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Current Anthropology Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
1997 by The Wenner-Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research. All rights reserved 0011-3204/97/3802-0002$2.50
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198 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
contrary that ‘‘the variety and particularity revealed by within it, and it is the peculiar nature of social science’s
[ethnographic] research is a necessary corrective to reflexive effect that it must constantly make this theory
grand theorising that loses touch with the specific, em- visible. In fact, it is this realisation which is the theme
bedded and diverse ways that people use media to make of this paper: that if, as Ginbsurg asserts, we cannot
sense of their worlds and, most importantly, to con- consider the formal properties of a film apart from the
struct new ones’’ (1994a:14). social relations which constituted its formation, no less
This world which indigenous and Third World people can we consider visual representation apart from (a) the
are trying to make sense of has been well described by theory embedded in the textual narrative which accom-
Homi Bhabha: No longer are social and cultural differ- panies and explains the film and (b) the particular meta-
ences guaranteed by an appeal to an authentic cultural physic that is reposited in our image-producing technol-
tradition; instead, such differences ‘‘are the signs of the ogy, a metaphysic that is just as much a part of our
emergence of community envisaged as a project—at culture and the social relations through which we live
once a vision and a construction—that takes you ‘be- it and just as accurately descriptive of it as the dju-
yond’ yourself in order to return, in a spirit of revision kurba, or ‘‘Law’’ or ‘‘Dreaming,’’ is a theory of Walbiri
and reconstruction, to the political conditions of the culture. A recognition of the theoretical lineaments of
present’’ (1994:3, emphasis added). In Bhabha’s formula- one’s mode of questioning is what allows a social analy-
tion I find a curious appeal to history in the very act of sis to be properly dialectical and hence provides the pos-
denying it any purchase on one’s theorizing. I therefore sibility of some real social and historical insight.
find it not coincidental that one of the many conten- As Ginsburg herself notes, the camera provides not
tious comments Fredric Jameson has made about video is merely a ‘‘‘window’ on reality, a simple expansion of
that it ‘‘blocks its own theorisation becoming a theory our powers of observation,’’ but ‘‘a creative tool in the
in its own right’’ (1991:71). According to Jameson (p. 70), service of a new signifying practice’’ (1991:93). But al-
though as technology it is ‘‘present to us only as the
in a situation of total flow, the contents of the phenomenal form of a relation with other people’’ (Cu-
screen streaming before us all day long without in- bitt 1991:15)—and here we might again point to the ne-
terruption . . . what used to be called ‘‘critical dis- cessity of dialectical thinking right at the outset—we
tance’’ seems to have become obsolete. Turning the as Westerners mask or repress this relational constitu-
television off has little in common either with the tion of such technology. And if this is true, the same
intermission of a play or an opera or with the grand goes for our other art forms as well. By this reasoning
finale of a feature film, when the lights slowly we must then conclude that film is no more—or less—
come back on and memory begins its mysterious genuine, and hence stylised, a depiction of ‘‘real social
work. Indeed, if anything like critical distance is relations’’ than the combination of secco recitative and
still possible in film, it is surely bound up with da capo aria was of emotions and their relational consti-
memory itself. But memory seems to play no role in tution in the Cartesian world of George Frederic Handel.
television. . . . From this vantage point, I want to speculate on the
effects of media such as film or video on cultures that
Perhaps memory itself is a function of juxtaposing two have a very different relation to the whole question of
different forms of language, two different interpretive representation than ours does. If it is insisted that we
modalities, two different forms of mediation itself—at see new identities—interstitial, hybrid, subaltern, em-
least this is what psychoanalysis has always main- bedded—as emerging from a deliberate effort at con-
tained, confronted with its task of memoriation (see Ri- struction, signing and visioning, then it is still anthro-
coeur 1970, Weiner 1995a). But it would seem that pology’s task to remind us of those traditions for which
Ginsburg is here appealing to ‘‘ethnography’’ as a means such processes are not a matter of human action and in-
of diverting our attention from the historicity of her tention but immanent in the world itself and not under
particular mode of questioning. direct human control. I am therefore interested at first
Perhaps ‘‘theory,’’ then, is the label we give to the ef- in Martin Heidegger, in whose existential phenomenol-
fect of this historical positioning, given that it simulta- ogy I locate a serious exploration of the Western founda-
neously reframes the mode of interpretation and the tions of representation, visualism, and subjectivity. I ar-
thing being interpreted and does so in a way that pre- gue that these foundations are integral to the filmic
serves the temporal and historical situatedness of our media themselves—as we must agree they are if we are
mode of questioning. It could be that the construction- to accept that they are cultural products through and
ist underpinning of Ginsburg’s approach to indigenous through—and that they could be opposed to and even
representation is left unquestioned by virtue of the ap- subversive of non-Western modes of knowledge and its
parent resistance of film and video to theory. And so, at acquisition, revelation, and articulation.
the risk of losing touch with Ginsburg’s world, I am go- I would like to explore these questions by examining
ing to refer to what she would label grand theory in or- the role of filmic media in anthropology both as a tool
der to establish contact with the world of non-Western of our ethnographic craft and as an object of our ethno-
camera users. I reject the notion that ethnographic re- graphic inspection. I consider a nexus of politics, cul-
search stands outside grand theory. Every social science ture, and self-identity within which, anthropologists
methodology has a grand or total theory inscribed such as Ginsburg maintain, the media of film and video
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 199
play an integral role. I argue that special issues per- something visible, whether visually or discursively, and
taining to representation and self-representation the social restrictions that surround such practices.2 But
emerge in the consideration of the role of film in cul- we late-20th-century Westerners inhabit a thoroughly
tural articulation and in our anthropological constitu- specularized as well as spectacularized society, a world
tion of it. I want also to raise questions concerning the in which the ‘‘tendency to make one see the world by
relationship between different modes of representation means of various specialized mediations . . . naturally
and the objects created by representational practices finds vision to be the privileged human sense’’ (Debord
and technologies. And finally, I want to address again 1983:§18). In such a world, we are very much unaware
the question Eric Michaels has asked with respect to of restrictions placed on seeing itself (see Jay 1992).3
the non-Western world of Australian Aborigines: ‘‘What In general, when I think about what is embodied in
is the cost of failing to describe the signifying practices certain features of the landscape in Aboriginal and New
of our cultural subjects in explicit comparison to our Guinea society and the relationship between this act of
own signifying practices?’’ (1994:133). territorial embodiment and the discursive practice of
myth which constitutes it, I feel that we are confronting
something more akin to the medieval phenomenon of
The Work of Revelation and Elicitation epiphany—the making visible of a manifestation of di-
vine power or, in general, the unseen, the invisible, the
In many parts of Papua New Guinea, the strategy of unrepresentable. Van Baal said of the Marind-anim of
public discourse is precisely not to reveal things—se- southern New Guinea that their myths are the form
cret or non-public names, magic spells, origin myths, that their ancestral creator beings (the dema) take in
etc. This is found in a most highly developed form in human language (van Baal 1966). Strategies for epi-
the East Sepik River region and has been described by phanic manifestation—strategies to make such power
Simon Harrison in Stealing People’s Names (1990). The reveal itself in certain ways—are what social life and
Avatip engage in formal debates of which the object is ritual are about in these settings, and, again, such strat-
for a subclan to demonstrate that it possesses the secret egies are not easily glossed by our conventional social
names of a disputed ancestor. ‘‘By doing so it proves, by constructionist idioms. The whole act of signing and of
implication, that it alone is capable of performing the encountering signs must be seen less in strict commu-
associated magic’’ (1990:153). But since to reveal the nicative terms than as the result of social strategies of
names is the very act of demonstrating that one pos- elicitation.
sesses the knowledge and its power, the debate is con- When I speak of elicitation, I refer not just to a spe-
ducted in a series of whispers between the most senior cific, non-representational approach to communication.
men of the two disputing groups. This phenomenon of I also appeal to the more general question of the way in
making something secret in the midst of the most pub- which form is revealed in any given world of communi-
lic, communal instances of discourse is very common cative convention. How would we describe the consti-
in Papua New Guinea. The Foi and other interior New tution of the effects of filmic communication in such
Guinea people employ the use of metaphorical, allusive terms?
language known by men of high status and renown but
not by others. Through knowing what the allusions are,
through knowing the restricted code, these men of sta- 2. Walter Benjamin, in his seminal article ‘‘The Work of Art in the
Age of Mechanical Reproduction’’ (1968), argues that the ritual
tus can converse amongst themselves in public without ‘‘use-value’’ of art works was their most important feature before
other men’s knowing what they are talking about. the advent of techniques of mass reproduction. ‘‘By the absolute
The Avatip thus seek to not reveal names and knowl- emphasis on its cult value,’’ he writes, the work of art ‘‘was first
edge. Their reasoning seems to be that if others know and foremost an instrument of magic’’ (p. 225). He goes on: ‘‘One
what they know, the precise identification of ownership may assume that what mattered was their existence, not their be-
ing on view. The elk portrayed by the man of the Stone Age on the
may become the opportunity for raids, thefts, and the walls of his cave was an instrument of magic. He did expose it to
preemption of knowledge itself, all of which may be his fellow men, but in the main it was meant for the spirits. Today
used tactically against others. The object of discursive the cult value would seem to demand that the work of art remain
strategies then becomes to force others to reveal these hidden. Certain statues of gods are accessible only to the priest in
the cella; certain Madonnas remain covered nearly all year round;
names or other items of restricted knowledge. Such an certain sculptures on medieval cathedrals are invisible to the spec-
approach to talk and to the act of ‘‘saying’’ or revealing tator on ground level.’’
does not, then, support any simple constructionist or 3. Elsewhere (Weiner 1991) I have described the Foi word mitina-,
mediational approach to knowledge or one in which which means ‘‘to show’’ and which I literally translate as ‘‘to cause
to be released.’’ Not only is the act of seeing tantamount to posses-
public representation and mediation is a central consti-
sion in Papua New Guinea but the act of showing someone an item
tutive mechanism. It is my contention that it is pre- of property—a piece of land, a shell valuable, a pig, for example—
cisely this non-constructionist approach to saying, re- is also tantamount to relinquishment. A Foi man who wishes pas-
vealing, and knowing that is hardest to convey to sersby to know that a garden is his property will leave a piece of
Westerners dazzled by the realism, immediacy, and leaf, usually from his totemic tree species, prominently displayed
for all to see. This is not simply a communicative act, or if it is
power of filmic representation. one it does not function in a simple way. A Foi person coming
These approaches to revelation underscore the enor- across such a mark deduces from it the presence of certain beings
mous importance attached to the very act of making and certain activities and intentions.
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200 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
The Medium and the Message from a dialectical analysis is precisely the manner in
which totality is appealed to. Georg Lukács, in his criti-
In examining the films produced by indigenous, non- cal treatment of early-20th-century Expressionism
Western film-makers about themselves, one of Gins- (quoted in Adorno et al. 1977:32), remarked that
burg’s main points is that there is a relation between
the social conditions of production of these filmic texts the underlying unity, the totality, all of whose parts
and their subject matter (1994a: 6, emphasis added): are objectively interrelated, manifests itself most
strikingly in the fact of crisis. Marx gives the follow-
If we recognise the cinematic or video text as a me- ing analysis of the process in which the constituent
diating object—as we might look at a ritual or a elements necessarily achieve independence: ‘‘Since
commodity—then its formal qualities cannot be they do in fact belong together, the process by
considered apart from the complex contexts of pro- means of which the complementary parts become
duction and interpretation that shape its construc- independent must inevitably appear violent and de-
tion. Films embody in their own internal structure structive . . .’’ [Marx 1976:209].
and meaning the forms and values of the social rela- . . . In periods when capitalism functions in a so-
tions they mediate, making texts and context inter- called normal manner, and its various processes ap-
dependent. pear autonomous, people living within capitalist so-
In response to this, I offer the following comments: ciety think and experience it as unitary, whereas in
First, the video text and the ritual are composed of and periods of crisis, when the autonomous elements
take place in completely different ‘‘times.’’ Although it are drawn together into unity, they experience it as
could be said in some cases that a ritual invokes and disintegration.
tries to make visible certain dimensions of ‘‘mythic’’
If we wished to characterize what have been called
time, in its practical constitution it is coterminous with
dialectical societies (see Wagner 1981, Maybury-Lewis
the temporal life of the community whose members en-
1979, Bateson 1968), such as the Gê and Bororo or the
gage in it. The scenes in a video or cinematic text, in
East Sepik River Avatip, Chambri, and Iatmul, we
contrast, are ‘‘never coterminous with the length of
would have to consider a world in which it was not the
such moments in real life’’ (Jameson 1991:74). Nor can
totality of a culture or society that was the form of so-
we solve the problem by comparing the practices of
cial objectification but rather the relations between its
viewing or producing the video text with the ritual, be-
unarticulated components. From Lukács’s point of
cause it is precisely the gap between video/cinematic
view, the conventional articulation of such a social to-
text, production, and viewing that we do not find in rit-
tality would resemble what he describes above as the
ual: The production and viewing of the ritual are the
unity through disintegration that characterizes capital-
ritual. (Inasmuch as, in the case of many rituals, every-
ist society in its periods of crisis. We would then have
one in a community participates in some form or an-
to say that constructionist and dialectical views of so-
other, its status as mediating ‘‘object’’ cannot be ac-
cial process draw forth totality through opposed means.
cepted prima facie.)4
Therefore, behind the marxist metonymy by which
The recognition of this gap leads to the second prob-
Ginsburg sees the relations of film production standing
lem. To which social relations is Ginsburg referring?
for the entirety of a social world5 lies that particular
Those at large in a social system which are now medi-
constructionist appeal to totality which is not inscribed
ated by film? Or specifically the relations between pro-
in dialectical analysis: the lure of the self-evident
ducer and viewer, or consumer, that is, the social rela-
wholeness of the experiential and the phenomenal and
tions of production of the film? It is a foundation of
the superior powers of film to capture this wholeness.
anthropology’s approach to the issue of social represen-
The anthropological film-maker David MacDougall
tation that a ritual models, or stands in some relation
likewise says, ‘‘The film image impresses us with its
to, the social world in which it is embedded. If we are
completeness. . . . It is possible that the sense of com-
to employ this analogy in its strict sense, then the social
pleteness created by a film also lies in the richness of
relations the films portray, even if not of these produc-
ambiguity of the photographic image. . . . unlike words
tive relations themselves, must of necessity be imaged
or even pictographs, [photographic images] share in the
in their terms.
physical identity of the objects’’ (1992:117).
