Future Primitive By John ZerzanDivision of labour, which has
had so much to do with bringing us to the present global crisis, works
daily to prevent our understanding the origins of this horrendous present.
Mary Lecron Foster (1990) surely errs on the side of understatement in
allowing that anthropology is today "in danger of serious and damaging
fragmentation." Shanks and Tilley (1987b) voice a rare, related challenge:
"The point of archaeology is not merely to interpret the past but to
change the manner in which the past is interpreted in the service of
social reconstruction in the present." Of course, the social sciences
themselves work against the breadth and depth of vision necessary to such
a reconstruction. In terms of human origins and development, the array of
splintered fields and sub-fields-anthropology, archaeology, paleontology,
ethnology, paleobotany, ethnoanthropology, etc., etc.-mirrors the
narrowing, crippling effect that civilisation has embodied from its very
beginning.
Nonetheless, the literature can provide highly useful assistance, if
approached with an appropriate method and awareness and the desire to
proceed past its limitations. In fact, the weakness of more or less
orthodox modes of thinking can and does yield to the demands of an
increasingly dissatisfied society. Unhappiness with contemporary life
becomes distrust for the official lies that are told to legitimate that
life, and a truer picture of human development emerges. Renunciation and
subjugation in modern life have long been explained as necessary
concomitants of "human nature." After all, our pre-civilised existence of
deprivation, brutality, and ignorance made authority a benevolent gift
that rescued us from savagery. 'Cave man' and 'Neanderthal' are still
invoked to remind us where we would be without religion, government, and
toil.
This ideological view of our past has been radically overturned in
recent decades, through the work of academics like Richard Lee and
Marshall Sahlins. A nearly complete reversal in anthropological orthodoxy
has come about, with important implications. Now we can see that life
before domestication/agriculture was in fact largely one of leisure,
intimacy with nature, sensual wisdom, sexual equality, and health. This
was our human nature, for a couple of million years, prior to enslavement
by priests, kings, and bosses.
And lately another stunning revelation has appeared, a related one that
deepens the first and may be telling us something equally important about
who we were and what we might again become. The main line of attack
against new descriptions of gatherer-hunter life has been, though often
indirect or not explicitly stated, to characterise that life,
condescendingly, as the most an evolving species could achieve at an early
stage. Thus, the argument allows that there was a long period of apparent
grace and pacific existence, but says that humans simply didn't have the
mental capacity to leave simple ways behind in favour of complex social
and technological achievement.
In another fundamental blow to civilisation, we now learn that not only
was human life once, and for so long, a state that did not know alienation
or domination, but as the investigations since the '80s by archaeologists
John Fowlett, Thomas Wynn, and others have shown, those humans possessed
an intelligence at least equal to our own. At a stroke, as it were, the
'ignorance' thesis is disposed of, and we contemplate where we came from
in a new light. To put the issue of mental capacity in context, it is
useful to review the various (and again, ideologically loaded)
interpretations of human origins and development. Robert Ardrey (1961,
1976) served up a bloodthirsty, macho version of prehistory, as have to
slightly lesser degrees, Desmond Morris and Lionel Tiger. Similarly, Freud
and Konrad Lorenz wrote of the innate depravity of the species, thereby
providing their contributions to hierarchy and power in the present.
Fortunately, a far more plausible outlook has emerged, one that
corresponds to the overall version of Palaeolithic life in general. Food
sharing has for some time been considered an integral part of earliest
human society (e.g. Washburn and DeVore, 1961). Jane Goodall (1971) and
Richard Leakey (1978), among others, have concluded that it was the key
element in establishing our uniquely Homo development at least as early as
two million years ago. This emphasis, carried forward since the early '70s
by Linton, Zihiman, Tanner, and Isaac, has become ascendant. One of the
telling arguments in favour of the co-operation thesis, as against that of
generalised violence and male domination, involves a diminishing, during
early evolution, of the difference in size and strength between males and
females. Sexual dimorphism, as it is called, was originally very
pronounced, including such features as prominent canines or 'fighting
teeth' in males and much smaller canines for the female. The disappearance
of large male canines strongly suggests that the female of the species
exercised a selection for sociable, sharing males. Most apes today have
significantly longer and larger canines, male to female, in the absence of
this female choice capacity (Zihiman 1981, Tanner 1981).
Division of labour between the sexes is another key area in human
beginnings, a condition once simply taken for granted and expressed by the
term hunter-gatherer. Now it is widely accepted that gathering of plant
foods, once thought to be the exclusive domain of women and of secondary
importance to hunting by males, constituted the main food source (Johansen
and Shreeve 1989). Since females were not significantly dependent on males
for food (Hamilton 1984), it seems likely that rather than division of
labour, flexibility and joint activity would have been central (Bender
1989). As Zihiman (1981) points out, an overall behavioural flexibility
may have been the primary ingredient in early human existence. Joan Gero
(1991) has demonstrated that stone tools were as likely to have been made
by women as by men, and indeed Poirier (1987) reminds us that there is "no
archaeological evidence supporting the contention that early humans
exhibited a sexual division of labour." It is unlikely that food
collecting involved much, if any, division of labour (Slocum 1975) and
probably that sexual specialisation came quite late in human evolution
(Zihiman 1981, Crader and Isaac 1981).
So if the adaptation that began our species centred on gathering, when
did hunting come in? Binford (1984) has argued that there is no indication
of use of animal products (i.e. evidence of butchery practices) until the
appearance, relatively quite recent, of anatomically modern humans.
Electron microscope studies of fossil teeth found in East Africa (Walker
1984) suggest a diet composed primarily of fruit, while a similar
examination of stone tools from a 1.5-million-year-old site at Koobi Fora
in Kenya (Keeley and Toth 1981) shows that they were used on plant
materials. The small amount of meat in the early Palaeolithic diet was
probably scavenged, rather than hunted (Ehrenberg 1989b).
The 'natural' condition of the species was evidently a diet made up
largely of vegetables rich in fibre, as opposed to the modern high fat and
animal protein diet with its attendant chronic disorders (Mendeloff 1977).
Though our early forbears employed their "detailed knowledge of the
environment and cognitive mapping" (Zihiman 1981) in the service of a
plant gathering subsistence, the archaeological evidence for hunting
appears to slowly increase with time (Hodder 1991).
