality. In a similar fashion and in the tradition of Walter Benjamin, Michael Taussig asks us to adapt an “optic that perceives the everyday as impenetrable, the impenetrable as everyday”.
In other words, the only way to escape the mystification at the heart of a culture of terror is by recognizing a certain degree of mystery and fiction as present in and integral to our everyday-life.
In “Culture of Terror: Torture and the Putumayo” from 1984 Taussig comes to this conclusion after examining how a culture of terror as emerged during the colonial regimes of the rubber boom in the early 20th century is mediated and reproduced through narratives. Examining reports composed by colonial envoys and conquerors he concludes that the development of an effective counter-narrative to the colonial representation of native Indians is only possible by breaking with the mystifying Western dialectic between evil and good, between savagery and civilization. The piece is shot through with Taussig’s criticism of the scientific form of the report that largely perpetuates the amalgamation of truth and fiction.  This blend maintains its mystical character in spite or because of attempts to rationalize the practice of the colonizers. Hence, the text reflects Taussig’s criticism of cultural analysis through the lens of the dominant culture, that is liberal capitalism and the assumption of objectivity and rationality. Instead, he advocates an anthropological approach to research that values the subjectivity and points of view of the object of the study, such as the Indian native, to render them a subject themselves.
Taussig is particularly critical of Casement’s tendency to reduce the explanation of torture of the Indian rubber gatherer to the capitalist logic of profit. Casement claims that  means of torture and debt peonage had emerged due to the scarcity of labour combined with the cheapness of the rubber so that regularly paying the workers would not have been profitable. The colonist used torture and other cruel practices as a means of deterring the Indians from running away or staying below the standard amount of rubber. Casement then suggests that while being motivated through capitalist interest in the first place the practices developed a “life of their own” to explain the cruel excesses with irrational cruelty and mass killing. However, Taussig points out that Casement disregards the way in which meaning has emerged from a clash of different cultural logics, construction and symbolism that cannot be reduced to rationalist argumentation. These have evolved from the encounter of pre-colonial mythology of the seemingly supernatural qualities of the wild man, the use of the cannibalistic “savage” as a mirror image to create the own civilized identity and the reproduction of these mythologies through narratives. Projections of fear and hatred generated an intense paranoia of the colonial station-managers that was only bearable by responding with terror themselves and “degenerating” into the savage.
In Foucault’s tradition, Taussig attempts to deconstruct the mystifying discourse and analyses how effects of truth are produced within discourses which are in themselves neither true nor false.  For Taussig though, truth seems to exist outside and independently of the narrative itself as it is the narrative that makes truth and reality indiscernible from illusion and fiction. The dichotomy still exist, we are just unable to grasp its bifurcation. At the same time he suggests in his concept of magical realism that through this coalescence, fiction and illusion become an integral part of the reality itself as they have concrete real-world effects. Hence, the narrative embodies and mediates the social force and political power of ideational constructions.
On a different not, in my mind, his continuous reference to the “banality of cruelty” and the “ordinarinesss of the extraordinary” as well as the “mean of terror becoming and end in itself” invokes the various attempts to account for the cruelty of the holocaust. Amongst others, Hannah Arendt and Zygmunt Baumann have faced a similar challenge as Taussig to “penetrate the veil while retaining its hallucinatory quality”. They tried to demystify the unspeakable deeds of the Nazis while not diminishing their gravity through rationalization.
Interestingly, Baumann sees the holocaust not as a unique event but as a window that allows us a glimpse of the logic of modernity through the encounter of very ordinary and common factors. Similar to Taussig arguing that torture and institutionalized terror were enabled through the very values of civilization rather than through their abandonment, Baumann sees the Holocaust as the epitome of the logic that underlies civilization, as a project of modernity.
Likwise, Baumann also depicts the projection of fear and hatred through the attitude of society towards strangers. A vision of an ideal society and someone committed to impose this design like a gardener on a plain was enabled through manifold processes of authorization, routinization and dehumanization. On the one hand, one may say that Baumann to a wide extend draws on rationalizing explanations that Taussig rejects. On the other hand, he illustrates how the mysterious and inconceivable dimension of the holocaust was inherent and immanent in every-day life and may still be today, a claim that is much more disconcerting than the weird rituals of Miner’s Nacirema.


Sources: 

Bauman, Zygmunt, Modernity and The Holocaust. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press. 1989

Horace Miner, Body Ritual among the Nacirema. In: American Anthropologist, New Series. Vol. 58, 
Nr. 3, Blackwell Publishing, 1956, S. 503–507


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