I think it is important to point out that Ginsburg em-
But the whole of social life also includes the conceal-
ploys an essentially marxist framework to describe
ments, the gaps in knowledge, and the turnings-away
these productive relations, for it indicates where this
that make nescience a positive component of social
debate is anchored within the current characterization
of postmodernity and anthropology’s place in and rela-
tion to it. What differentiates a social-constructionist
5. ‘‘It is not just the objective conditions of the process of produc-
tion that appear as its result. The same thing is true of its specific
4. Eric Michaels’s account of the producing and viewing of Conis- social character. The social relations and therefore the social posi-
ton Story at Yuendumu, Northern Territory, Australia, is the most tion of the agents of production in relation to each other, i.e. the
successful attempt so far to show that filmic production is coeval relations of production, are themselves produced: they are also the
with social and community life in a non-Western setting. constantly renewed result of the process’’ (Marx 1976:1065).
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 201
knowledge.6 And how are these gaps to be recorded or gree that movement (the so-called cinematic) is gen-
reproduced by our representational media? Iris Jean- erated between such shots, information is hidden in
Klein, in her account of social life in the Israeli-occu- the cut which would not be contained in the shot it-
pied West Bank, described the dilemma of an American self. This means that montage has as its object
photographer who arrived with a group of visiting West- something qualitatively quite different from raw ma-
ern students whom she accompanied to the town of Ra- terial.
mallah. He could find nothing to photograph, nothing
which visibly or graphically represented a community I thus take issue with Ginsburg’s and Collier’s asser-
in the midst of political struggle or an indigenous peo- tions: If film conveys to us ‘‘the real,’’ how literally are
ple in the process of cultural and political self-assertion. we to take that, if we must admit that ‘‘the real’’ as
He and other members of the group did not know what such is inaccessible to us? And if in our everyday life
they were being shown. What the photographer was the real is inaccessible, then in what realm does con-
commenting on, Jean-Klein says, was the absences that vention, which we do ‘‘know,’’ reside? Would it not be
had become salient and noticeable to outside observers: more accurate to say that film, like other works of art,
‘‘We were presented with glimpses of ‘routine’ and yet, like rituals and myths, and most of all like opera, con-
concurrently, (and more paradoxically) we were shown veys not the real but rather something like ‘‘the truth’’
glimpses of ‘routine suspended.’ These qualities were of convention, which is to say, the revelation of its cari-
contrived by reference to ‘gaps’ and absences of various catured form?9 And can we not then affirm Adorno’s
qualities’’ (1993:124). (1984) words: ‘‘Art is the social antithesis of society’’?
Hence, when Collier makes a similar pronounce-
ment—‘‘only film or video can record the realism of
time and motion or the psychological reality of varieties Visualism and Subjectivity
of interpersonal relations’’ (1986:144)—apart from the
patent impossibility of recording ‘‘real time’’ on film The main issue that arises now is the problematic sta-
and video I submit that such an assessment can be made tus of both representation and subjectivity in the con-
only on the assumption that the act of recording is not text of non-Western traditions. Given social science’s
at the same time an act of transfiguration, and the more current concern with these issues with respect to char-
total the medium, the more totally the depicted object acterizing its position with regard to postmodernity, I
is transfigured. In bringing forth the conditions of their consider the problems raised by Ginsburg to be impor-
own production as subject matter, film and video con- tant. I speak as someone who has taken seriously the
ceal this very transfiguring effect. In this sense, I would program that Marcus and Fischer (1986) label cultural
endorse Adorno’s early observation that ‘‘there is even critique. As does James Faris (1992), I hold that we can-
reason to believe that the more closely pictures and not consider the issue of indigenous film-making with-
words are co-ordinated, the more emphatically their in- out simultaneously situating it alongside a critique of
trinsic contradiction and the actual mutedness of those the filmic medium itself. Film is put forth as a guaran-
who seem to be speaking are felt by the spectators’’ tor of both the subjectivity and the autonomy of the
(cited in Hullot-Kentor 1989:xvii).7 More to the point,
there is no reason that an appeal to realism as film tech- 9. The dilemma between realism and representation in ethno-
nique—which is all that Collier could be laying claim graphic film is addressed by several contributors to the volume Vis-
ualizing Theory (Taylor 1994). The terms of this dilemma are artic-
to—should be privileged as representational strategy ulated so effectively by Jameson (1990b:158) that it is worthwhile
over, say, montage.8 As the German film producer Alex- quoting him at length: ‘‘ ‘Realism’ is, however, a peculiarly unsta-
ander Kluge (1981–82:218–19, emphasis added) put it: ble concept owing to its simultaneous, yet incompatible, aesthetic
and epistemological claims, as the two terms of the slogan, ‘repre-
If I conceive of realism as the knowledge of relation- sentation of reality,’ suggest. These two claims then seem contra-
ships, then I must provide a trope for what cannot dictory: the emphasis on this or that type of truth content will
be shown in the film, for what the camera cannot clearly be undermined by any intensified awareness of the techni-
cal means or representational artifice of the work itself. Mean-
record. This trope consists in the contrast between while, the attempt to reinforce and to shore up the epistemological
two shots, which is only another way of saying mon- vocation of the work generally involves the suppression of the for-
tage. At issue here are the concrete relations be- mal properties of the realistic ‘text’ and promotes an increasingly
tween two images. Because of the relationship naive and unmediated or unreflective conception of aesthetic con-
struction and reception. Thus, where the epistemological claim
which develops between two shots, and to the de- succeeds, it fails; and if realism validates its claim to being a cor-
rect or true representation of the world, it thereby ceases to be an
6. Film is, if anything, a decidedly un-organic depiction of this. We aesthetic mode of representation and falls out of art altogether. If,
can say, paraphrasing Sartre, that film theory, ‘‘while rejecting or- on the other hand, the artistic devices and technological equipment
ganicism, lacks weapons against it’’ (Sartre 1963:77). whereby it captures that truth of the world are explored and
7. Hullot-Kentor (1989:xvii) goes on to say: ‘‘Although the effort stressed and foregrounded, ‘realism’ will stand unmasked as a mere
to mimetically achieve organicity ultimately leads to stiltedness, reality- or realism-effect, the reality it purported to deconceal fall-
which it is the role of film to obscure, a true organicity can be ing at once into the sheerest representation and illusion. Yet no
achieved only by way of a dissonant composition.’’ viable conception of realism is possible unless both these demands
8. Marcus (1994) and Taussig (1987) advocate the use of montage, or claims are honored simultaneously, prolonging and preserving—
both filmic and textual, as a solution to the problem of the trans- rather than ‘resolving’—this constitutive tension and incommen-
parency of one’s representational praxis. surability’’ (Jameson 1990b:158).
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202 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
film-maker and as a useful and powerful medium of rep- sympathise with Jameson’s remark that ‘‘no one seems
resentation and self-representation for non-Western to have asked the Ayatollah whether the use of audio-
people. I think it is fair, however, to question whether cassettes marked a corrupt surrender to Western tech-
the people of such traditions were interested in articu- nology and values’’ (1992:117), leaving aside the ques-
lating the subject or the subjective and whether their tion of whether modern Iranian society is in a more
modes of relational articulation could themselves be la- completed stage of modernisation than the Kayapo. But
belled representational. besides the observation that Mokuka has made a cate-
Martin Heidegger first raised these issues in powerful gory mistake here—properly phrased, his question
form earlier in this century. He took note of what we should be reversibly posed back to him as ‘‘If you were
could call in Foucault’s terms an epistemic shift be- to hold one of our cameras, would that make you a film-
tween the medieval and the modern period. It was with maker?’’—I wish to make two other points with respect
the dawn of the modern age that European society ar- to his pronouncement: (1) Is it not an assertion that the
rived at the notion that the world in its entirety could essence of culture is not affected by the medium
be pictured or represented. For Parmenides but also for through which it is made visible? And does it not there-
our medieval forebears, ‘‘man is the one who is looked fore controvert what Ginsburg is trying to say about the
upon by that which is,’’ whereas in the modern age intertextuality of indigenous media and its reflexive, re-
‘‘that which is . . . come[s] into being . . . through the lational constitution? Does it not then argue against
fact that man first looks upon it, in the sense of a repre- the transformative power of film or at least its superior
senting that has the character of a subjective percep- powers vis-à-vis other representational media, saying
tion’’ (Heidegger 1977:131). Thus, said Heidegger, ‘‘the that no matter how radical a transformative effect we
world picture does not change from an earlier medieval attribute to film and its technique and embodied repre-
one into a modern one, but rather the fact that the sentational praxis, the constitutive mechanisms and re-
world becomes picture at all is what distinguishes the lational practices of non-Western society will neverthe-
essence of the modern age’’ (p. 130). Guy Debord, char- less remain unaffected by it? (2) The difference between
acterizing the ‘‘society of the spectacle,’’ notes in simi- myself and Mokuka is that when I hold a Kayapo head-
lar terms that ‘‘the spectacle cannot be understood as dress, I do not use it to constitute my self-identity, or
an abuse of the world of vision, as a product of the tech- to negotiate that identity or construct an image of it for
niques of mass dissemination of images. It is, rather, a others. It is exactly this differential social/existential
Weltanschauung which has become actual, materially relation to the camera and its technology that is the dif-
translated. It is a world vision which has become ob- ference between us.11
jectified’’ (1983:§5). Heidegger accurately identified this In the Australian version of her paper, Ginsburg dis-
shift to totalising picturing as underwriting the emer- tinguished what these indigenous video-makers are do-
gence of subjectivity itself: ‘‘to represent means to bring ing—that is, depicting their authentic social relations—
what is present at hand before oneself as something from what any ordinary bourgeois Western video re-
standing over against, to relate it to oneself, to the one corder owner does when he or she (mostly he’s, I would
representing it, and to force it back into this relation- say, judging from my most casual inspection of week-
ship to oneself as the normative realm’’ (1977:131).10 end crowds in various parts of the Western world)
Thus, as Foucault (1973) notes, what is made possible makes footage of home, holiday, and other events and
by this is not just a relation of subject to perceived ob- occasions of his/her social life. Westerners, she seemed
jective world; this external dualism also finds its inter- to be saying, through their video-making practices are
nal form as the subject’s relation to him/herself. not focusing on creating images of their cultural or so-
How would we address this transition in an anthropo- cial life, at least not for political purposes. But in what
logical context, and specifically with respect to the role sense could Ginsburg possibly maintain that the video
of film? Michaels has, I feel, correctly identified the camera is not intimately involved in constituting and
crux of the matter: ‘‘There is no necessary translation representing such bourgeois relationality? And who is
from orality to electronics; we are seeing instead an ex- to say that they don’t do it as well as or even better than
perimental phase involving the insertion of the camera the Kayapo or the Inuit?12 Bourdieu (1990:83–84) com-
into the social organisation of events. The point is the ments on the intimate relationship between such pic-
necessity of locating such a position for the camera’’ turing and Western bourgeois relationality:
(1986:65, emphasis added). What Ginsburg and others
fail to do is distinguish between the representation of The conventionality of attitudes towards photogra-
relations and a relation to representative praxis. This is phy appears to refer to the style of social relations
brought out most vividly when Ginsburg refers to the
statement of the Kayapo video-maker Mokuka (quoted
11. As Bourdieu notes, ‘‘An art of illustration and imagery, photog-
from Eaton 1992): ‘‘Just because I hold a white man’s raphy can be reduced to the project of showing what the photogra-
camera, that doesn’t mean I am not a Kayapo . . . if you pher chose to show, and with which it becomes, one might say,
were to hold one of our head-dresses, would that make morally complicit, since it approves of and bears witness to what
you an Indian?’’ (Ginsburg 1994a:9). Mokuka might it shows’’ (1990:86).
