After-Dinner ASA Keynote Speaker, 8.30pm
Professor Andre Beteille, University of Delhi, India: An Anthropologist
in his own Country
Welcome: John Gledhill, ASA Chair
Anthropology has been defined as the study of other cultures and the
anthropologist, in Lévi-Strauss’ picturesque phrase, as ‘the astronomer of
the social sciences’. What should the anthropologist do in his own country?
When anthropology was developing as a distinct empirical discipline a
hundred years ago, anthropologists did not study their own country. They
were Europeans who went out to other countries or Americans who went into
the reservations to investigate communities that were very different from
the ones to which they belonged. The preoccupation with difference and
otherness has given a very distinctive intellectual orientation to
anthropology as a discipline in contrast to, say, sociology, political
science and economics. It has to come to terms now with major changes in the
composition of the profession that began in the middle of the last century.
Anthropologists are no longer all Europeans and Americans studying
communities in countries that are different from their own. Increasing
numbers of them are Asians, Africans and Latin Americans who practise
anthropology in their own countries. Western anthropologists are, as it were
by definition, ‘cosmopolitan’. Are their counterparts in Asian and other
countries condemned to remain ‘provincial’? Or do they have to relocate to
Western universities to maintain a cosmopolitan approach to the study of
society and culture?
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