Much evidence, however, has overturned assumptions as to widespread
prehistoric hunting. Collections of bones seen earlier as evidence of
large kills of mammals, for example, have turned out to be, upon closer
examination, the results of movement by flowing water or caches by
animals. Lewis Binford's "Were There Elephant Hunters at Tooralba?" (1989)
is a good instance of such a closer look, in which he doubts there was
significant hunting until 200,000 years ago or sooner. Adrienne Zihiman
(1981) has concluded that "hunting arose relatively late in evolution,"
and "may not extend beyond the last one hundred thousand years." And there
are many (e.g. Straus 1986, Trinkhaus 1986) who do not see evidence for
serious hunting of large mammals until even later, viz. the later Upper
Palaeolithic, just before the emergence of agriculture.
The oldest known surviving artifacts are stone tools from Hadar in
eastern Africa. With more refined dating methods, they may prove to be 3.1
million years old (Klein 1989). Perhaps the main reason these may be
classified as representing human effort is that they involve the crafting
of one tool by using another, a uniquely human attribute so far as we
know. Homo habilis, or 'handy man,' designates what has been thought of as
the first known human species, its name reflecting association with the
earliest stone tools (Coppens 1989). Basic wooden and bone implements,
though more perishable and thus scantily represented in the archaeological
record, were also used by Homo habilis as part of a "remarkably simple and
effective" adaptation in Africa and Asia (Fagan 1990). Our ancestors at
this stage had smaller brains and bodies than we do, but Poirier (1987)
notes that "their postcranial anatomy was rather like modern humans," and
Holloway (1972, 1974) allows that his studies of cranial endocasts from
this period indicate a basically modern brain organisation. Similarly,
tools older than two million years have been found to exhibit a consistent
right-handed orientation in the ways stone has been flaked off in their
formation. Right-handedness as a tendency is correlated in moderns with
such distinctly human features as pronounced lateralization of the brain
and marked functional separation of the cerebral hemispheres (Holloway
1981a). Klein (1989) concludes that "basic human cognitive and
communicational abilities are almost certainly implied."
Homo erectus is the other main predecessor to Homo Sapiens, according
to long-standing usage, appearing about 1.75 million years ago as humans
moved out of forests into drier, more open African grasslands. Although
brain-size alone does not necessarily correlate with mental capacity, the
cranial capacity of Homo erectus overlaps with that of moderns such that
this species "must have been capable of many of the same behaviours"
(Ciochon, Olsen and Tames 1990). As Johanson and Edey (1981) put it, "If
the largest brained erectus were to be rated against the smallest brained
Sapiens-all their other characteristics ignored-their species names would
have to be reversed." Homo Neanderthalus, which immediately preceded us,
possessed brains somewhat larger than our own (Delson 1985, Holloway 1985,
Donald 1991). Though of course the much maligned Neanderthal has been
pictured as a primitive, brutish creature-in keeping with the prevailing
Hobbesian ideology-despite manifest intelligence as well as enormous
physical strength (Shreeve 1991).
Recently, however, the whole species framework has become a doubtful
proposition (Day 1987, Rightmire 1990). Attention has been drawn to the
fact that fossil specimens from various Homo species "all show
intermediate morphological traits," leading to suspicion of an arbitrary
division of humanity into separate taxa (Gingerich 1979, Tobias 1982).
Fagan (1989), for example, tells us that "it is very hard to draw a clear
taxonomic boundary between Homo erectus and archaic Homo Sapiens on the
one hand, and between archaic and anatomically modern Homo Sapiens on the
other." Likewise, Foley (1989): "the anatomical distinctions between Homo
erectus and Homo Sapiens are not great." Jelinek (1978) flatly declares
that "there is no good reason, anatomical or cultural" for separating
erectus and Sapiens into two species, and has concluded (1980a) that
people -from at least the Middle Palaeolithic onward "may be viewed as
Homo Sapiens" (as does Hublin 1986). The tremendous upward revision of
early intelligence, discussed below, must be seen as connected to the
present confusion over species, as the once-prevailing overall
evolutionary model gives way.
But the controversy over species categorisation is only interesting in
the context of how our earliest forbears lived. Despite the minimal nature
of what could be expected to survive so many millennia, we can glimpse
some of the texture of that life, with its often elegant, pre-division of
labour approaches. The 'tool kit' from the Olduvai Gorge area made famous
by the Leakeys contains "at least six clearly recognisable tool types"
dating from about 1.7 million years ago (M. Leakey, 1978). There soon
appeared the Acheulian handaxe, with its symmetrical beauty, in use for
about a million years. Teardrop-shaped, and possessed of a remarkable
balance, it exudes grace and utility from an era much prior to
symbolisation. Isaac (1986) noted that "the basic needs for sharp edges
that humans have can be met from the varied range of forms generated from
'Oldowan' patterns of stone flaking," wondering how it came to be thought
that "more complex equals better adapted." In this distant early time,
according to cut-marks found on surviving bones, humans were using
scavenged animal sinews and skins for such things as cord, bags, and rugs
(Gowlett 1984). Further evidence suggests furs for cave wall coverings and
seats, and seaweed beds for sleeping (Butzer 1970).
The use of fire goes back almost two million years (Kempe 1988) and
might have appeared even earlier but for the tropical conditions of
humanity's original African homeland, as Poirier (1987) implies. Perfected
fire-making included the firing of caves to eliminate insects and heated
pebble floors (Perles 1975, Lumley 1976), amenities that show up very
early in the Palaeolithic.
As John Gowlett (1986) notes, there are still some archaeologists who
consider anything earlier than Homo sapiens- a mere 30,000 years ago-as
greatly more primitive than we "fully human" types. But along with the
documentation, referred to above, of fundamentally 'modern' brain anatomy
even in early humans, this minority must now contend with recent work
depicting complete human intelligence as present virtually with the birth
of the Homo Species. Thomas Wynn (1985) judged manufacture of the
Acheulian handaxe to have required "a stage of intelligence that is
typical of fully modern adults." Gowlett, like Wynn, examines the required
"operational thinking" involved in the right hammer, the right force and
the right striking angle, in an ordered sequence and with flexibility
needed for modifying the procedure. He contends that manipulation,
concentration, visualisation of form in three dimensions, and planning
were needed, and that these requirements "were the common property of
early human beings as much as two million years ago, and this," he adds,
"is hard knowledge, not speculation."