12. ‘‘Our familial and social relations are very much in play in the
uses to which we bend media technologies, as are the vagaries
10. These statements of Heidegger’s are also forcefully discussed through which they become elements of psychic life’’ (Cubitt 1991:
in an anthropological context by Pinney (1992a). 16).
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 203
favoured by a society which is both stratified and mediated relationship with a tool which nevertheless
static and in which family and ‘‘home’’ are more exercises a mediational function.13
real than particular individuals, who are primarily But Western home video footage inevitably includes,
defined by their family connections; in which the so- if it can, the obligatory several seconds of the video
cial rules of behaviour and the moral code are more holder being videoed by another video holder. And inev-
apparent than the feelings, desires or thoughts of in- itably, we the viewers oblige by laughing at this. The
dividual subjects; in which social exchanges, strictly video-maker’s relationship to the camera becomes an
regulated by consecrated conventions, are carried item of representation; the video-maker’s standing out-
out under the constant fear of the judgement of oth- side the very relationships he or she is caught in is cap-
ers, under the watchful eye of opinion, ready to con- tured for a few seconds in this obligatorily funny inter-
demn in the name of norms which are unquestion- lude. In this way we know that what the camera
able and unquestioned, and always dominated by produces is not a documentary record, nor is it constitu-
the need to give the best image of oneself, the im- tive in the strict realist sense to which Collier defers
age most in keeping with the ideal of dignity and of the social relationships it is portraying.14 We make
honour. How, under these conditions, could the rep- it deliberately parodic and exaggerated, for we learn to
resentation of society be anything other than the display that slightly self-mocking defensive clowning in
representation of a represented society? front of the camera, the posing that says that what is
captured is not the occasion or the social relations that
But while this may be perfectly accurate as a descrip- constitute it as event but our own not-taking-it-seri-
tion of the sacred role of the photograph in the European ously attitude towards them. Is this what we were
context that Bourdieu focuses on, I wonder whether the seeing the Inuit engaged in? How would we recognise it
American bourgeois relationship to it is as solemn. In if it were the case?
fact, as I watched the Inuit in their igloos struggling to Perhaps it is this non-seriousness, this willful refusal
appear spontaneous and natural (whatever that might to make of the home video a serious political or cultural
mean for them) in front of the camera in the scenes text, that causes Ginsburg to dismiss it. The home
from Qaggiq, I thought of the ease with which middle- video-maker isn’t making images on behalf of anyone
class Westerners stand before the camera. First of all, in the marked political/cultural sense in which Gins-
Westerners can hardly walk into a bank, a large depart- burg is interested. But then who exactly do the indige-
ment store, or a shopping mall without entering into nous film-makers represent? On whose behalf do they
the field of view of the now-ubiquitous security camera. speak?15 Who authorises them to produce these impor-
We are usually unaware of this discrete panoptical vi- tant texts of cultural identity? Are they merely some
sual recording device, and if so, we would hardly con- indigenous mirror version of ourselves, which is to say
sider that what it records is anything resembling what dilettantes, aesthetes, and auteurs-manqué with the
we consciously and deliberately construct with the time and resources to worry about culture? Are they in
camera. But with regularity, we from time to time catch the same position with respect to their society as we
a glimpse of ourselves on a video monitor. What we see imagine ‘‘ritual experts’’ to be in such places as New
is ourselves with faces turned away (since the camera Guinea and Africa? Or must we now revise our under-
and monitor are usually not facing the same direction) standing of the traditional ritual expert, as something
even though we are looking at the monitor face on. We of a dilettante him- or herself? There is much to recom-
see ourselves looking at the monitor, not at our our- mend such a revision. And I think that such authors as
selves or at the camera. Ginsburg, Worth and Adair, Michaels, and Terry Turner
Not only do we picture this viewing relationship to are cognizant of the need to situate the project of con-
ourselves in our public space; we are brought up from temporary visual and filmic image-making within a
the day of our birth to pose in front of its eye, from the communal assessment and evaluatory praxis and to
series of photographic prints that constitute the visual make such situating part of the subject matter. In Gins-
record of our development to the meters of video tape burg’s effective commentary on indigenous aesthetics
that capture our happy and festive occasions with fam- (1994b), she notes that ‘‘this new and complex object—
ily and friends. We do not just use this footage to medi- Aboriginal media—is understood by its producers to be
ate encounters with each other; we demonstrate an operating in multiple domains as an extension of their
awareness of filmic sensibility in all these encounters collective (vs. individual) self-production’’ (p. 368).
with others. Nevertheless, to compare the role of the camera in
We look through the viewfinder and the implement this bourgeois world with its role in the Aboriginal or
itself disappears from the frame which it creates. Tech- Inuit world strikes me as the central task at hand, and
nology keeps making it smaller and smaller not so
much to make it more portable as to make it more like 13. ‘‘Television delivers near to sight that which almost always ap-
a literal extension of the eye and hand. The camera pears remote. Television is dealt with at arm’s length (now usually
seems to record without being visible for the most part. via ‘the remote’), it seemingly bridges distance without making
In this sense, the camera is zuhanden, in Heidegger’s material connection’’ (Fry 1993:14).
14. ‘‘For the film, what matters primarily is that the actor repre-
terms, ‘‘ready-to-hand’’ or ‘‘available.’’ We use it with- sents himself to the public before the camera, rather than repre-
out attending to it as such, and our relationship to it senting someone else’’ (Benjamin 1968:229).
cannot then be considered mediatory. We are in an un- 15. These points have also been cogently raised by Faris (1992).
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204 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
it is this task which receives no treatment by Ginsburg. system of evaluation that refuses a separation of textual
In this unhesitating juxtaposition of images, image- production and circulation from broader arenas of social
making, and framing we find the most convincing dem- relations’’ (1994b:368). If exploring the interpretive di-
onstration of the postmodern status of Ginsburg’s proj- mensions of a social world is itself the manner of adduc-
ect, a project that is less impressed by one of anthropol- ing the proper form, then it is essential to consider the
ogy’s more conventional modernist goals—to see aesthetic properties of these indigenous videos.
within art an alienating doubling of the world—than by Ginsburg recognises that there is an incommensura-
the self-signifying powers of the visual image in and of bility between the possibilities of representation en-
itself (see Jameson 1992:96).16 Is it unreasonable to spec- abled by film technology and those extant in non-West-
ulate on the depth of understanding of Aboriginal or In- ern societies, but where we differ is precisely on the
uit society that is being sacrificed to make these filmic locus of this incommensurability. Ginsburg says that
events stand forth? ‘‘the very form of Western narratives may undermine
These questions expose another critical ellipsis in traditional modes’’ (1991:97). From this point of view,
Ginsburg’s program: in only one of her many articles we would have to agree with Cubitt’s (1991:19) observa-
(Ginsburg 1994b) identifying this new space of film tion:
practice, its new social-cultural-political positioning,
and its producers is there any mention of aesthetics— Photocopying, video cameras and edit suites, com-
and, in fact, Eliot Weinberger (1994) identified art and puting and computer imaging are available for com-
aesthetics as the acknowledged bane of ethnographic munity use already. But those who try to appro-
film realism. It could be that in the face of the over- priate each newly available technology for new
whelming ineffectiveness of many of these efforts, we purposes seem constrained to reproduce the patterns
must suspend aesthetic judgement of these films be- of textual production which the medium seems to
cause they are made by people inexperienced with both demand. . . . [see Ang 1987] Something of the ‘‘tech-
the technology and its technique. In this case, we must, nological’’ relation is deeply embedded, not simply
as Michaels has done (1994:114–15), explain why it is as peer pressure, but as something far more deeply
that Westerners might fail to see what is or is not being entrenched.
framed by non-Western video- and film-makers. We Ginsburg and other anthropologists, prefer, however, to
could then instead see this failure as not adventitious make transparent the structural implications of the
to the medium but inherent in the dissonance between technological relationship themselves. For them, it is a
a non-Western representational praxis and the one in- matter of the different styles afforded by the medium.
scribed within the Western filmic. Nor do I necessarily Ginsburg cites MacDougall (1987:54), who reports:
refer to the kind of suspension of judgement that Bour-
dieu (1990:90) refers to with respect to the Western fam- The dominant conflict structure of Western fic-
ily photographs: tional narratives, and the didacticism of much of
Western documentary, may be at odds with tradi-
The taking and contemplation of the family photo- tional modes of discourse. . . . Differences may arise
graph presuppose the suspension of all aesthetic in the conventions of narrative and imagery. At a
judgement, because the sacred character of the ob- film conference in 1978, Wiyendji, an Aboriginal
ject and the sacralizing relationship between the man from Roper River, argued against the Western
photographer and the picture are enough uncondi- preoccupation with close-ups and fast cutting, say-
tionally to justify the existence of a picture which ing that Aborigines preferred to see whole bodies
only really seeks to express the glorification of its and whole events. . . . Such objections obviously cry
object, and which realises its perfection in the per- out for more Aboriginal filmmaking.
fect fulfilment of that function.
In a similar manner, Turner has identified the stylistic
As Michaels further notes, both a ‘‘failure to value
difference between Western and non-Western film-
and a banal overvaluation’’ are bad anthropological ap-
making (1992a:7, emphasis added):
proaches to this phenomenon, and I think both postures
are evident in current evaluations of indigenous film We have tried to limit editing assistance and advice
and video. By invoking the aesthetic I do not mean that to elementary technical procedures of insertion and
we should only judge these to be good or bad as films; assembly, compatibility of adjacent cuts, use of cut-
they are an instantiation of an aesthetic insofar as Gins- aways and inserts, and avoiding abrupt camera
burg claims that they are now the form in which social movements or zooms. We have made no attempt to
relations themselves are brought forth and made visi- teach Western notions or styles of framing, mon-
ble (see Weiner 1993a, b; Strathern 1988). Ginsburg re- tage, fast cutting, flashback or other narrative or
fers to ‘‘embedded aesthetics’’ to ‘‘draw attention to a anti-narrative modes of sequencing, nor have we
sought to impose length constraints or other fea-
16. Barthes identifies a photograph which does not contain a ‘‘point tures that might render a video more accessible, or
of rupture’’ as unary. In this form ‘‘it emphatically transforms ‘real- acceptable to a Western audience.
ity’ without doubling it, without making it vacillate; no duality,
no indirection, no disturbance’’ (1984:40). But surely this is tantamount to saying something like
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 205
‘‘We have taught them English grammar, syntax, and tions of mimesis and representation that antedate West-
semantics but have made no attempt to teach them ern cultural influences, but which have also exerted
iambic pentameter, the sonnet, or the couplet.’’ As their influence on Kayapo work in video and Kayapo
Hobbs (1991:44, emphasis added) has said, representations of themselves in social and political in-
teraction with the West’’ (1992a:9). While I feel that
By its ability to shape our interest in information, this would make the Kayapo unique among Amazonian
television editing conventions and formats encour- societies, judging from what, among others, Hugh-Jones
age a value system that emphasises fragmentation and Reichel-Dolmatoff have written about the precon-
over continuity, repetition over diversity, and famil- tact Amazonian lifeworld,18 I think that what Turner is
iar messages over unfamiliar ones, all of it in 30-sec- trying to convey is a point made by Fred Myers concern-
ond bits instead of more sustained attentional pat- ing the discourse of Pintupi painters from the Central
terns. It is this video legacy that has shaped modern Desert of Australia—that it ‘‘emphasizes their works as
American politics and business and religion and cul- vehicles of self-production and collective empow-
ture, not through the messages presented on televi- erment. . . . [and that] these are not necessarily interpre-
sion, but through specific utilisations of the form tations that are outside the processes of representation
and structure of the medium itself. themselves’’ (Myers 1994:35). Fry and Willis likewise
I am suggesting, in other words, that the difference assert that film creates ‘‘a cultural space in which inno-
between Aboriginal and Western preferences for forms vation is possible; it has a future. This is a new symbol
of filmic representation is situated one epistemological of power in a culture dominated by the media. It doesn’t
step too late. It presupposes the rôle and function of the override the effects of the damaged culture in which it
picture as self-representation and as a document of sub- functions, but creates a fissure in which a new set of
jectivity, and it is this relational eidos of Western visu- perceptions can seep in’’ (1989:163).
