martes, 20 de septiembre de 2016

EVANS-PRITCHARD. THE NUER AND THE PIONEER WORK ON ANTHROPOLOGY OF SPACE


Some years ago, I met a classic of British anthropology literature, which end up exerting a profound influence on me when i started to rethinking the relationships between society, speace and time, it was "The Nuer" written by British anthropologist Edward Evans Pritchard, especially in chapters 2 and 3 of this work, respectively entitled "Oecology" and "Time and Space".
Originally published in 1940, "The Nuer" is an intense monograph built on a dense field work, in which Evans-Pritchard explores the ways of life and political institutions among the tribe of the Nuer in Sudan during the early years thirty. What makes this work particularly interesting from the reflections that are part of the "spatial turn" is that precisely this early ethnography anticipates several relevant issues. Evans-Pritchard interpreting the Nuer ways of understanding space, denatures their own western spatiotemporal conceptions, for the Nuer people (the author says) there are no categories of space and time as independent forms, but rather, both are actually constituent in an integrated between society and environment, mediated by social rhythms.
While authors of classical sociology as Émile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss (1902)of French School of sociology and ethnology, or the German sociologist Georg Simmel (1903) addressed the issue of space as an epistemological and sociological category, the particularity of Evans-Pritchard´s work was that this is a theoretical reflection rooted in ethnographic research, constructing theoretical reflections from field work, which shows the integration between the rhythms of social life and activities, the materiality of space and social relations between humans and animals as relational elements to understand the time and space as processes overlapping social existence, revealing the constructed character of space.
In chapter two, the author describes and think about diverse aspects that constitute the material and spatial frameworks of the Nuer, a tribe that at the time of Evans-Pritchard´s fieldwork, was a group of people with seasonal mobility in periods of flooding in areas bordering the Nile river. in this second chapter, Evans-Pritchard importantly highlights the place of the cattle, which had an economic relevance for the Nuer, exploring also a social dimension in relations between the people and their animals, that is especially relevant to understand the theoretical reflections of chapter three, on the notions of time and space as representations while materialized as social practices.
Years later, reading the work of philosophers like Henri Lefebvre (1991, 2004), or geographers as Yi-Fu Tuan (1977) or David Harvey (1989), I found some important parallels to the pioneering ideas and empirical work of Evans-Pritchard and the so-called "spatial turn", however, has been not studied and read in contemporary geography. In the sociology of the "Movility turn", Evans-Pritchard and in particular his work on the Nuer has been re discovered by authors like John Urry and Scott Lasch (1994), who also had rethinking the space and the rhythms of social life in the global world and late modernity.

Reading the classic and inexhaustible Henri Lefebvre´s "The Production of Space" I found two mentions of Evans-Pritchard work, no one of the references refers to "The Nuer" or the chapters mentioned in question, so that the links between philosophy spatialized Lefebvre and the work of Evans-Pritchard as a pioneer of space reflection based on empirical research, still opened for futures development and research. In fact it is part of one of my future projects in which I will explore the links between spatial perspective of anthropology of Evans-Pritchard and other theoretical and disciplinary lines on human geography.
For some notes of chapter three on spanish click here
I remembered the intersection between space time, regarding a comment made by my dear friend, the geographer Philippe Gervais-Lambony, about one of my presentations on environmental justice and creative destruction, when He argued that we can´t think about space without thinking about the time and temporality
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REFERENCES
-Durkheim, Émile y Mauss, Marcel. 1996[1902]. “Sobre algunas Formas de Clasificación Primitiva. Contribución al estudio de las representaciones colectivas” En: Durkheim, E. Clasificaciones Primitivas (y otros ensayos de antropología positiva). Barcelona: Ariel.
-Evans-Pritchard, Edward. 1940. “The Nuer: a description of the modes of livehood and the political institutions of Nilotic people”. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
-Harvey, David. 1998[1990]. “La Condición de Posmodernidad: una investigación sobre los orígenes del cambio cultural”. Buenos Aires: Amorrortu Editores.
-Lasch, Scott & Urry, John. 1994. “Economy of Signs and Space”. London: SAGE.
-Lefebvre, Henri.
1991[1974]. “The Production of Space”. Oxford: Blackwell.
2004[1992]. “Rhythmanalysis: Space, Time and Everyday life”. London and New York: Continuum.
-Simmel, Georg. 1997 [1903]. “The Sociology of Space”. En: Frisby,D & Featherstone, M (edS). Simmel on Culture. London: SAGE.
-Tuan, Yi-fu. 1977. “Space and Place: the perspective of experience”. London and Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.


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