During the vast time-span of the Palaeolithic, there were remarkably
few changes in technology (Rolland 1990). Innovation, "over 2.5 million
years measured in stone tool development was practically nil," according
to Gerhard Kraus (1990). Seen in the light of what we now know of
prehistoric intelligence, such 'stagnation' is especially vexing to many
social scientists. "It is difficult to comprehend such slow development,"
in the judgment of Wymer (1989). It strikes me as very plausible that
intelligence, informed by the success and satisfaction of a
gatherer-hunter existence, is the very reason for the pronounced absence
of 'progress'. Division of labour, domestication, symbolic culture-these
were evidently refused until very recently. Contemporary thought, in its
post-modern incarnation, would like to rule out the reality of a divide
between nature and culture; given the abilities present among people
before civilisation, however, it may be more accurate to say that,
basically, they long chose nature over culture. It is also popular to see
almost every human act or object as symbolic (e.g. Botscharow 1989), a
position which is, generally speaking, part of the denial of a nature
versus culture distinction. But it is culture as the manipulation of basic
symbolic forms that is involved here. It also seems clear that reified
time, language (written, certainly, and probably spoken language for all
or most of this period), number, and art had no place, despite an
intelligence fully capable of them.
I would like to interject, in passing, my agreement with Goldschmidt
(1990) that "the hidden dimension in the construction of the symbolic
world is time." And as Norman O. Brown put it, "life not repressed is not
in historical time," which I take as a reminder that time as a materiality
is not inherent in reality, but a cultural imposition, perhaps the first
cultural imposition, on it. As this elemental dimension of symbolic
culture progresses, so does, by equal steps, alienation from the natural.
Cohen (1974) has discussed symbols as "essential for the development
and maintenance of social order." Which implies - as does, more
forcefully, a great deal of positive evidence - that before the emergence
of symbols there was no condition of dis-order requiring them. In a
similar vein, Levi-Strauss (1953) pointed out that "mythical thought
always progresses from the awareness of oppositions toward their
resolution." So whence the absence of order, the conflicts or
'oppositions'? The literature on the Paleolithic contains almost nothing
that deals with this essential question, among thousands of monographs on
specific features. A reasonable hypothesis, in my opinion, is that
division of labour, unnoticed because of its glacially slow pace, and not
sufficiently understood because of its newness, began to cause small
fissures in the human community and unhealthy practices vis-_-vis nature.
In the later Upper Palaeolithic, "15,000 years ago, we begin to observe
specialised collection of plants in the Middle East, and specialised
hunting," observed Gowlett (1984). The sudden appearance of symbolic
activities (e.g. ritual and art) in the Upper Palaeolithic has definitely
seemed to archaeologists one of prehistory's "big surprises" (Binford
1972b), given the absence of such behaviours in the Middle Palaeolithic
(Foster 1990, Koziowski 1990). But signs of division of labour and
specialisation were making their presence felt as a breakdown of wholeness
and natural order, a lack that needed redressing. What is surprising is
that this transition to civilisation can still be seen as benign. Foster
(1990) seems to celebrate it by concluding that the "symbolic mode...has
proved extraordinarily adaptive, else why has Homo Sapiens become material
master of the world?" He is certainly correct, as he is to recognise "the
manipulation of symbols [to be] the very stuff of culture," but he appears
oblivious to the fact that this successful adaptation has brought
alienation and destruction of nature along to their present horrifying
prominence.
It is reasonable to assume that the symbolic world originated in the
formulation of language, which somehow appeared from a "matrix of
extensive non-verbal communication" (Tanner and Zihiman 1976) and
face-to-face contact. There is no agreement as to when language began, but
no evidence exists of speech before the cultural 'explosion' of the later
Upper Palaeolithic (Dibble 1984, 1989). It seems to have acted as an
"inhibiting agent," a way of bringing life under "greater control"
(Mumford 1972), stemming the flood of images and sensations to which the
pre-modern individual was open. In this sense it would have likely marked
an early turning away from a life of openness and communion with nature,
toward one more oriented to the overlordship and domestication that
followed symbolic culture's inauguration. It is probably a mistake, by the
way, to assume that thought is advanced (if there were such a thing as
'neutral' thought, whose advance could be universally appreciated) because
we actually think in language; there is no conclusive evidence that we
must do so (Allport 1983). There are many cases (Lecours and Joanette
1980, Levine et al. 1982), involving stroke and like impairments, of
patients who have lost speech, including the ability to talk silently to
themselves, who were fully capable of coherent thought of all kinds. These
data strongly suggest that "human intellectual skill is uniquely powerful,
even in the absence of language" (Donald 1991).
In terms of symbolisation in action, Goldschmidt (1990) seems correct
in judging that "the Upper Palaeolithic invention of ritual may well have
been the keystone in the structure of culture that gave it its great
impetus for expansion." Ritual has played a number of pivotal roles in
what Hodder (1990) termed "the relentless unfolding of symbolic and social
structures" accompanying the arrival of cultural mediation. It was as a
means of achieving and consolidating social cohesion that ritual was
essential (Johnson 1982, Conkey 1985); totemic rituals, for example,
reinforce clan unity.
The start of an appreciation of domestication, or taming of nature, is
seen in a cultural ordering of the wild, through ritual. Evidently, the
female as a cultural category, viz. seen as wild or dangerous, dates from
this period. The ritual 'Venus' figurines appear as of 25,000 years ago,
and seem to be an example of earliest symbolic likeness of women for the
purpose of representation and control (Hodder 1990). Even more concretely,
subjugation of the wild occurs at this time in the first systematic
hunting of large mammals; ritual was an integral part of this activity
(Hammond 1974, Frison 1986). Ritual, as shamanic practice, may also be
considered as a regression from that state in which all shared a
consciousness we would now classify as extrasensory (Leonard 1972).When
specialists alone claim access to such perceptual heights as may have been
once communal, further backward moves in division of labour are
facilitated or enhanced. The way back to bliss through ritual is a
virtually universal mythic theme, promising the dissolution of measurable
time, among other joys. This theme of ritual points to an absence that it
falsely claims to fill, as does symbolic culture in general.