alist culture which, as Raymond Williams (1990) Against this undeniably vital and useful perspective
pointed out long ago, itself both impelled and was en- (though the idea of a ‘‘damaged culture’’ needs some
abled by the development of visual image technology.17 careful thought here) must be balanced what is surely
Moreover, in theatre or ritual one can always assume a our practical understanding of the effect of film—that
vantage point from which the ritual or play can be seen in the cinema ‘‘visual pleasure always triumphs over
as a contrivance (see Benjamin 1968:233). But the cam- critical resolve’’ (Kaes 1989:7; see Barthes 1984). I would
era eliminates this possibility for the viewer of film. To like to pose two polemically oriented questions of my
cry out for more indigenous film-making under such own here: (1) If cultural difference can now take place
circumstances as MacDougall (1987) does in the Austra- only within the arena of electronically generated visual
lian context would then be to cover over even more con- and audio images, how much scope is there for the un-
certedly the Aboriginal mode of making-things-appear. covering or revelation of such difference? How will we
To return to an earlier point, we therefore need to measure what kind or how much cultural difference we
give constant attention to theory, the theory of repre- find between, say, American and Soviet society, on the
sentation, in order to determine whether modes of cine- one hand, and American and Soviet film, on the other?
matic creation are serving to erase the precinematic re- Must not the techniques and material lineaments of
lation to the visual of indigenous and non-Western film and video technology necessarily limit the range of
people. If the use of media technology offers a ‘‘new op- expressive and social relational modalities available for
portunity for influence and self-expression’’ (Ginsburg the articulation of such difference? (2) More important,
1991:97), then surely we are justified in questioning and again I point to the necessity of dialectical thinking
whether self-expression was a component of the rela- in the characterization of this phenomenon, what new
tional strategies of such people. Turner argues that forms of concealment does this new medium also bring
‘‘Kayapo culture possesses a well developed set of no- with it, given that every form of expression takes shape
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206 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
against a mode of repression which is its background? have to tell us about what precisely was being not said
In considering the power of any medium to represent or or what was being said in a deliberately banal way. (I
picture everyday life, we must not ignore what is re- must point out that I am responding only to Ginsburg’s
pressed or hidden or misrecognized in everyday life and edited use of certain clips from the various films and
how these everyday concealments are made inevitable videos and her comments on them; in no way is this
through the conduct of social life itself. How then do meant to be a comprehensive critical assessment of the
we reconcile the power of making visible, or the repre- films and videos.) The footage in Jean Rouch’s film Petit
sentational impact of film, with the need to acknowl- à petit of an African man taking cranial measurements
edge the concealing properties of convention?19 I remain of Parisians is amusing, but by itself how complex is it?
convinced that we must ultimately judge the social, po- The Native American Miguel sisters mimicking Jea-
litical, and aesthetic value of film in the same way that nette MacDonald and Nelson Eddy’s Indian Love Song
Brecht (1964:192) suggested we evaluate drama, in might provide us with a giggle, but again, where is the
terms of what he called the ‘‘alienation-effect’’: ‘‘A rep- complexity in this all-too-predictable (to us) parody? In
resentation that alienates is one which allows us to rec- contrast, the footage of Sylvanian Waters, made to look
ognize its subject, but at the same time makes it seem like exactly what it was parodying, home video footage,
unfamiliar. The classical and medieval theatre alien- was an extraordinarily complex commentary on and
ated its characters by making them wear human or ani- savage mockery of contemporary middle-class Austra-
mal masks. . . . Here is the outlook, disconcerting but lian family relations. If it is complexity one wants to
fruitful, which the theatre must provoke with its repre- see, I suggest that one look no farther than Robert Alt-
sentations of social life.’’20 An aesthetics that remains man’s mordant commentaries on Southern Californian
‘‘embedded’’ may certainly retain the perspective of the social relations in The Player or Short Cuts. Perhaps
conventional, but its refusal to come free of the conven- it is this self-mockery, the portrayal of a seemingly un-
tional obviates its transformative, consciousness-rais- intended taking-the-micky-out-of-the-film-maker-him/
ing power. Only within an experience of self-alienation herself (especially in The Player), that was missing in
can we assess the complexity of the dramatic and filmic the clips that Ginsburg showed us. My overwhelming
effect. reaction to these clips is that they did not work for me,
and I desired more specific information on the manner
in which they did or did not work for the producers and
Complexity viewers themselves.21
If they do not work for us, then surely the mere view-
We would all agree that Mephistopheles emerges as one ing of these videos by us the anthropologists will not
of the most complex characters in our literature in suffice. It is not enough for Ginsburg to show us these
Goethe’s Faust. But how much of our insight into that clips and say, ‘‘Here are the Miguel sisters being hilari-
character is sacrificed when that role is sung and acted ously parodic’’ or ‘‘Here is an Inuit film-maker making a
in Gounod’s opera? Would we have to say that opera is film about himself talking about film-making.’’ We can
less complex than literature? Or are we dealing with judge this for ourselves. Ginsburg’s comments do not,
two different kinds of complexity, two different strate- any more than mine do, constitute an analysis of this
gies for the production of form, which are not totally phenomenon, either critical or otherwise. Nor, because
transposable into each other? This is what Peter Kivy of the representational goal towards which they are de-
(1989:271) calls the ‘‘fallacy of misplaced depth’’—here ployed, can we see them as Sibelius saw his piano mu-
it refers to the attempt to make commensurate two in- sic—when asked what a piece of his meant, he merely
commensurate types of complexity, the musical and played it over. Film is not as resolutely pragmatic an art
the literary. And it applies all the more forcefully, I sus- form as music because it calls forth and makes visible
pect, to film—for much of Ginsburg’s argument rests its own representational, picturing function. I want
on her appeal to the complex and to the complexity of Ginsburg to tell me what I can’t know about the film
filmic representations: ‘‘My argument is that looking at just by inspecting it, and here I reiterate that a full-
media made by people occupying a range of cultural po- blooded anthropological treatment of this phenomenon
sitions, from insider to outsider . . . [offers] us a fuller cannot neglect the critical dimension. We need, in other
sense of the complexity of perspectives on what we words, further mediation.
have come to call culture’’ (1994a:6, emphasis added). This is because these films are not the same as a rit-
What is meant by ‘‘complexity’’ here? Certainly the ual or an artefact. The latter are incomplete without a
Inuit actors’ dialogue did not appear complex—if it is, consideration of the co-presence of an audience from
in Inuit terms, again, we would need to have that ex-
plained to us, and such an explanation would probably 21. In this respect I am taking a position analogous to that of James
Faris but for precisely opposite reasons: Faris too questions the rôle
19. ‘‘The unstable dialectic of the real and the apparent, the present of Western filmic technology in traditions that have very different
and the absent, the visible and the invisible, is the condition under relations to visuality and representation. But whereas he sees West-
which TV enters into the social’’ (Cubitt 1991:33). ern consumption of indigenous videos as their driving force, I de-
20. ‘‘The photographic ‘shock’ . . . consists less in traumatizing sire to know more about the conflict engendered by the production
than in revealing what was so well hidden that the actor himself of videos which should be affecting the Western world but can only
was unaware or unconscious of it’’ (Barthes 1984:32). do so within the world of the video-makers themselves.
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 207
which a certain social response is elicited in a specific film on the Walbiri people of Yuendumu. It is quite
context. They have a specific, usually quite practical clear from his account of the making of the film Conis-
goal. This was what, among other things, Sol Worth and ton Story that the documentary evoked strong emo-
John Adair found out in their experiment with Navajo tional and social reactions among the people of Yuen-
film-making (1974): the Navajo Sam Yazzie was not in- dumu—but to evoke and to depict are two distinct
terested in film once he found that it had, for him, only things. In such a case, it is reasonable to assume that
a representational and not a practico-transformative ef- just as Walbiri rituals and artefacts and myths did not
fect. Ginsburg, however, does not conclude from this have the representational function that film and photo-
that filmic media might be irrelevant or inutile for the graphic depiction must inevitably have, films such as
Navajo; instead, she criticises Worth and Adair for ‘‘fo- Coniston Story are being used in ways that go beyond
cusing almost exclusively on the film text as the site the representational. They are more than techniques or
for the production of cultural meaning’’ (1994a:10). But tools for the fashioning of identity or self-identity.
perhaps the real problem is that when Worth and Adair
were among the Navajo the production of cultural texts
had not yet become an issue. The Aesthetics of Culturalism
Something like a ritual which has such a practico-
transformative effect might be considered mediatory in Earlier I suggested that memory and history might
such terms. But film and video can be characterized as themselves be the product of juxtaposing two incom-
what Baudrillard calls ‘‘speech without response’’ mensurable interpretational modalities, which creates a
(1988:207); far from being mediating objects as Gins- space of temporality and within it the possibility of
burg believes them to be, ‘‘what characterises the mass making social and historical transformation visible. I
media is that they are opposed to mediation.’’22 In this continue with this dialectical orientation by citing a
respect, perhaps the comments of the Scottish TV and passage from Habermas (1990:85) in which one could
stage dramatist John McGrath (1985:52–53) are worth just as easily substitute the word ‘‘culture’’ for ‘‘his-
repeating, since they echo the sentiments of Adorno, tory’’ and which addresses the quotation from Adorno
Jameson, and Brecht to which I have referred in this dis- that is this essay’s epigraph:
cussion:23
Modern consciousness, overburdened with historical
Drama has lost the quintessential quality of televi- knowledge, has lost the ‘‘plastic power of life’’ that
sion—that of being an event brought to us as a na- makes human beings able, with their gaze toward
tion simultaneously. Ten years ago, I think televi- the future, to ‘‘interpret the past from the stand-
sion drama was still primarily created as an event point of the highest strength of the present.’’ In
specially tailored for the one-off moment of trans- other words, the history invoked by many current
mission. . . . This was the quality that made it dif- writers all too easily abandons any pretense at her-
ferent from film, and linked it to the heroic unre- meneutical perspectivism; it takes on a ‘‘paralysing
peatability of the experience of theatre. relativism’’ rather than a living perspectivism; it
blocks ‘‘the capacity to ‘shatter and dissolve some-
Michaels (1987a) has gone farther than anyone else in thing [past]’ from time to time, in order ‘to enable
elucidating this performative capacity of film-making [us] to live [in the present].’’’
in his description of the effects of auto-documentary
Jameson echoes this critique of ahistoricism in his
identification of the ‘‘media phenomenon of neo-eth-
22. We should recall the words of Benjamin (1968:228–29): ‘‘The nicity. . . . Ethnicity is something you are condemned
. . . performance . . . of the screen actor is presented by a camera to; neo-ethnicity is something you decide to reaffirm for
with a twofold consequence. The camera that presents the perfor-
mance of the film actor to the public need not respect the perfor- yourself’’ (1992:117). I now turn to the relationship be-
mance as an integral whole. Guided by the cameraman, the camera tween the representational strategies we have been dis-
continually changes its position with respect to the performance. cussing and what Ginsburg identified as the exigencies
The sequence of positional views which the editor composes from of cultural self-assertion. As she remarks (1994a:5),
the material supplied him constitutes the completed film. . . .
Hence the performance of the actor is subjected to a series of opti-
‘‘Those . . . from indigenous, ethnic, or diaspora groups
cal tests. This is the first consequence of the fact that the actor’s who are using such media, are more and more conscious
performance is presented by means of the camera. Also, the film of their activities as vehicles for mediating cultural re-
actor lacks the opportunity of the stage actor to adjust to the audi- vival, identity formation, and political assertion.’’24 I
ence during the performance, since he does not present his perfor- trust I am not reading too much into that statement
mance to the audience in person. This permits the audience to take
the position of the critic, without experiencing any personal con- when I interpret it as meaning that there is something
tact with the actor. The audience’s identification with the actor is about filmic media themselves that causes this kind of
really an identification with the camera. Consequently, the audi-
ence takes the position of the camera; its approach is that of
testing.’’ 24. Thorp utters a similar pronouncement: ‘‘Given a concentration
23. What has emerged as the discursive constitution of American of technical equipment and the energetic potential it represents,
sociality through the relationship of co-viewing provided by the video may become the condensor or catalyst of concrete attitudes
televised trial of O. J. Simpson seems to me a critical ethnographic and behaviours, a certain way of looking at things that stems from
opportunity for anthropology at this juncture. genuine historical and cultural concerns’’ (1991:103).
