Claude Levi-Strauss: The Poet in the Laboratory (63 page)

Read Claude Levi-Strauss: The Poet in the Laboratory Online

Authors: Patrick Wilcken

Tags: #Biographies & Memoirs, #Professionals & Academics, #Social Scientists & Psychologists, #History, #Americas, #South America, #Brazil, #Politics & Social Sciences, #Anthropology, #Cultural

BOOK: Claude Levi-Strauss: The Poet in the Laboratory
2.68Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
But for someone often considered an intellectual elitist, Lévi-Strauss had a popular touch, especially in the many interviews, radio broadcasts and documentary films in which he participated over the years. He was extremely articulate, effortlessly delivering potted summaries of his most demanding books. There was also an autobiographical strain to his work, which often interweaved incidents from his life with own thinking, the two sometimes merging into a kind of vital essence. And for readers unfamiliar with French, all of Lévi-Strauss’s books and most of his essays have been translated into English.
Of the many interviews he gave, Didier Eribon’s book-length
Conversations with Claude Lévi-Strauss
is by far the most comprehensive and searching.
1
Divided into three parts, it covers his early travels; the rise of structuralism; and his ideas on art, politics and culture. Lévi-Strauss’s late 1950s radio interviews with Georges Charbonnier have also been published in book form.
2
In this encounter, Lévi-Strauss talked at length about contemporary art and music. On the subject of myth, the Massey lectures, later published as
Myth and Meaning
, are as clear as the originals are opaque.
3
A good compilation of his television interviews, as well as a highly watchable feature documentary, is Pierre-André Boutang and Annie Chevallay’s
Lévi-Strauss: In His Own Words
; while the Canadian Film Board’s documentary,
Behind the Masks,
which covers his first trip to British Columbia in the 1970s, gives a flavor of his method, featuring a short lecture summarizing his analysis of myths and masks.
4
One of the best summaries of his ideas in English is Edmund Leach’s
Claude Lévi-Strauss
, which, in a series of essays, takes the reader step-by-step through the complexities of Lévi-Strauss’s arguments.
5
Also interesting is David Pace’s
Claude Lévi-Strauss: The Bearer of Ashes
, a critical assessment of the development of his ideas.
6
François Dosse’s two-volume narrative account of the era,
History of Structuralism
, contextualizes Lévi-Strauss’s work and the enormous influence he had over his contemporaries.
7
For a witty, bare-bones summary, replete with cartoon figures of Lévi-Strauss expounding his theories in speech bubbles, Boris Wiseman and Judy Groves’s
Introducing Lévi-Strauss and Structural Anthropology
, offers a rapid, but by no means trivialized, introduction to Lévi-Strauss.
8
French anthropologist Dan Sperber’s “Claude Lévi-Strauss Today,” which combines admiration and skepticism in the right measure, is one of the most balanced and intelligent essay-length assessments of his work.
9
Coming from a more literary perspective, American anthropologist Clifford Geertz’s “The Cerebral Savage: On the Work of Claude Lévi-Strauss” is a critique of what he calls Lévi-Strauss’s “infernal culture machine,” ending up questioning whether Lévi-Strauss’s theories represent “science or alchemy.”
10
Good chapter-length summaries of Lévi-Strauss’s work can also be found in Howard Gardner,
The Mind’s New Science: A History of the Cognitive Revolution
; John Sturrock,
Structuralism
; J. G. Merquior,
From Prague to Paris: A Critique of Structuralist and Post-Structuralist Thought
; and Boris Wiseman’s entry in the
Encyclopedia of Modern French Thought
.
11
Published in 1970,
Claude Lévi-Strauss: The Anthropologist as Hero
brings together an interesting selection of short review pieces by Susan Sontag, David Maybury-Lewis and Sanche de Gramont among others, written at the height of Lévi-Strauss’s fame.
12
For those wishing to return to the original works, Lévi-Strauss’s classic memoir,
Tristes Tropiques
, remains by far the most accessible and enjoyable entry point into his oeuvre.
13
The narrative follows his early years as a disillusioned university student, through to his discovery of anthropology and fieldwork in Brazil. Strangely, it skips over his crucial period of exile in New York, though this gap was partially filled by a short, descriptive essay on his first impressions on arriving in Manhattan in the third volume of his essay anthologies,
The View from Afar
.
14
For a visual companion piece to
Tristes Tropiques
, the coffee-table book,
Saudades do Brasil
showcases Lévi-Strauss’s formidable talents as a field photographer.
15
In his academic works, certain key chapters stand out as accessible encapsulations of his ideas. Lévi-Strauss often began and ended his books with clarity; it is the following through of the argument, demonstrated by hundreds of examples, that can be a slog for the general reader. The “Overture” and the “Finale” of the
Mythologiques
series, for instance, summarize the project in lucid prose; the intervening two thousand pages, though, require high levels of concentration to hold on to all the strands of Lévi-Strauss’s argument while remembering the twists and turns of an ever-accumulating stock of mythic material.
16
Similarly,
The Savage Mind
begins with a statement of key notions—the importance of disinterested classification, bricolage and the science of the concrete—but then drifts into complex ethnographic applications of these ideas.
17
The same could be said of
The Elementary Structures of Kinship
, which opens with a general discussion of the fundamental distinction between nature and culture and the power of the incest taboo, before becoming overladen with kinship diagrams and ethnographic minutiae.
18
Lévi-Strauss is certainly easier to manage at essay length. “The Structural Study of Myth,” his classic early demonstration of his method using Sophocles’
Oedipus Rex,
is a key reference point.
19
For an easy overview of some of his more general ideas, Lévi-Strauss wrote short, popularizing essays for the
UNESCO Courier
, covering discussions on the illusory notion of the “primitive,” the relationship between shamans and psychoanalysis and structural analyses of cooking, that are now available online.
20
For readers of French, the options are virtually limitless. However, a few of the more recently published titles stand out. Denis Bertholet’s 2003 biography,
Claude Lévi-Strauss
, is a detailed overview of his life and ideas.
21
Frédéric Keck has written a series of clear introductions to Lévi-Strauss’s work, including
Lévi-Strauss et la pensée sauvage
;
Claude Lévi-Strauss, une introduction
; and, with Vincent Debaene,
Claude Lévi-Strauss: L’homme au regard éloigné
.
22
The Bibliothèque de la Pléiade edition of
Oeuvres
, published when Lévi-Strauss was ninety-nine, is a fitting conclusion to his life and work.
23
It contains not just the bulk of his oeuvre, but previously unpublished material from Lévi-Strauss’s recently opened archive at the Bibliothèque nationale in Paris, including excerpts from his aborted novel, the first acts of a play he wrote in Brazil and his field notes. All this is presented with the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade’s customary gravitas, from the almost weightless Bible paper and soft leather cover to the pale pink flyleaves and the gold-embossed “Claude Lévi-Strauss Oeuvres” on the spine.
INDEX
 