Ritual as a means of organising emotions, a method of cultural
direction and restraint, introduces art, a facet of ritual expressiveness
(Bender 1989). "There can be little doubt," to Gans (1985), "that the
various forms of secular art derive originally from ritual." We can detect
the beginning of an unease, a feeling that an earlier, direct authenticity
is departing. La Barre (1972), I believe, is correct in judging that "art
and religion alike arise from unsatisfied desire." At first, more
abstractly as language, then more purposively as ritual and art, culture
steps in to deal artificially with spiritual and social anxiety.
Ritual and magic must have dominated early (Upper Paleolithic) art and
were probably essential, along with an increasing division of labour, for
the co-ordination and direction of community (Wymer 1981). Similarly,
Pfeiffer (1982) has depicted the famous Upper Palaeolithic European cave
paintings as the original form of initiating youth into now complex social
systems; as necessary for order and discipline (see also Gamble 1982,
Jochim 1983). And art may have contributed to the control of nature, as
part of development of the earliest territorialism, for example (Straus
1990).
The emergence of symbolic culture, with its inherent will to manipulate
and control, soon opened the door to domestication of nature. After two
million years of human life within the bounds of nature, in balance with
other wild species, agriculture changed our lifestyle, our way of
adapting, in an unprecedented way. Never before has such a radical change
occurred in a species so utterly and so swiftly (Pfeiffer 1977).
Self-domestication through language, ritual, and art inspired the taming
of plants and animals that followed. Appearing only 10,000 years ago,
farming quickly triumphed; for control, by its very nature, invites
intensification. Once the will to production broke through, it became more
productive the more efficiently it was exercised, and hence more ascendant
and adaptive.
Agriculture enables greatly increased division of labour, establishes
the material foundations of social hierarchy, and initiates environmental
destruction. Priests, kings, drudgery, sexual inequality, warfare are a
few of its fairly immediate specific consequences (Ehrenberg 1986b, Wymer
1981, Festinger 1983). Whereas Palaeolithic peoples enjoyed a highly
varied diet, using several thousand species of plants for food, with
farming these sources were vastly reduced (White 1959, Gouldie 1986).
Given the intelligence and the very great practical knowledge of Stone
Age humanity, the question has often been asked, "Why didn't agriculture
begin, at say, 1,000,000 B.C. rather than about 8,000 B.C.?" I have
provided a brief answer in terms of slowly accelerating alienation in the
form of division of labour and symbolisation, but given how negative the
results were, it is still a bewildering phenomenon. Thus, as Binford
(1968) put it, "The question to be asked is not why agriculture...was not
developed everywhere, but why it was developed at all." The end of
gatherer-hunter life brought a decline in size, stature, and skeletal
robusticity (Cohen and Armelagos 1981, Harris and Ross 1981), and
introduced tooth decay, nutritional deficiencies, and most infectious
diseases (Larsen 1982, Buikstra 1976a, Cohen 1981). "Taken as a whole...an
overall decline in the quality - and probably the length - of human life,"
concluded Cohen and Armelagos (1981).
Another outcome was the invention of number, unnecessary before the
ownership of crops, animals, and land that is one of agriculture's
hallmarks. The development of number further impelled the urge to treat
nature as something to be dominated. Writing was also required by
Domestication, for the earliest business transactions and political
administration (Larsen 1988). Levi-Strauss has argued persuasively that
the primary function of written communication was to facilitate
exploitation and subjugation (1955); cities and empires, for example,
would be impossible without it. Here we see clearly the joining of the
logic of symbolisation and the growth of capital.
Conformity, repetition, and regularity were the keys to civilisation
upon its triumph, replacing the spontaneity, enchantment, and discovery of
the pre-agricultural human state that survived so very long. Clark (1979)
cites a gatherer-hunter "amplitude of leisure," deciding "it was this and
the pleasurable way of life that went with it, rather than penury and a
day-long grind, that explains why social life remained so static." One of
the most enduring and, widespread myths is that there was once a Golden
Age, characterised by peace and innocence, and that something happened to
destroy this idyll and consign us to misery and suffering. Eden, or
whatever name it goes by, was the home of our primeval forager ancestors,
and expresses the yearning of disillusioned tillers of the soil for a lost
life of freedom and relative ease.
The once-rich environs people inhabited prior to domestication and
agriculture are now virtually non-existent. For the few remaining foragers
there exist only the most marginal lands, those isolated places as yet
unwanted by agriculture. And surviving gatherer-hunters, who have somehow
managed to evade civilisation's tremendous pressures to turn them into
slaves (i.e. farmers, political subjects, wage labourers), have all been
influenced by contact with outside peoples (Lee 1976, Mithen 1990).
Duffy (1984) points out that the present day gatherer-hunters he
studied, the Mbuti Pygmies of central Africa, have been acculturated by
surrounding villager-agriculturists for hundreds of years, and to some
extent, by generations of contact with government authorities and
missionaries. And yet it seems that an impulse toward authentic life can
survive down through the ages. "Try to imagine," he counsels, "a way of
life where land, shelter, and food are free, and where there are no
leaders, bosses, politics, organised crime, taxes, or laws. Add to this
the benefits of being part of a society where everything is shared, where
there are no rich people and no poor people, and where happiness does not
mean the accumulation of material possessions." The Mbuti have never
domesticated animals or planted crops.
Among the members of non-agriculturist bands resides a highly sane
combination of little work and material abundance. Bodley (1976)
discovered that the San (a.k.a. Bushmen), of the harsh Kalahari Desert of
southern Africa, work fewer hours, and fewer of their number work, than do
the neighbouring cultivators. In times of drought, moreover, it has been
the San to whom the farmers have turned for their survival (Lee 1968).
They spend "strikingly little time labouring and much time at rest and
leisure," according to Tanaka (1980), while others (e.g. Marshall 1976,
Guenther 1976) have commented on San vitality and freedom compared with
sedentary farmers, their relatively secure and easygoing life.
Flood (1983) noted that to Australian aborigines "the labour involved
in tilling and planting outweighed the possible advantages." Speaking more
generally, Tanaka (1976) has pointed to the abundant and stable plant
foods in the society of early humanity, just as "they exist in every
modern, gatherer society." Likewise, Festinger (1983) referred
Palaeolithic access to "considerable food without a great deal of effort,"
adding that "contemporary groups that still Iive on hunting and gathering
do very well, even though they have been pushed into very marginal
habitats." As Hole and Flannery (1963) summarised: "No group on earth has
more leisure time than hunters and gatherers, who spend it primarily on
games, conversation and relaxing." They have much more free time, adds
Binford (1968), "than do modern industrial or farm workers, or even
professors of archaeology."