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208 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
cultural consciousness-raising even as they at the same the video clips with which to judge this relation, the
time discourage us from theorising it. Indeed, television cultural-nationalist message we are told it contains be-
has done more than anything to facilitate the develop- comes ‘‘a message’’—and ultimately a sociality—
ment of national identity throughout the world. The ‘‘transmitted by the quality of the image, rather than
1986 Peacock Report on the funding of the BBC con- its structural implications’’ (Jameson 1992:208, empha-
cluded that ‘‘British broadcasting in its existing public sis added). While we must always be aware who is the
service mode should and did assert and reflect Britain author of a film or video, we cannot ask who is the au-
as a community, society, and culture and . . . was the thor of a myth or ritual, and hence the filmic and the
principal forum by which the nation as a whole was ritual-mythic must stand in a very contrastive relation
able to talk to itself’’ (quoted in Murray-Brown 1991: of revelation with respect to such structural implica-
21). Identity in this case is established strictly speaking tions.
not through the give-and-take of social interaction but But then, of what use is the assertion of a new cul-
through co-identification with the same screenly im- tural identity if it does not differ in its theory, cosmol-
ages. For modern citizens, national and cultural self- ogy, and mode of being from our own? Why should we
hood ‘‘is realised in the knowledge that we are all continue to do anthropology if we can only find a sort of
watching the same image at the same time’’ (p. 21), and ersatz difference in the manufactured sound bites, video
it is this usually tacit appeal to the ‘‘sociality’’ of the clips, and promotional videos which will henceforth be
co-watchers that grounds the constructionist analyses everyone’s most important cultural product? It remains
of what TV or film ‘‘means’’ or ‘‘signifies.’’25 for us to place indigenous video alongside all of the
If such is the case, then what is being revived and as- more ‘‘traditional’’ appropriations, if I can call them
serted through indigenous video-making? It could not that, of Western representational and expressive forms.
be the revival of a world in which visual representation Where in our repertoire is a sound anthropological anal-
was constituted in terms very different from our own, ysis of the lives and works of Wole Soyinka, Chinua
as was certainly the case with Papua New Guinea peo- Achebe, Albert Namatjira, or V. S. Naipaul? Why
ples and many Australian Aboriginal people of the should video and film alone capture our imagination
Northern Territory. It would have to be a revival when it comes to cultural identity and assertion? But
founded on the possibilities and limitations of social then, such a question I believe in large part supplies its
and self-constitution inscribed in the new media. It own answer.27
would have to include the mirroring relation of self to Further, how will we be able to distinguish between
self that screen media make necessary and inevitable, different forms of cultural assertion if we have only aes-
including the transitive, unarticulated, tacit sociality of thetic grounds for doing so? How will we be able to dis-
the co-viewer, and it is this kind of peculiarly visualist tinguish—culturally, politically, or in any other way—
sociality that I find so inappropriate to the characteriza- between these indigenous film-makers’ products and
tion of non-Western ritual and performance and other the products of the growing underground video cul-
so-called mediatory practices.26 Hence, to return to a tures, the porn enthusiasts, sports fans, and other ‘‘vi-
point made earlier, the nature of the political and cul- déastes’’ who now circulate their own images through
tural identity created through filmic media would have the market (see Cubitt 1991:9)? Who will say that the
to have a most radically different relation to social and social relations depicted in the latter are any less au-
political practice itself, and it is some sense of the con- thentic a cultural product than the Inuits’? Will the an-
crete lineaments of this relation, which Michaels ulti- swer to such questions do more than call forth indig-
mately identifies as the sole locus of analysis, that is nant assertions of moralism or the judgement of taste
missing from Ginsburg’s account. Since we have only or the Bourdieuian mixture of the two? Could this not
be exactly the manner in which anthropological film-
25. In this respect, commentators on the role of mass media in con- makers unwittingly have helped drive the final nail into
stituting present-day Western sociality are confirming the observa-
tion that de Tocqueville made over 150 years ago: In early-19th- the coffin of the non-Western world?
century American society, where the dispersal of population meant We are witness to a devaluation of the strange and the
weak social ties and there was little centralization of political au- different in this exercise. No, not so much that—it is
thority, newspapers flourished. ‘‘The political character of Ameri- something more insidious. It is the replacement of gen-
cans’ association was disclosed in the profusion of newspapers,
‘which bring to them every day . . . some intelligence of the state uine historical, linguistic, social, and cultural difference
of their public weal.’ A newspaper survived, he understood, by with an ersatz difference among electronic images.28 As
‘publishing sentiments of principles common to a large number of Jameson has noted, following Barthes, we are replacing
men,’ and hence ‘it always represents an association which is com- genuine historical and social difference with the conno-
posed of its habitual readers’ . . . who through it were able ‘to con-
verse every day without seeing one another, and to take steps in
common without having met’’ (Tocqueville 1954:121–22, 119–20, 27. Even so, where is a specifically anthropological interest in
quoted by Zynda 1984:253). Third Cinema, for example, the work of the Filipino producer/di-
26. As Zynda (1984) points out, such appeals to the community of rector Kidlat Tahimik?
viewers, or of readers, ‘‘rest on a comparison of mediated commu- 28. ‘‘In the new dimensionality of postmodern cultural space, ideas
nication to the directness of face-to-face communication. This of the older conceptual type have lost their autonomy and become
comparison ignores the alienation of the receivers of mass-medi- something like by-products and after-images flung up on the screen
ated messages from their senders, not to mention the content of of the mind and of social production by the culturalization of daily
what is printed or televised’’ (p. 251). life’’ (Jameson 1992:24–25).
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 209
tation of it, ‘‘the purveying of imaginary and stereotypi- as its latest and perhaps final act of colonization: ‘‘As
cal differences’’ signalled by the pervasiveness of the the indispensable decoration of the objects produced to-
nominalizing constructions ‘‘-ness’’ and ‘‘-ity’’ in talk- day, as the general exposé of the rationality of the sys-
ing about culture—‘‘alterity,’’ ‘‘otherness,’’ ‘‘aborigi- tem, as the advanced economic sector which directly
nality,’’ ‘‘Sinité.’’ It could be that this will soon be the shapes a growing multitude of image-objects, the spec-
only difference available to us, and one wonders tacle is the main production of present-day society’’
whether that will spell the death of anthropology, or at (Debord 1983:§15) says. The only space thus left for the
least the death of its modernist foundations. perception of totality—productive, cultural, or other-
In fact, to be obsessed with the strange and the differ- wise—is within the image itself.
ent in this ‘‘old-fashioned’’ sense is to be branded as
anachronistic, an exoticist. But when strangeness and
difference are disallowed as features of our encounter Conclusions: The Total Work
with non-Westerners, we at the same time deny, in the of Representation
Freudian sense of Verneinung, the space of the uncanny,
the strange, the inexplicable in our own life the percep- Consider the words of John Kasaipwalova, the Trobri-
tion of which makes social difference possible (see and aesthete (1975:1): ‘‘Our process of Kabisawali is a
Weiner 1993b). We deny the possibility of the social vis- total movement involving our politics, our economy,
ibility of what Lacoue-Labarthe calls désistance, the in- our villages, our families and our persons, we are as a
herent instability or ‘‘infirmity’’ of the subject ‘‘without matter of consequence engaged in changing our given
which no relation (either to oneself or to others) could historical reality and at the same time attempting to
be established and there would be neither conscious- create a cultural environment that is both contempo-
ness nor sociality’’ (1990:83). We could also add that rary of our times and relevant to our present needs.’’
there would be no history either, and to return once This was an introduction to a proposal for the creation
again to Adorno’s epigraph we would have to admit, as of a modern art school on the Trobriand island of Kiri-
Jameson (1991:46) puts it, that wina, to be called the Sopi Arts Centre. Through the en-
couraging of traditional graphic, plastic, and musical
the logic of the simulacrum, with its transformation arts, it was anticipated that the Trobriand Islanders
of older realities into television images, does more could establish directions of cultural development
than merely replicate the logic of late capitalism: it which would more effectively link present-day society
reinforces and intensifies it. Meanwhile, for poli- with its own traditions while at the same time not clos-
tical groups which seek actively to intervene in ing off avenues for change and growth.
history and to modify its otherwise passive mo- Let us now compare Kasaipwalova’s formulation
mentum . . . there cannot but be much that is de- with Wyzewa’s description of Richard Wagner, cited by
plorable and reprehensible in a cultural form of James Boon: ‘‘With [Wagner], Art is no longer in paint-
image addiction which, by transforming the past ing, nor in literature, nor in music, but in the strict
into visual mirages, stereotypes, or texts, effectively union of these genres and in the total life which is born
abolishes any practical sense of the future and of thereof’’ (Boon 1972:171). What Kasaipwalova and
the collective project. . . . Wagner seem to share is the Boasian, Benedictian, belief
that the process of forming a community or a cultural
To return to Marcus and Fischer, from whom I take tradition is similar to the production of a work of art
my original cue, it must now be pointed out that cul- (see Zimmerman 1990:11).
tural critique was advocated years ago by Brecht, who But such a belief is inextricably linked to the ex-
looked toward theatre rather than ethnography for this pressivist and expressionist tendencies in 19th-century
critical Archimedean leverage. Of a new critical review social and artistic theory which still inform our view
he was introducing in the early 1930s he wrote, of culture and social identity and which I maintain are
‘‘Amongst other things the review understands the implicit in the approach of Terry Turner, Faye Gins-
word ‘criticism’ in its double sense—tranforming dia- burg, and all of visual anthropology. For Wagner, ‘‘mu-
lectically the totality of subjects into a permanent crisis sic is called upon to do nothing less than retract the his-
and thus conceiving the epoch as a critical period in torical tendency of language, which is based on
both meanings of the term. And this point of view nec- signification, and to substitute expressiveness for it’’
essarily entails a rehabilitation of theory in its own (Adorno 1981:99). If we were to substitute ‘‘film’’ for
rights’’’ (quoted in MacCabe 1974:7). By pointing to the ‘‘music’’ in Adorno’s statement, we would then see film
similarity of the agendas of Brecht and Marcus and as 20th-century anthropology’s latest formulation of
Fischer I draw attention to the broader theoretical and the total work of art (Jameson 1992:158–59):
historical frame within which, I maintain, the inspec-
tion of indigenous film and video must take place. This Whenever other arts are foregrounded with a film—
frame is defined by the progress of marxist theory in and, generally visual, these can range from video to
this century as it has confronted the changes in the cuneiform, or . . . from theatre to painting—what is
form of capital formation upon which Western society at stake is always some formal proposition as to the
has focused and its appropriation of image production superiority of film itself as a medium over these dis-
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210 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
parate competitors. There would thus be a kind of effects of the analytical engagement are made tangible
built in auto-referentiality in the very cinemato- or palpable only by focusing one’s attention elsewhere.
graphic medium, which, without having read In anthropological terms, this can be rendered in the fol-
Wagner, instinctively proposes itself as the fulfil- lowing way: By focusing on the anticipated construc-
ment for the ideals of the Gesamtkunstwerk. . . . tionist outcome of an act of representation, we conceal
the constructionist origin of the transfiguration that ac-
In considering these imperialistic qualities of video, companies such a representational act (see Wagner
we might want to recall Raymond Williams’s descrip- 1981). Drawing these social and psychoanalytical per-
tion of television as ‘‘whole flow’’ (1990). If Ginsburg spectives together, McCabe (1974:17) puts it this way:
appeals to the totalising medium of video as a privileged ‘‘the unproblematic taking up of the position of the sub-
site of cultural articulation, she must by that token ask ject entails the repression of the whole mechanism of
us to consider both social relations and culture as equiv- the subject’s construction.’’
alent to a total image or total work—be it of art or pro- But to me this is no more than an affirmation of what
duction or the fusion of the two.29 Under what condi- has been (up until now perhaps) one of anthropology’s
tions could this equivalence be established? What central tenets, one which was adumbrated by Victor
characteristics do works of art have that societies also Turner nearly 40 years ago: ‘‘the participant is likely to
have? And how are we to reconcile such a position with be governed in his actions by a number of interests, pur-
the equally valid intuition that art opposes conven- poses, and sentiments, dependent upon his specific po-
tional sociality and culture? I acknowledge that my crit- sition, which impair his understanding of the total situ-
ical view of indigenous film is from what some would ation’’ (1964 [1957]:29). Anthropology exists only
label the ‘‘high-culture/low-culture’’ dichotomy whose because it can poise the promise of a description of a
last great theorist in this century was Adorno (see Huys- total system against the perspectivism of its members.
sen 1986). But I maintain that this contrast is generated This promise cannot be secured by isolating and ex-
by a more general appreciation of the alienating effects alting the subjectivity of any of those members,
of art, without which anthropology’s own techniques of whether anthropologist or indigenous ‘‘other.’’ The po-
making culture visible would be seriously compro- sition of externality, of outsider, is still necessary to an-
mised. thropology.