 
Abbaye de Royaumont talks
 
Académie française
 
Adler, Alfred
 
Africa
 
Dakar-Djibouti expedition to
 
African-Americans
 
Afrique fantôme, L’
(Leiris)
 
Afro-Brazilians
 
Agamben, Giorgio
 
Alquié, Ferdinand
 
Althusser, Louis
 
Alvarenga, Oneyda
 
Amado, Jorge
 
Amaral, Tarsila do
 
“Analyse structurale en linguistique et en anthropologie, L’” (Structural Analysis in Linguistics and Anthropology) (Lévi-Strauss)
 
Andrade, Mário de
 
Andrade, Oswald de
 
Anthropologie structurale
(
Structural Anthropology
) (Lévi-Strauss)
 
anthropology:
 
Anglo-American
 
CLS on progress of
 
cultures as changed by
 
French
 
linguistics and
 
of 1930s vs. nineteenth century
 
North American
 
physical
 
solitary cultural immersion of
 
surrealism and
 
Anthropophagy
(Amaral)
 
anti-Semitism
 
Anzieu, Didier
 
Apothéose d’Auguste, L’
(
The Apotheosis of Augustus
) (Lévi-Strauss)
 
Aragon, Louis
 
Aron, Raymond
 
Art magique, L’
(Breton)
 
Atran, Scott
 
Audiberti, Jacques
 
Augé, Marc
 
Aurignacian culture
 
Australian Aborigines
 
kinship system of
 
totemism of
 
Auzias, Jean-Marie
 
avant-garde
 
 
Babeuf, Gracchus
 
Bachelard, Gaston
 
Badiou, Alain
 
Baker, Josephine
 
Balandier, Georges
 
Balzac, Honoré de
 
Barthes, Roland-
 
Bastide, François-Régis
 
Bastide, Paul Arbousse
 
Bataille, Georges
 
Bateson, Gregory
 
Bayet, Albert
 
Beiços de Pau
 
Belgian Workers Party
 
Bellour, Raymond
 
Bellow, Saul
 
Benedict, Ruth
 
Benoît-Lévy, Jean
 
Bensa, Alban
 
Benveniste, Emile
 
Berger, Gaston
 
Bergson, Henri
 
Bertholet, Denis
 
Beuchot, Pierre
 
Bibliothèque de la Pléiade
 
binary pairs
 
Blum, Léon
 
Boas, Franz
 
CLS relationship with
 
death of
 
fieldwork of
 
Northwest Coast motifs described by
 
Bogatyrev, Petr
 
Boggiani, Guido
 
Bolivia
 
Borges, Jorge Luis
 
Bororo
 
artifacts collected from
 
bartering for artifacts with
 
body paint of
 
bull-roarers of
 
film footage of
 
funerals of
 
huts of
 
kinship system of
 
material culture of
 
men of
 
myths of
 
ritual music of
 
tobacco crop of
 
village layout of
 
Bouglé, Célestin
 
Boulez, Pierre
 
Bourdieu, Pierre
 
brain
 
Brancusi, Constantin
 
Brasília
 

Other books

The Goblin King's Lovers by Marie Medina
Find, Fix, Finish by Peritz, Aki, Rosenbach, Eric
Kiss the Tiger by Lyon, Raquel
Warriors of the Night by Kerry Newcomb
Circle of Blood by Debbie Viguie
The Krishna Key by Ashwin Sanghi
One Last Call by Susan Behon
Madame de Pompadour by Nancy Mitford
The Slender Man by Dexter Morgenstern