The non-domesticated know that, as Vaneigem (1975) put it, only the
present can be total. This by itself means that they live life with
incomparably greater immediacy, density and passion than we do. It has
been said that some revolutionary days are worth centuries; until then "We
look before and after," as Shelley wrote, "And sigh for what is not...."
The Mbuti believe (Turnbull 1976) that "by a correct fulfilment of the
present, the past and the future will take care of themselves." Primitive
peoples do not live through memories, and generally have no interest in
birthdays or measuring their ages (Cipriani 1966). As for the future, they
have little desire to control what does not yet exist, just as they have
little desire to control nature. Their moment-by- moment joining with the
flux and flow of the natural world does not preclude an awareness of the
seasons, but this does not constitute an alienated time consciousness that
robs them of the present.
Though contemporary gatherer-hunters eat more meat than their
prehistoric forbears, vegetable foods still constitute the main stay of
their diet in tropical and subtropical region (Lee 1968a, Yellen and Lee
1976). Both the Kalahari San and the Hazda of East Africa, where game is
more abundant than in the Kalahari, rely on gathering for eighty percent
of their sustenance (Tanaka 1980). The !Kung branch of the San search for
more than a hundred different kinds of plants (Thomas 1968) and exhibit no
nutritional deficiency (Truswell and Hansen 1976). This is similar to the
healthful, varied diet of Australian foragers (Fisher 1982, Flood 1983).
The overall diet of gatherers is better than that of cultivators,
starvation is very rare, and their health status generally superior, with
much less chronic disease (Lee and Devore 1968a, Ackerman 1990).
Lauren van der Post (1958) expressed wonder at the exuberant San laugh,
which rises "sheer from the stomach, a laugh you never hear among
civilised people." He found this emblematic of a great vigour and clarity
of senses that yet manages to withstand and elude the onslaught of
civilisation. Truswell and Hansen (1976) may have encountered it in the
person of a San who had survived an unarmed fight with a leopard; although
injured, he had killed the animal with his bare hands.
The Andaman Islanders, west of Thailand, have no leaders, no idea of
symbolic representation, and no domesticated animals. There is also an
absence of aggression, violence, and disease; wounds heal surprisingly
quickly, and their sight and hearing are particularly acute. They are said
to have declined since European intrusion in the mid-19th century, but
exhibit other such remarkable physical traits as a natural immunity to
malaria, skin with sufficient elasticity to rule out post childbirth
stretch marks and the wrinkling we associate with aging, and an
'unbelievable' strength of teeth: Cipriani (1966) reported seeing children
of 10 to 15 years crush nails with them. He also testified to the Andamese
practice of collecting honey with no protective clothing at all; "yet they
are never stung, and watching them one felt in the presence of some
age-old mystery, lost by the civilised world." DeVries (1952) has cited a
wide range of contrasts by which the superior health of gatherer-hunters
can be established, including an absence of degenerative diseases, mental
disabilities, and childbirth without difficulty or pain. He also points
out that this begins to erode from the moment of contact with
civilisation.
Relatedly, there is a great deal of evidence not for only physical and
emotional vigour among primitives but also concerning their heightened
sensory abilities. Darwin described people at the southernmost tip of
South America who went about almost naked in frigid conditions, while
Peasley (1983) observed Aborigines who were renowned for their ability to
live through bitterly cold desert nights "without any form of clothing."
Levi-Strauss (1979) was astounded to learn of a particular [South
American) tribe which was able to "see the planet Venus in full daylight,"
a feat comparable to that of the North African Dogon who consider Sirius B
the most important star; somehow aware without instruments, of a star that
can only be found with the most powerful of telescopes (Temple 1976). In
this vein Boyden (1970) recounted the Bushman ability to see four of the
moons of Jupiter with the naked eye.
In The Harmless People (1959), Marshall told how one Bushman walked
unerringly to a spot in a vast plain, "with no bush or tree to mark
place," and pointed out a blade of grass with an almost invisible filament
of vine around it. He had encountered it months before in the rainy season
when it was green. Now, in parched weather, he dug there to expose a
succulent root and quenched his thirst. Also in the Kalahari Desert, van
der Post (1958) meditated upon San/Bushman communion with nature, a level
of experience that "could almost be called mystical. For instance, they
seemed to know what it actually felt like to be an Elephant, a lion, an
antelope, a steenbuck, a lizard, a striped mouse, mantis, baobab tree,
yellow-crested cobra or starry-eyed amaryllis, to mention only a few of
the brilliant multitudes through which they moved." It seems almost
pedestrian to add that gather-hunters s have often been remarked to
possess tracking skills that virtually defy rational explanation (e.g. Lee
1979).
Rohrlich-Leavitt (1976) noted, "The data show that gatherer-hunters are
generally non territorial and bilocal; reject group aggression and
competition; share their resources freely; value egalitarianism and
personal autonomy in the context of group co-operation; and are indulgent
and loving with children." Dozens of studies stress communal sharing and
egalitarianism as perhaps the defining traits of such groups (e.g.
Marshall 1961 and 1976, Sahlins 1968, Pilbeam 1972, Damas 1972, Diamond
1974, Lafitau 1974, Tanaka 1976 and 1980, Wiessner 1977, Morris 1982,
Riches 1982, Smith 1988, Mithen 1990). Lee (1982) referred to the
"universality among foragers" of sharing, while Marshall's classic 1961
work spoke of the "ethic of generosity and humility" informing a "strongly
egalitarian" gatherer-hunter orientation. Tanaka provides a typical
example: "The most admired character trait is generosity, and the most
despised and disliked are stinginess and selfishness."
Baer (1986) listed "egalitarianism, democracy, personalism,
individuation, nurturance" as key virtues of the non-civilised, and Lee
(1988) cited "an absolute aversion to rank distinctions" among "simple
foraging peoples around the world." Leacock and Lee (1982) specified that
"any assumption of authority" within the group "leads to ridicule or anger
among the !Kung, as has been recorded for the Mbuti (Turnbull 1962), the
Hazda (Woodburn 1980) and the Montagnais-Naskapi (Thwaites 1906), among
others."