Let me repeat what Ginsburg said: ‘‘Films embody in The anthropological study of art, and of representa-
their own internal structure and meaning the forms and tion more generally, models this dialectic between in-
values of the social relations they mediate, making side and outside. We confront again the Brechtian para-
texts and context interdependent’’ (1994a:6, emphasis dox of art—and of ritual, to which Ginsburg originally
added). But included in this internal embodiment of re- compared the cinematic or video text: It is something
lations must also be the relation between the viewer produced within the social relations of life but which,
and the filmic text (see Cubitt 1991:87–88). It sites rep- if it is to be recognised as such, must stand apart from
resentation as a basic feature of relationality itself. It is it. In his commentary on Adorno, Jameson says, ‘‘Every
in this very fusion of aesthetics and politics that Gins- work of art is ‘of the world’ and . . . everything about it
burg situates her subject matter within a postmodern is social—its materials, its creator, its reception, art it-
project, and I maintain that one of the effects of this par- self (or culture) as a leisure class activity, and so forth;
ticular postmodern position is the obliteration of the as a thing in the world it is social, yet the most impor-
kind of cultural difference that anthropologists have tant thing about it is not ‘in’ the world at all, in that
been used to and by which they have defined their disci- sense’’ (1990a:185–86). Insofar as the self in Western so-
pline and its replacement with an illusion of difference. ciety is included within this arena of representable
In the words of Wolf Lepeneis, ‘‘If you believe in the things, then in its practice and conceptualisation it is
unity of aesthetics and politics, you are already living ‘‘always a production rather than [a] ground’’ (Spivak
in the period of post-historie’’—and therefore of post- 1987:212). It is this productionist self which is inevita-
culture. bly consolidated through televisual media. But to the
Now, elsewhere (Weiner 1995a) I have said that this extent that the self and the body were components of
isomorphy between methodology and subject matter is such an unarticulated ground for (among others) the
one of the defining characteristics of both anthropology Walbiri, Foi, Chambri, Manambu, and many Native
and psychoanalysis. To study social relations, anthro- American peoples, the use of film will always work
pologists have to enter into social relations with their counter to their strategies of self-concealment.
hosts; to elicit from a patient the possibility of dis- Gewertz and Errington, in their compelling account
course, the psychoanalyst must inevitably become the of the Chambri (Papua New Guinea) experience of the
focus of those anxieties the patient cannot at first speak modern world system, argue that in representing the
about. In both cases, the appearance of the transference Chambri’s relationship with the developing nation-
and of the countertransference must at first be con- state one must not neglect to make visible the way in
cealed from both parties to the analysis. The reflexive which the Chambri resist being turned into a culture of
representation focused on subjective expression (1991:
29. Adorno, who otherwise was an implacable opponent of Heideg-
ger and his philosophy, nevertheless reached the same conclusion 168). The promoters of indigenous video insist that
concerning the role of film in achieving this totalisation of repre- such people should have the power to produce their
sentational subjects and subject matter. own images of their own society and culture. The impli-
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 211
cation, of course, is that this culture and society already mands (if not local peoples’ refusals to submit to tradi-
exist as a knowable entities, and the people themselves tional anthropological scrutiny) motivate constant
have to be assumed to possess the rationalising and ex- novel approaches to a discipline in increasing trouble
pressive urges so bound up with our own notions of the and willing to reward anything that might save it. Sur-
individual and its autonomy. That the Chambri impor- veys indicate that undergraduates prefer films, and an-
tantly and decisively speak for others—the ancestors in thropology instructors often ‘‘show a film’’ as a way of
particular—is clear. But let us not gloss over the other minding the class without lecturing—commonly, in-
patent observation that for the Chambri not speaking is deed, without explanation of the sort Weiner is here
both a necessity and a prerogative of the powerful. As crying for. As he says, filmic consumption in the West
the ethnography of this region shows so pronouncedly, is often direct, ironically un-‘‘media’’-ed; in fact, other
for some Melanesian peoples self-objectification is not input on the filmic text is sometimes resented.
the final and desired outcome of discursivity but a posi- To begin: Weiner is quite correct to point out the lim-
tive danger looming over all social life and discourse itations, consistently ignored by ‘‘indigenous media’’
(Weiner 1991:193–94).30 partisans, of the technology of optical recording de-
The last film clip we were shown by Ginsburg in her vices—their obliteration of time, their silencing, their
Australian lecture was to my mind the most significant: censoring—and to insist, moreover, that Western visu-
It consisted of the face of an Inuit director, masked by alism ignores a multitude of other communicative
opaque aviator sunglasses, explaining in what was for modes and expressive styles. Representation is itself
me, I must admit, an expressionless way the manner in censoring (see von Sturmer 1989), whether of self (pre-
which he had utilised this new technology of expres- sumably indigenous media) or others (traditional an-
sion. If this is to be the ultimate product of video pro- thropological ethnographies and film documentaries).
duction—the mock-discursive elaboration of its own But the problem is not necessarily the modality (given
productive conditions of possibility—then all vid- the caveats on limitations of scopic technologies) but
eotexts ultimately have the same subject matter, and the social relations surrounding intention, production,
culture as such becomes merely another contrived ef- and use. People who insist on the neutrality of imaging
fect within the confines of the screen. I finally thought devices such as cameras fail to remember that they can-
about a famously reported Native American propensity not but involve social relations, whatever else may be
to ‘‘give up on words’’—the ‘‘stolidness’’ we so often ambient features. And it is those social relations, not
think of with respect to Native Americans31 —and won- the photographs, the films themselves, that are the ob-
dered how useful a medium that calls forth acting, over- ject of political critique. The means for political argu-
acting, projecting, and overprojecting as expressive mo- mentation are beyond the scope of this commentary,
dalities of the subject would be to people for whom the but I will argue below for political debate—political cri-
avoidance of such projection is a virtue. tiques of specific social relations (cf. Faris 1996). Suffice
it to say that I would argue against means involving pro-
grams, projects, platforms, or some universal epistemo-
logical appeal.
Comments Weiner notes that in Ginsburg’s clips humor is quite
apparent in the work of indigenous video producers she
illustrates—parodies of white men, etc. But indigenous
j a m e s c. f a r i s observers have been making fun of Westerners for years.
644 Canyon Rd., #4, Santa Fe, N.M. 87507, U.S.A. To feature this in illustration of some cultural pastiche
22 vi 96 or reflexivity is almost pitiful; this is not power, it is
patronizing self-deprecation—a safe humor that leaves
This is an ambitious paper—addressing as it does the- social relations as they are. Humor, as we all know, is
ory, practices, politics, and an aspect of the issue of an- often used in situations where it is the only possible at-
thropological representation in ‘‘televisualist anthro- tack on power and unequal social relations—and possi-
pology.’’ It is especially challenging to a highly ble only because it does leave such social relations in-
promoted and currently popular modality—for careers tact. After all, the most powerful men in the world are
are made, the drives of academic dividends, funding, the subject of cartoonists’ daily assaults. At least in
and research leave are at stake, and consumption de- Turner’s accounts of Kayapo indigenous video produc-
tion there was more than parody, and their video efforts
were supposed to have had some influence in stopping
30. As Pinney (1992a:48) has put it, ‘‘modern Western selves . . . a World Bank dam project (that internationally famous
consolidated themselves through an accumulating externality, an rock stars lent their influence may also have been sig-
ineluctable accretion of possessions—presences—which effaced
(through a displacement) the absence of the very self they pur- nificant, however).
ported to reflect.’’ Turner quite consciously celebrates the technological
31. ‘‘ ‘The Bororo call civilized people kidoe kidoe, ‘parakeet, para- adulteration. While this is a complicated matter (and no
keet,’ because, like these birds, they talk too much. . . . The white one is arguing that ‘‘indigenous’’ peoples remain un-
man thus has his place in the native bestiary. . . . In return, white
observers have often mentioned oral retention, ‘a fierce reluctance touched, a protected zoo of cultural integrity), it is at
to speak except when absolutely necessary,’ as a behaviour typical least an honest position (if stubbornly Western and
of American Indians’’ (Lévi-Strauss 1988:164–65). postmodern in its focus). In Ginsburg’s formulations
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212 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
there is more hedging, and if it seems to be video that content and form in a human entity, such as a cultural
she approves of (and therefore shows in clips to aca- group.
demic audiences), it is labeled ‘‘mediation’’—a fuzzy Apart from the unfortunate 19th-century heritage of
word suggestive of a type of normative methodology the position axiomatically linking aesthetics and politi-
that must always ignore power and cannot appreciate cal form, the notion is crippling in that it inhibits any
difference. It celebrates a pastiche (Turner’s term ‘‘adul- serious political critique—exactly the point, as I under-
teration’’—wisely—is never used), perhaps a nonstri- stand him, that Weiner is making with his insistence
dent humor (poking fun at Westerners)—a cultural con- on cultural critique (a concept promoted by Marcus and
structivism (which can be viewed) that is not very Fischer [1986] but never practiced by them) in his exam-
challenging. ‘‘Mediation’’ of this sort is quite safe, com- ination of ‘‘indigenous media.’’ Along these lines, how-
fortable, popular. Now they are more like us, have per- ever, let me comment on some important implications
haps accepted elements of our humor, our methods of for such critique.
impotent criticism in parody.1 I think that we must be extremely clear that while
Faye Ginsburg and Terry Turner, as leading represen- we have no business critiquing anyone’s culture (be-
tatives and partisans of ‘‘indigenous media’’ (and the yond differences in personal taste), we have every right
foci of much of Weiner’s paper), might agree with some to engage in debate about social relations (I take the
of the above and bemoan the shallow use of filmic ma- phrase cultural critique to mean a critique of social re-
terials and the increasing dependency upon visualist lations, a political critique—what I think Weiner calls
modalities. But, as Weiner has so carefully illustrated, a cognizance of ‘‘social difference’’). This has long been
their enthusiasms cannot be divorced from some of the a confusion in the literature, I suspect because of this
problems such work has created, particularly their theo- unfortunate combination of specific aesthetics with
retical assumptions. Of course Ginsburg and Turner specific political structures—in short, because of the
fully realize that there are nonvisual texts necessary to concept of totality. While it is usually a culture’s job to
the comprehension of filmic narrative. But Ginsburg, insist on such combination, such totality, it is the job
particularly, insists that filmic text is ‘‘mediational,’’ of the critic to deconstruct such unity, such totality, for
constructive, and revelatory of social and cultural rela- political critique—not in aid of another totality (the an-
tions, both new and creative. Weiner correctly, in my thropological approach) but in debate. From Walter Ben-
opinion, notes the assumptions that must lie behind jamin to Marcus and Fischer, there has been a promise
such a position (the ‘‘views’’)—first, a curious, even ata- of cultural critique. But unless there is a firm existential
vistic appeal to reality and, most especially, the paraly- totality of culture and social relations (which I argue
sis to any cultural critique if such assumptions are held. there must not be, cannot be), then we cannot critique
He goes farther, indicating the banal assumption in this anyone’s culture, however distasteful, ugly, etc., we
‘‘view’’ that aesthetics and politics are axiomatically may find it. It is the social relations behind any cultural
linked (rather than situationally and theoretically pos- manifestation which must be the object of criticism,
ited and argued). This latter position has unfortunately not the cultural expressions.2 So if people decide to cir-
enjoyed hegemony in Western aesthetic discourse for cumcise their young (male and or female), otherwise
some time—the notion that there is recognizable bour- mutilate their bodies, or goose-step about in black
geois art or socialist realism or fascist aesthetics—some leather, that is their prerogative. If, however, the social
manner of straightforwardly reading politics or social relations signified in these practices are debated as in-
relations from visualist productions or appropriate aes- egalitarian, oppressive, racist, or sexist (and our future
thetics from particular political relations. But there can will challenge other relations of oppression of which we
be no true aesthetics of a modality that is so premised are now unaware as well as alter thinking about those
in reality. If one is to lean on canons of realism in the which we now specify), then we have every reason to
underlying assumptions that Weiner convincingly dem- object, argue, and struggle for the change of such social
onstrates for Ginsburg, there can indeed be no appeal to relations. This need not and perhaps will not bring
aesthetics at all (cf. Solomon-Godeau 1985, 1991). Ev- about any change in the expressive forms. So be it.
eryone from the now-defunct socialist regimes and the There is no reason for particular social relations to be
United States Congress (say, as represented by Jesse allowed to hegemonize particular noniconic symbols
Helms) to intellectuals such as Susan Sontag (1975) has (even, for example, something so historically loaded in
accepted the notion that somehow particular aesthetics the recent West as the swastika).3
are appropriate to specific political relations. It is indeed
the notion of totality that makes possible the axiomatic 2. The notion of totality is also implicit in the terms ‘‘society’’ and
‘‘culture.’’ While it is beyond the scope of this critique, I would
link between social relations and aesthetics, between
argue for jettisoning such terms and being henceforth quite careful
in our usage. Our political critiques can only be of specific social
relations (between people, groups, institutions), and we must theo-
1. Another term besides the awful ‘‘mediation’’ linked to it by retically specify any concatenation of relations beyond these. ‘‘So-
Ginsburg and Turner surrounds ‘‘indigenous media,’’ and that is ciety’’ and ‘‘culture’’ are not existentially given (see Faris and Wutu
the term ‘‘empowerment.’’ It seems to me extraordinarily problem- 1986, Hirst 1977).
atic, a term without meaning locally and of relevance only to visu- 3. The use of the swastika (and the mirror image) was common in
alist, surveilling, observing social relations vis-à-vis indigenous Native American and other non-European art prior to World War
entities applied by external observers. II. After that, its use dropped away, out of self-censorship or rejec-
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 213
Weiner, I think, correctly assesses anthropology’s actionary, and its ability to preserve difference while
promise as that perspective that can suggest a total sys- obliterating Otherness—or the ability to differ (‘‘the
tem against the position of its members. I think, how- perception of social difference’’ in Weiner’s terms)—
ever, that this is also why anthropology (the ‘‘science’’ evaporates. It is especially anachronistic to sustain an
of representation) as traditionally practiced (and as still anthropology in such efforts.
practiced by the vast majority of its practitioners) is
doomed. It is part of the unfortunate promise of univer-
sal knowledge (which required a totality—such as a the- f a y e g i n sb u rg
ory of the evolution of life forms [natural science], a Center for Media, Culture, and History, Department
theory of the individual in human social forms [psy- of Anthropology, New York University, New York,
chology], and a reduction of the world’s cultural varia- N.Y. 10003-6970, U.S.A. 25 ix 96
tion and local expression to a master template [anthro-
pology]). And that optimistic—no, arrogant—set of Writing a brief response to Weiner’s article is an awk-
assumptions is now in quite serious trouble as the anar- ward task, as my work (and that of colleagues such as
chy and chaos of human social reality (and ‘‘natural’’ re- Terence Turner) is misrepresented and misinterpreted
ality in the case of evolutionary studies) increasingly throughout. Nonetheless, I will use the opportunity for
falsify attempts to codify it nomothetically. Indeed, any discussion provided here to consider some issues and
attempt at totalizing theory would, as Weiner has sug- clarify what I think are genuine differences between
gested, mean a truly ‘‘postcultural’’ period. Weiner’s position and that of those he attacks. Weiner’s
If I understand him correctly, Weiner, however, ap- discussion of indigenous media is only the latest contri-
pears more positive about the possibility of a totalizing bution to what has generally been a very lively and pro-
theory of human culture than I would be. My views ductive debate on the topic, a sign of the interest it
against a totalizing enterprise are noted above and have holds for scholars in anthropology and media studies
been detailed elsewhere (Faris and Wutu 1986; Faris and for indigenous people.