"Not even the father of an extended family can tell his sons and
daughters what to do. Most people appear to operate on their own internal
schedules," reported Lee (1972) of the !Kung of Botswana. Ingold (1987)
judged that "in most hunting & gathering societies, a supreme value is
placed upon the principle of individual autonomy," similar to Wilson's
finding (1988) of "an ethic of independence" that is "common to the
focused open societies." The esteemed field anthropologist Radin (1953)
went so far as to say: "Free scope is allowed for every conceivable kind
of personal outlet or expression in primitive society. No moral judgment
is passed on any aspect of human personality as such."
Turnbull (1976) looked on the structure of Mbuti social life as "an
apparent vacuum, a lack of internal system that is almost anarchical."
According to Duffy (1984), "the Mbuti are naturally acephalous--they do
not have leaders or rulers, and decisions concerning the band are made by
consensus." There is an enormous qualitative difference between foragers
and farmers in this regard, as in so many others. For instance,
agricultural Bantu tribes (e.g. the Saga) surround the San, and are
organised by kingship, hierarchy and work; the San exhibit egalitarianism,
autonomy, and sharing. Domestication is the principle which accounts for
this drastic distinction.
Domination within a society is not unrelated to domination of nature.
In gatherer-hunter societies, on the other hand, no strict hierarchy
exists between the human and the non human species (Noske 1989), and
relations among foragers are likewise non-hierarchical. The
non-domesticated typically view the animals they hunt as equals; this
essentially egalitarian relationship is ended by the advent of
domestication.
When progressive estrangement from nature became outright social
control (agriculture), more than just social attitudes changed.
Descriptions by sailors and explorers who arrived in "newly discovered"
regions tell how wild mammals and birds originally showed no fear at all
of the human invaders (Brock 1981). A few contemporary gatherers practised
no hunting before outside contact, e.g. the Tasaday of the Philippines
(Nance 1975), but while the majority certainly do hunt, "it is not
normally an aggressive act" (Rohrlich-Leavitt 1976). Turnbull (1965)
observed Mbuti hunting as quite without any aggressive spirit, even
carried out with a sort of regret. Hewitt (1986) reported a sympathy bond
between hunter and hunted among the Xan Bushmen he encountered in the 19th
century.
As regards violence among gatherer-hunters, Lee (1988) found that "the
!Kung hate fighting, and think anybody who fought would be stupid." The
Mbuti, by Duffy's account (1984), "look on any form of violence between
one person and another with great abhorrence and distaste, and never
represent it in their dancing or playacting." Homicide and suicide,
concluded Bodley (1976), are both "decidedly uncommon" among undisturbed
gatherer-hunters. The 'warlike' nature of Native American peoples was
often fabricated to add legitimacy to European aims of conquest (Kroeber
1961); the foraging Comanche maintained their non-violent ways for
centuries before the European invasion, becoming violent only upon contact
with marauding civilisation (Fried 1973).
The development of symbolic culture, which rapidly led to agriculture,
is linked through ritual to alienated social life among extant foraging
groups. Bloch (1977) found a correlation between levels of ritual and
hierarchy. Put negatively, Woodburn (1968) could see the connection
between an absence of ritual and the absence of specialised roles and
hierarchy among the Hazda of Tanzania. Turner's study of the west African
Ndembu (1957) revealed a profusion of ritual structures and ceremonies
intended to redress the conflicts arising from the breakdown of an
earlier, more seamless society. These ceremonies and structures function
in a politically integrative way. Ritual is a repetitive activity for
which outcomes and responses are essentially assured by social contract;
it conveys the message that symbolic practice, via group membership and
social rules, provides control (Cohen 1985). Ritual fosters the concept of
control domination, and has been seen to tend toward leadership roles
(Hitchcock 1982) and centralised political structure (Lourandos 1985). A
monopoly of ceremonial institutions clearly extends the concept of
authority (Bender 1978), and may itself be the original formal authority.
Among agricultural tribes of New Guinea, leadership and the inequality
it implies are based upon participation in hierarchies of ritual
initiation or upon shamanistic spirit-mediumship (Kelly 1977, Modjeska
1982). In the role of shamans we see a concrete practice of ritual as it
contributes to domination in human society.
Radin (1937) discussed "the same marked tendency" among Asian and North
American tribal peoples for shamans or medicine men "to organise and
develop theory that they alone are in communication with the
supernatural." This exclusive access seems to empower them at the expense
of the rest; Lommel (1967) saw ''an increase in the shaman's psychic
potency...counterbalanced by a weakening of potency in other members of
the group." This practice has fairly obvious implications for power
relationships in other areas of life, and contrasts with earlier periods
devoid of religious leadership. The Batuque of Brazil are host to shamans
who each claim control over certain spirits and attempt to sell
supernatural services to clients, rather like priests of competing sects
(S. Leacock 1988). Specialists of this type in "magically controlling
nature...would naturally come to control men, too," in the opinion of
Muller (1961). In fact, the shaman is often the most powerful individual
in pre-agricultural societies (e.g. Sheehan 1985); he is in a position to
institute change. Johannessen (1987) offers the thesis that resistance to
the innovation of planting was overcome by the influence of shamans, among
the Indians of the American Southwest, for instance. Similarly, Marquardt
(1985) has suggested that ritual authority structures have played an
important role in the initiation and organisation of production in North
America. Another student of American groups (Ingold 1987) saw an important
connection between shamans' role in mastering wildness in nature and an
emerging subordination of women.
Berndt (1974a) has discussed the importance among Aborigines of ritual
sexual division of labour in the development of negative sex roles, while
Randolph (1988) comes straight to the point: "Ritual activity is needed to
create 'proper' men and women." There is "no reason in nature" for gender
divisions, argues Bender (1989). "They have to be created by proscription
and taboo, they have to be 'naturalised' through ideology and ritual." But
gatherer-hunter societies, by their very nature, deny ritual its potential
to domesticate women. The structure (non-structure?) of egalitarian bands,
even those most oriented toward hunting, includes a guarantee of autonomy
to both sexes. This guarantee is the fact that the materials of
subsistence are equally available to women and men and that, further, the
success of the band is dependent on co-operation based on that autonomy
(Leacock 1978, Friedl 1975). The spheres of the sexes are often somewhat
separate, but inasmuch as the contribution of women is generally at least
equal to that of men, social equality of the sexes is "a key feature of
forager societies" (Ehrenberg 1989b). Many anthropologists, in fact, have
found the status of women in forager groups to be higher than in any other
type of society (e.g. Fluer-Lobban 1979, Rohrlich-Leavitt, Sykes and
Weatherford 1975, Leacock 1978).
In all major decisions, observed Turnbull (1970) of the Mbuti, "men and
women have equal say, hunting and gathering being equally important." He
made it clear (1981) that there is sexual differentiation--probably a good
deal more than was the case with their distant forbears--"but without any
sense of superordination or subordination." Men actually work more hours
than women among the !Kung, according to Post and Taylor (1984). It should
be added, in terms of the division of labour common among contemporary
gatherer-hunters, that this differentiation of roles is by no means
universal. Nor was it when the Roman historian Tacitus wrote, of the Fenni
of the Baltic region, that "the women support themselves by hunting,
exactly like the men...and count their lot happier than that of others who
groan over field labour." Or when Procopius found, in the 6th century
A.D., that the Serithifinni of what is now Finland "neither till the land
themselves, nor do their women work it for them, but the women regularly
join the men in hunting."
The Tiwi women of Melville Island regularly hunt (Martin and Voorhies
1975) as do the Agta women in the Philippines (Estioko-Griffen and Griffen
1981). In Mbuti society, "there is little specialisation according to sex.
Even the hunt is a joint effort," reports Turnbull (1962), and Cotlow
(1971) testifies that "among the traditional Eskimos it is (or was) a
co-operative enterprise for the whole family group." Darwin (1871) found
another aspect of sexual equality:"...in utterly barbarous tribes the
women have more power in choosing, rejecting, and tempting their lovers,
or of afterwards changing their husbands, than might have been expected."
The !Kung Bushmen and Mbuti exemplify this female autonomy, as reported by
Marshall (1959) and Thomas (1965); "Women apparently leave a man whenever
they are unhappy with their marriage," concluded Begler (1978). Marshall
(1970) also found that rape was extremely rare or absent among the !Kung.
An intriguing phenomenon concerning gatherer-hunter women is their
ability to prevent pregnancy in the absence of any contraception
(Silberbauer 1981). Many hypotheses have been put forth and debunked, e.g.
conception somehow related to levels of body fat (Frisch 1974, Leibowitz
1986). What seems a very plausible explanation is based on the fact that
undomesticated people are very much more in tune with their physical
selves. Foraging women's senses and processes are not alienated from
themselves or dulled; control over childbearing is probably less than
mysterious to those whose bodies are not foreign objects to be acted upon.
The Pygmies of Zaire celebrate the first menstrual period of every girl
with a great festival of gratitude and rejoicing (Turnbull 1962). The
young woman feels pride and pleasure, and the entire band expresses its
happiness. Among agricultural villagers, however, a menstruating woman is
regarded as unclean and dangerous, to be quarantined by taboo (Duffy
1984). The relaxed, egalitarian relationship between San men and women,
with its flexibility of roles and mutual respect impressed Draper (1971,
1972, 1975); a relationship, she made clear, that endures as long as they
remain gatherer- hunters and no longer.
Duffy (1984) found that each child in an Mbuti camp calls every man
father and every woman mother. Forager children receive far more care,
time, and attention than do those in civilisation's isolated nuclear
families. Post and Taylor (1984) described the "almost permanent contact"
with their mothers and other adults that Bushman children enjoy. !Kung
infants studied by Ainsworth (1967) showed marked precocity of early
cognitive and motor skills development. This was attributed both to the
exercise and stimulation produced by unrestricted freedom of movement, and
to the high degree of physical warmth and closeness between !Kung parents
and children (see also Konner 1976)
Draper (1976) could see that "competitiveness in game is almost
entirely lacking among the !Kung," as Shostack (1976) observed "!Kung boys
and girls playing together and sharing most games." She also found that
children are not prevented from experimental sex play, consonant with the
freedom of older Mbuti youth to "indulge in premarital sex with enthusiasm
and delight" (Turnbull 1981). The Zuni "have no sense of sin," Ruth
Benedict (1946) wrote in a related vein. "Chastity as a way of life is
regarded with great disfavour... Pleasant relations between the sexes are
merely one aspect of pleasant relations with human beings...Sex is an
incident in a happy life."
Coontz and Henderson (1986) point to a growing body of evidence in
support of the proposition that relations between the sexes are most
egalitarian in the simplest foraging societies. Women play an essential
role in traditional agriculture, but receive no corresponding status for
their contribution, unlike the case of gatherer-hunter society (Chevillard
and Leconte 1986, Whyte 1978). As with plants and animals, so are women
subject to domestication with the coming of agriculture. Culture, securing
its foundations with the new order, requires the firm subjugation of
instinct, freedom, and sexuality. All dis-order must be banished, the
elemental and spontaneous taken firmly in hand. Women's creativity and
their very being as sexual persons are pressured to give way to the role,
expressed in all peasant religions, of Great Mother, that is, fecund
breeder of men and food.
The men of the South American Munduruc, a farming tribe, refer to
plants and sex in the same phrase about subduing women: "We tame them with
the banana" (Murphy and Murphy 1985). Simone de Beauvoir (1949) recognised
in the equation of the plow and the phallus a symbol of male authority
over women. Among the Amazonian Jivaro, another agricultural group, women
are beasts of burden and the personal property of men (Harner 1972); the
"abduction of adult women is a prominent part of much warfare" by these
lowland South American tribes (Ferguson 1988) . Brutalization and
isolation of women seem to be functions of agricultural societies (Gregor
1988), and the female continues to perform most or even all of the work in
such groups (Morgan 1985).
Head-hunting is practised by the above-mentioned groups, as part of
endemic warfare over coveted agricultural land (Lathrap 1970);
head-hunting and near-constant warring is also witnessed among the farming
tribes of Highlands New Guinea (Watson 1970). Lenski and Lenski's 1974
researches concluded that warfare is rare among foragers but becomes
extremely common with agrarian societies. As Wilson (1988) put it
succinctly, "Revenge, feuds, rioting, warfare and battle seem to emerge
among, and to be typical of, domesticated peoples."