1989, 1993); it is sufficient here to say that there are Conflation and misrepresentation. I begin with an in-
methodological, theoretical, and even ethical problems terrogation of the term ‘‘televisualist anthropology,’’ a
with such a position. It is not to succumb to some silly murky one that Weiner never unpacks. This might
relativism to deny the possibility of an overarching the- seem a pedantic note on which to start except that
ory, but it is certainly to dismiss local views to adopt Weiner’s failure to define his object is symptomatic of
one. Surely at the end of the millennium we are no a broader problem: a general lack of familiarity with the
longer sanguine about mapping the world and its pro- phenomenon itself—indigenous work in film, video,
cesses or even convinced that it is process-governed. All and television—and the research and scholarship per-
that unfortunate vocabulary ultimately dates from a taining to it. Weiner doesn’t find it necessary to define
century ago, with the triumph of rationalist discourse, the term, nor is its meaning implicit in the article as it
and must now be jettisoned if we are to proceed. It will might be if he were writing exclusively about (for exam-
be a new enterprise that explores difference for critical ple) ethnographic films produced for and seen via televi-
debate; anthropology cannot do it, and I feel that Weiner sion. Instead, he leaps from home movies to various na-
is excessively optimistic to think so. tional cinemas to ethnographic film to indigenous film,
Visual anthropology still insists on a ‘‘view,’’ still video, and television as if they were equivalent technol-
leans on an observationalist privilege, on a modality ogies and social practices. Additionally, he uses ‘‘indige-
that can only involve a liberal access—even if it is their nous’’ and ‘‘non-Western’’ interchangeably throughout,
photography of themselves (us looking on, of course). an ethnocentric category mistake that results in col-
There cannot be a revolutionary nonfiction cinema, a lapsing phenomena such as the Indian and Chinese cin-
gesture of severance with the camera, for its very con- ema industries into the same cultural and analytic
finement to registering, to documenting ostensibly dic- frame as locally based indigenous media associations in
tated by an external agenda (i.e., ‘‘reality’’), condemns remote areas of Australia, Canada, or Brazil.
it. There may be other potentialities of which I am un- The term ‘‘televisualist anthropology’’ and the lack of
aware, and certainly there are great possibilities with explanation for it are also indicative of other problem-
other narrative constructions, as the history of Holly- atic strategies of argumentation, particularly false attri-
wood and fiction cinema demonstrates. But insofar as bution through rhetorical assertion. Weiner uses the
anthropology leans on ‘‘reality’’ in its visualist obses- term as if I or Turner had coined and used it and then
sions (whether the documents of local people by local attributes positions to us that we do not hold and argues
people especially championed by Ginsburg and Turner against them, occasionally using our arguments as his
or the more classical productions of anthropological own. This strategy, along with a lack of clarity and
documentary cinema), its discussions of power are un- logic, leads to basic errors. For example, Weiner pre-
fortunate, even deceiving, its gestures are ultimately re- sents opposing positions as if they were the same; he
collapses my interest in the mediation of social and cul-
tion by the consuming Western public. That the Third Reich (and
tural processes via a wide range of media practices and
more contemporary fascists) came to have all authority over such social actions—a position which is built on a funda-
a popular symbol was indeed unfortunate. mental recognition of the constructed nature of film
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214 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
and video—with the contrasting view (no longer preva- research is a necessary corrective to grand theoriz-
lent) of John Collier, who remains preoccupied with the ing that loses touch with the specific, embedded,
presumed transparency (or mimetic possibility) of eth- and diverse ways that people use media to make
nographic film as a narrowly defined genre. Such basic sense of their worlds and, most importantly, to con-
misreadings are indicative of serendipitous knowledge struct new ones. It is only through such case stud-
of the field and confusion about some very central dif- ies, especially in diverse cultural settings, that we
ferences in contemporary debates in visual anthropol- can refine and rethink prevailing theories regarding
ogy and media studies. the power and impact of film and television, and re-
Weiner has failed to understand (or at least to repre- imagine the place of media in all of our lives.
sent) my argument. In the opening section of his essay,
for example, he appropriates my position to his own. He This serves as the introduction to a long section enti-
begins by interrogating a video clip (3 minutes out tled ‘‘Mediating Culture,’’ in which I discuss recent eth-
of a 60-minute piece) I showed of an Inuit work called nographic studies of media precisely in terms of the
Qaggiq (‘‘Gathering Place’’). He asks how it can tell us contributions they make to a variety of theoretical de-
something about Inuit social relations and the way in bates regarding, for example, postcolonial representa-
which the camera is being used to mediate them. These tional practices or Habermas’s notion of the public
are precisely the kinds of questions I raised; I showed sphere as an arena of social criticism autonomous from
the segment as a case in point for my argument that state or market domination.
these works are best understood in their ethnographic Weiner’s central complaint, directed against distorted
context. Ignoring that, Weiner himself argues (as if I had versions of our work, is that ethnographic attention to
not) that such works must be understood in their ethno- indigenous film, video, and television signals the de-
graphic context, ‘‘that film, like all art forms, never cline of an anthropology engaged in a confrontation
stands alone.’’ He then further distorts my position by with radical alterity. Only cultures apparently unsul-
taking a quote of mine out of context, contending that lied by contact with the West provide the anthropologi-
I am ‘‘opposed to grand theorizing’’ in favor of ethno- cal imaginary (in a Lacanian sense) that he desires, and
graphic practice, as if I saw these as contrary activities. in his view this indigenous work (as he misrepresents
In fact, my call for ‘‘ethnographic research as a correc- it) poses a threat to it.1 He writes, ‘‘Why should we con-
tive to grand theorizing’’ in no way expresses a desire tinue to do anthropology if we can only find a sort of
to eschew theory; it was specifically aimed at work in ersatz difference in the manufactured sound bites, video
film studies which has been, until recently, uninter- clips, and promotional videos which will henceforth be
ested in examining the ethnocentrism of its theoretical everyone’s most important cultural product?’’ As I will
assumptions about activities such as film spectatorship. clarify below, this statement in no way characterizes
(Even reception theory, which has begun to break that the kind of research and analysis that any of us have
frame through the use of quasi-ethnographic methods, been doing but is a projection of the imagined threat of
organizes itself in terms of constructed and mostly ethnographic attention to ‘‘hybrid practices’’ which
Western viewing environments.) The original text Weiner takes as a sign of the end of serious ethnogra-
(1994a: 8, emphasis added) read as follows: phy. He seems to long for what Fabian (1983) calls the
allochronic as opposed to an anthropology of the pres-
If there is some original contribution to be made by ent (to use Richard Fox’s [1991] term).
an ethnographic approach, it is to break up the Projection and the effacement of memory. It is ironic
‘‘massness’’ of the media, and to intervene in its that Weiner begins his article by quoting Adorno on the
supposed reality effect by recognizing the complex effacement of memory, as he seems to have forgotten
ways in which people are engaged in processes of two discussions we have had on aspects of this essay in
making and interpreting media works in relation to the past two years. The first was during the question-
their cultural, social, and historical circumstances. and-answer period after the keynote lecture I gave at the
. . . By looking at the broad range of social processes 1994 Australian anthropology meetings in Sydney,
that shape media production, distribution, and recep- where he asked if Western home movies might not be
tion in particular settings, such inquiries offer co- considered indigenous media. Far from dismissing such
gent challenges to the ethnocentric assumptions of practices (as he suggests I do), I mentioned the consider-
the inevitability of western media hegemony, explor- able scholarship on home movies and family photo-
ing the intersection of local cultures, regional his- graphs as aspects of Western bourgeois social practices
tories of cinema and television, and the political and nuclear-family life, studied not only by Bourdieu
economies and ideological agendas of states and cor- (1990) (whom Weiner cites) but by others as well (Chal-
porate empires. . . . Whatever the power and reach fen 1987, Zimmerman 1995). Such research fits in with
of media institutions and messages, the people who a fertile and growing area of ethnographic research on
receive them continue to have unpredictable and media (see Ginsburg 1994a, Spitulnick 1993) which is
creative responses to such processes; ethnographic beginning to appear in journals such as Visual Anthro-
research is especially well-suited to understanding
these dynamics, as the cases I have described make 1. For an interesting discussion of this kind of framework, I recom-
clear. The variety and particularity revealed by such mend Trouillot (1991).
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 215
pology Review and Public Culture. Indeed, the cultural have been subject to missionizing? In my view, Wein-
and political differences between home movies and in- er’s position signals a profound difference in our episte-
digenous media demonstrate precisely the (very basic) mological, intellectual, political, and moral commit-
point that I make in a number of articles—that the em- ments as anthropologists.
ployment of the media needs to be understood in its cul- An aporia in the text. I fail to understand how Weiner
tural, sociological, and political economic contexts. can make such vehement claims about indigenous me-
These may be the unreflective leisure practices of the dia without having actually looked at the material in
American middle class in the case of home movies or question and talked to some of its producers. By his own
the very self-conscious struggle of indigenous people for admission, he has not viewed more than a total of ten
recognition of land rights and cultural autonomy, in minutes of short clips (approximately three minutes
which media skills may be one tool for making their each of much longer pieces) that I showed at two differ-
claims known. ent public lectures. I contextualized them ethnographi-
As a second part of my answer to the query on home cally and formally at the time (and not by pointing out
movies, I pointed out that my use of the term ‘‘indige- their ‘‘hilarity,’’ as he misremembers)2 but certainly did
nous’’ would not apply to the American middle class. not expect an audience to comprehend or appreciate
Rather, it is in accordance with its late-20th-century them in their entirety. A large proportion of indigenous
use as a referent for the original inhabitants of lands work is made primarily for internal consumption (or in
taken over by colonial settler societies: Aboriginal Aus- some cases as an archive of rituals that can be seen only
tralians, Native Americans, Maori, Sami, Kayapo, and by particular male or female initiates, as is the case at
other Amazonian groups, as well as Quechua and Ernabella in South Australia). However, I specifically
Mayan peoples of Central and South America. For these showed works that had been viewed by general as well
groups, the recent introduction of Western media tech- as indigenous audiences (whatever the intention of
nologies is only the most recent of a long series of impo- their makers). Although these short clips failed to
sitions of colonial practices far more devastating than ‘‘speak to’’ Weiner, they have had remarkable success
video technology, even if one were to agree that West- elsewhere, having won numerous prizes and been re-
ern ideologies are smuggled in with the very apparatus ceived enthusiastically at so-called high-culture venues
of the camera.