Tribal conflicts, Godelier (1977) argues, are "explainable primarily by
reference to colonial domination" and should not be seen as having an
origin "in the functioning of precolonial structures." Certainly contact
with civilisation can have an unsettling, degenerative effect, but
Godelier's Marxism (viz. unwillingness to question
domestication/production), is, one suspects, relevant to such a judgment.
Thus it could be said that the Copper Eskimos, who have a significant
incidence of homicide within their group (Damas 1972), owe this violence
to the impact of outside influences, but their reliance on domesticated
dogs should also be noted.
Arens (1979) has asserted, paralleling Godelier to some extent, that
cannibalism as a cultural phenomenon is a fiction, invented and promoted
by agencies of outside conquest. But there is documentation of this
practice (e.g. Poole 1983, Tuzin 1976) among, once again, peoples involved
in domestication. The studies by Hogg (1966), for example, reveal its
presence among certain African tribes, steeped in ritual and grounded in
agriculture. Cannibalism is generally a form of cultural control of chaos,
in which the victim represents animality, or all that should be tamed
(Sanday 1986). Significantly, one of the important myths of Fiji
Islanders, "How the Fijians first became cannibals," is literally a tale
of planting (Sahlins 1983). Similarly, the highly domesticated and
time-conscious Aztecs practised human sacrifice as a gesture to tame
unruly forces and uphold the social equilibrium of a very alienated
society. As Norbeck (1961) pointed out, non-domesticated, "culturally
impoverished" societies are devoid of cannibalism and human sacrifice.
As for one of the basic underpinnings of violence in more complex
societies, Barnes (1970) found that "reports in the ethnographic
literature of territorial struggles" between gatherer-hunters are
"extremely rare." !Kung boundaries are vague and undefended (Lee 1979);
Pandaram territories overlap, and individuals go where they please (Morris
1982); Hazda move freely from region to region (Woodburn 1968); boundaries
and trespass have little or no meaning to the Mbuti (Turnbull 1966); and
Australian Aborigines reject territorial or social demarcations (Gumpert
1981, Hamilton 1982). An ethic of generosity and hospitality takes the
place of exclusivity (Steward 1968, Hiatt 1968).
Gatherer-hunter peoples have developed "no conception of private
property," in the estimation of Kitwood (1984). As noted above in
reference to sharing, and with Sansom's (1980) characterisation of
Aborigines as "people without property," foragers do not share
civilisation's obsession with externals. "Mine and thine, the seeds of all
mischief, have no place with them," wrote Pietro (1511) of the native
North Americans encountered on the second voyage of Columbus. The Bushmen
have "no sense of possession," according to Post (1958), and Lee (1972)
saw them making "no sharp dichotomy between the resources of the natural
environment and the social wealth." There is a line between nature and
culture, again, and the non-civilised choose the former.
There are many gatherer-hunters who could carry all that they make use
of in one hand, who die with pretty much what they had as they came into
the world. Once humans shared everything; with agriculture, ownership
becomes paramount and a species presumes to own the world. A deformation
the imagination could scarcely equal.
Sahlins (1972) spoke of this eloquently: "The world's most primitive
people have few possessions, but they are not poor. Poverty is not a
certain small amount of goods, nor is it just a relation between means and
ends; above all, it is a relation between people. Poverty is a social
status. As such it is the invention of civilisation."
The "common tendency" of gatherer-hunters "to reject farming until it
was absolutely thrust upon them" (Bodley1976) bespeaks a nature/culture
divide also present in the Mbuti recognition that if one of them becomes a
villager he is no longer an Mbuti (Turnbull 1976). They know that forager
band and agriculturist village are opposed societies with opposed values.
At times, however, the crucial factor of domestication can be lost
sight of. "The historic foraging populations of the Western Coast of North
America have long been considered anomalous among foragers," declared
Cohen (1981); as Kelly (1991) also put it, "tribes of the Northwest Coast
break all the stereotypes of hunter-gatherers." These foragers, whose main
sustenance is fishing, have exhibited such alienated features as chiefs,
hierarchy, warfare and slavery. But almost always overlooked are their
domesticated tobacco and domesticated dogs. Even this celebrated 'anomaly'
contains features of domestication. Its practice, from ritual to
production, with various accompanying forms of domination, seems to anchor
and promote the facets of decline from an earlier state of grace.
Thomas (1981) provides another North American example, that of the
Great Basin Shoshones and three of their component societies, the Kawich
Mountain Shoshones, Reese River Shoshones, and Owens Valley Paiutes. The
three groups showed distinctly different levels of agriculture, with
increasing territoriality or ownership and hierarchy closely corresponding
to higher degrees of domestication. To 'define' a disalienated world would
be impossible and even undesirable, but I think we can and should try to
reveal the unworld of today and how it got this way. We have taken a
monstrously wrong turn with symbolic culture and division of labour, from
a place of enchantment, understanding and wholeness to the absence we find
at the heart of the doctrine of progress. Empty and emptying, the logic of
domestication, with its demand to control everything, now shows us the
ruin of the civilisation that ruins the rest. Assuming the inferiority of
nature enables the domination of cultural systems that soon will make the
very earth uninhabitable.
Postmodernism says to us that a society without power relations can
only be an abstraction (Foucault, 1982). This is a lie unless we accept
the death of nature and renounce what once was and what we can find again.
Turnbull spoke of the intimacy between Mbuti people and the forest,
dancing almost as if making love to the forest. In the bosom of a life of
equals that is no abstraction, that struggles to endure, they were
"dancing with the forest, dancing with the moon " {The spelling mistakes
etc are probably not the fault of the author.}
John Zerzan Anti-Authoritarians Anonymous PO Box 11331 Eugene,
Oregon 97440 USA no email address
John Zerzan is the author of Future Primitive (1994, Autonomedia),
Questioning Technology: A Critical Anthology (co-edited with Alice Carnes,
Freedom Press) and his 1988 book, Elements of Refusal will be re-released
shortly by CAL Press. He has also written numerous essays, many of which
are published in Anarchy Magazine, and he is completing a book of new
essays.
Anarchy Magazine C.A.L. Press POB 1446 Columbia, MO
65205-1446 E-Mail: jmcquinn@mail.coin.missouri.edu
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