The efforts of indigenous activists to appropriate 2. In my notes from the talk, I contextualize a clip from Sun, Moon,
video and television technology to their own use were and Feather (1989) in the following way: ‘‘Much of this work ex-
a creative and in their view necessary response to this pands on the important insights of Benedict Anderson regarding
how contemporary nation states constitute imagined communities
latest onslaught. Inuit people, for example, faced with (Anderson 1983) through print media, by demonstrating how criti-
unwanted Western (or Southern, as they would say) cal the visual media are to the building (and contesting) of contem-
television programs following the launching of satel- porary collective identities. This can be tracked through commu-
lites over their remote lands in the 1970s, organized to nity-based media production such as local communications
demand from the Canadian government satellite space societies in monolingual communities in Canada’s far north or in
media associations in Central Australia such as EVTV or WMA; in
and training to create their own media. Their alterna- regional centers like CAAMA in Australia or the Inuit Broadcast
tive was what is now the Inuit Broadcasting Corpora- Corporation in Canada; and in national film or television indus-
tion (IBC) (Roth and Valaskakis 1989), a remarkably tries, such as Studio Six, the First Nations’ Production Center for
lively social formation and a force for cultural revival, National Film Board of Canada, or the Aboriginal Programs Unit
at the ABC. The variety of sites challenges arguments that view
language preservation, and dissemination of important the media as inexorably hegemonic and homogenizing, wiping out
health care information as well as political news on in- the cultural integrity, authenticity, and diversity of people living
digenous issues. A similar process in central Australia in mass societies. Rather, they clarify the importance of looking at
in the 1980s (Batty 1993; Michaels 1986, 1987b) sparked the complexity of social processes that shape the global spread of
Eric Michaels’s work with Warlpiri Media and the for- television and film, and of examining the range of practices that
influence its production and reception.
mation of a number of other groups such as the Central The film Sun, Moon, and Feather (1989), for example, is a hilari-
Australian Aboriginal Media Association (CAAMA) and ous and poignant examination of this sort of complexity. It is made
Imparja (Ginsburg 1991, 1993a). These groups in no way by Lisa, Gloria, and Muriel Miguel, Native American sisters of
represent the whole of Warlpiri or Inuit society (a ridic- Cuna and Rapahnonok descent who grew up in Brooklyn where
they were part of a medicine show circuit as children in the 1940s.
ulously reductive position that Weiner attributes to me) As adults in the 1970s, they formed the Spiderwoman Theatre
but are aspects of late-20th-century contact that they Company. In Sun, Moon, and Feather, they blend performance,
have managed to indigenize in the service of cultural memoir, and home movies to reflect on their complex histories and
preservation, intergenerational transmission of tradi- identities as Native American women. Their childhood memories
coincide with those of many other Americans (the arrival of a sib-
tion and language, regional contact with other groups,
ling, discovering sex, alcoholism), yet those experiences differed in
and more practical needs from the selling of indigenous important ways as they negotiated their subjectivities through dis-
artwork via satellite to long-distance driver education. torted images of Native American culture. This is brought home
It seems profoundly misguided for anthropologists to to the audience not through solemn indictments of Hollywood for
dismiss such efforts as ‘‘ersatz’’ because the actors are its inherent racism, but through an antic re-enactment by the sis-
ters of ‘Indian Love Song’ intercut with the original cinematic ver-
self-conscious about their culture-making efforts or are sion featuring Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald, followed by
using Western media technologies to their own ends. an evocation through home movies, reminiscence, and humor of
Should we equally dismiss as inauthentic those who their own roles as ‘public Indians.’’’
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216 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
such as the Museum of Modern Art in New York. I One of the key issues that Langton addresses here (and
stress this point as some kind of ‘‘objective measure’’ one that underscores the significance of indigenous me-
(beyond my opinion) of these works because of the dia) is erased in Weiner’s accounting: that many aborigi-
peremptory tone Weiner adopts in discussing their qual- nal people are engaged in social movements for politi-
ity. Given that his whole essay is built on his interpre- cal, human, and cultural rights, movements which are
tation of such work as ‘‘ersatz,’’ his lack of knowledge central to their survival in every sense. These are pro-
of it creates a gaping lacuna at the center of his argu- cesses in which the media play an increasingly impor-
ment. This is particularly puzzling in that I specifically tant role, as was clear in the mass demonstration orga-
encouraged him to look at some works produced by Ab- nized by the Kayapo and other Amazonian groups to
original people in Australia when he asked me for com- stop the building of a hydroelectric dam at Altamira
ments on an earlier version of his essay via e-mail in (Turner 1992b). These kinds of actions are part of what
early 1995. (I also pointed out that he had misrepre- appealed to me, as an anthropologist who works on so-
sented my ideas and the broader discourse on indige- cial movements (1989) as well as visual anthropology,
nous media and the ethnographic study of media.) about indigenous media.3 Indeed, the fact that this has
Aboriginal works are readily accessible to Weiner in become a phenomenon of interest for contemporary
Australia; he could see EVTV in action in the Aborigi- ethnographic inquiry seems to have provoked Weiner’s
nal community of Ernabella, north of Adelaide, where polemic. The more important social fact (in my view)—
he teaches, or he could talk to Sydney-based Aboriginal that film, video, and television have been appropriated
filmmakers such as Tracey Moffatt (whose films mas- by indigenous groups to help produce conditions that
terfully capture the intercultural production of the might give them greater control over their cultural fu-
Freudian Verneinung that Weiner so longs for). He tures—seems not to interest him at all (although this
could also have read the work of the distinguished Ab- aspect is of considerable theoretical and political inter-
original activist/actress/anthropologist Marcia Lang- est to other scholars besides myself, among them Ca-
ton, who at the request of the Australian Film Commis- relli [1988], Langton [1993], Michaels [1987b], and
sion (AFC) wrote an important treatise on Aboriginal Turner [1992a]). I hope that this exchange will encour-
media entitled ‘‘Well I Heard It on the Radio and Saw age interest in the work itself and the lively research
It on the Television . . .’’ (1993). Perhaps such ‘‘na- and theoretical debates that have been produced on this
tives’’—some of whom hold advanced degrees in an- topic over the past decade (Batty 1993; Carelli 1988;
thropology and head organizations such as the Austra- Faris 1992; Ginsburg 1991, 1992, 1993a, b, 1994a, b,
lian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Straits Islander 1995a, b, 1996; Langton 1993; Michaels 1986, 1987b,
Studies—are not sufficiently ‘‘alter.’’ 1991; Roth and Valaskakis 1989; Ruby 1991; Turner
Langton (1993:84) addresses this attitude acerbically. 1990, 1991, 1992a, b, 1995a).
Contemporary indigenous self-consciousness and repre-
sentational practices, she argues, are in part the product
of centuries of colonial practice. Indigenous people are a nn e t t e ha m il t on
now asserting cultural and political concerns through Anthropology, Macquarie University, Sydney, N.S.W.
their skills at collective self-production, using a variety 2109, Australia, 3 ix 96
of oral, performative, and visual media:
At Weiner’s request I gave him comments on an earlier
Aboriginal people have invented a theatre of politics version of this paper, and I am pleased to have the op-
in which self-representation has become a sophisti- portunity to do so further here. He has made substantial
cated device, creating their own theories or models changes to the original version, and so I treat the pres-
of intercultural discourse such as land rights, self-de- ent one ab initio to the extent that that is possible. I
termination, ‘‘White Australia has a black history,’’ should preface these remarks by noting that I was
and so on. . . . closely involved in the early work on indigenous media
The complaint, ‘‘This is all so tiresome and infan- in Australia by the late Eric Michaels and have been for
tile; why do we have to listen to this chorus of ‘I the past ten years engaged in a rather eclectic study of
want’, ‘I demand’?’’ is part of an intellectual mal- media production and effects in Thailand. While I
aise. Some intellectuals even demand that the Na- would not see ‘‘televisualist anthropology’’ as an apt
tive answer back in a refereed journal, say some- term for either of these projects, I will not delay the dis-
thing about the French intellectuals, Jacques cussion to examine the issue.
Derrida or Jean Baudrillard, and speak from the ‘‘Theory’’ is a major concern of Weiner’s paper, not
hyperluxury of the first world with the reflective always explicitly. The entire piece is saturated with
thoughts of a well-paid, well-fed, detached scholar. theoretical questions and assumptions, which are
The notion of social justice appears to have be-
come boring and has disappeared from the rhetoric. 3. I have been writing about indigenous video and film makers as
But this, like the consumption and reconsumption cultural activists as a way of both placing their work and distin-
guishing it from standard social movement frameworks (Ginsburg
of all ideas and style including all that is regarded 1996). In addition, I have addressed how the emergence of this
as ‘‘the primitive,’’ is a symptom of postmodernism work resituates the theory and practice of visual anthropology
and economic rationalism. (1991, 1994a, 1995b).
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 217
stated as if there were or ought to be universal accep- tend to new media and their effects on—who? ‘‘na-
tance within anthropology of certain approaches and tives’’? ‘‘primitives’’?—are actively participating in the
understandings. The initial quote from Adorno sets the undermining of the basis of those peoples’ modes of ex-
tone: there is some furious and conscious activity afoot istence.
to efface memory, to achieve a forgetting. Whose fury Weiner’s Heideggerian approach to the deep cultural
is thus engaged? The perpetrator seems to be the an- significance of en-framing and the fundamental trans-
thropologist who attends to the visual productions of formation in consciousness and self-consciousness in
indigenous peoples, who gives them credence and the technologised world of representation is well-taken.
thereby some sort of validation. But is it the anthropolo- There is no doubt that dominant Western cultural prac-
gist who is effacing the recollection of an authentic ‘‘na- tices arise from an intersection between technology and
tive’’ world by allowing modern technological forms of subjectivity which marks a determinate break with pre-
representation to be admitted as valid cultural prod- modern forms. It is understandable that some kinds of
ucts? Or, worse, is it ‘‘the native’’ who is being lured anthropology are suffused with regret and nostalgia for
to forget his/her own authentic cultural traditions by a genuinely ‘‘other’’ world, the ‘‘cold’’ world of the Lévi-
taking up the video camera? At different points in the Straussian primitive. However, the brute fact is that, for
paper, both charges seem to be made. virtually all indigenous and ‘‘tribal’’ people within
Throughout Weiner’s paper runs a sense of accusa- Western settler colonies and for many others as well,
tion, if not exactly of bad faith then at least of somehow this break has already occurred. They are already ‘‘view-
betraying the authentic project of anthropology. The ac- ers,’’ with all the disruption to indigenous subjectivity
cused are those who embrace ‘‘televisualist anthropol- which this implies. I well remember sitting in the open-
ogy’’—but presumably not all of them, since he reserves air ‘‘cinema’’ at Maningrida in 1968 with several hun-
some approbation for Eric Michaels’s work, at least to dred Aboriginal people watching the steady diet of
the extent that Michaels speaks of a ‘‘failure to value American cowboy and Indian movies which their set-
and a banal overvaluation’’ of Aboriginal cultural pro- tlement superintendent thought was suitable viewing
duction (though I believe that Michaels was referring to for a Saturday night. People were reading these movies
art in these remarks, not video). Weiner’s failure to eval- as ‘‘real’’ then; they wanted to know, for instance, what
uate Michaels’s own project is particularly odd in the had happened to John Wayne’s wife, who had appeared
light of later comments in which he appears to be sug- in one movie the previous week and now seemed to
gesting that the televisualist anthropologist is a ‘‘pro- have disappeared. And where were his mother and fa-
moter’’ of indigenous video and that this promoter ther? His other kinsmen? Where was his country, and
seems to ‘‘insist that such people should have the power his countrymen? And I was puzzled to see that they
to produce their own images.’’ It was Michaels who in cheered the cowboys who slaughtered the Indians. I
the mid-1980s insisted that his research would not take thought they should identify with the Indians, of
an objectivist ‘‘before and after’’ approach to the intro- course—some romantic essentialism, the common de-
duction of national broadcasting to Aboriginal people in nominator of invasion and genocide to be recognised
Central Australia but would instead give them the tech- across time and space. But of course they identified
nological capacity to take the medium into their own with the cowboys, because the cowboys were the win-
hands and make their own programs. Indigenous peo- ners. Under the peculiar conditions of cultural circula-
ples’ use of the media, both in and beyond Australia, has tion today, the situation may well be reversed: the
proceeded apace since that time, and Ginsburg’s project global emergence of identities as ‘‘indigenous peoples’’
aims to understand the contexts in which these cultural has been taken up and redefined, often through film and
forms have arisen and their meaning and significance in video itself, and ‘‘winning’’ occurs no longer in Holly-
the technologised world in which such peoples are now wood film but in global contexts such as the United Na-
enmeshed. tions and in the legal environments of nation-states
Part of the puzzle of Weiner’s treatment of the subject where peoples are putting forward their particular
arises from his apparent failure to understand that in- claims.
digenous productions exist in a dialogical relation with Now Aboriginal people in the most remote parts of
other already existing visual products in contexts in Australia are sophisticated viewers. People deep in the
which visual technologies have been long established in Western Desert hire videos, often brought in by air, and
the cultural environment. I imagine that few anthropol- they can in many places also watch segments of broad-
ogists would argue that it is preferable for people to cast television made in their own languages through the
make videos or to watch them than to make rituals and various media providers in Central Australia, such as
participate in them. However, these are simply not the CAAMA. Indigenous broadcasting and video produc-
alternatives. Weiner, perhaps because he has worked tion and circulation have taken their place alongside
among some of the last few humans on the planet who other products of the media from the broader Australian
are not already engaged with modern technologies, puts environment. Could anyone seriously think that Ab-
forward the view that media such as film and video rest original people would be better off if they saw only
on foundations which ‘‘could be opposed to and even these external products, a steady diet of Rambo and
subversive of non-Western modes of knowledge.’’ Thus Jackie Chan videos, and not much else? What is the be-
the argument seems to be that anthropologists who at- trayal, or cultural undermining, of indigenous peoples
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218 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
already enmeshed in the world as viewers of now being the view of the lens, and who appears in what contexts
able to see their own world on screen as it appears to in the film by pre-existing kinship and ritual relations,
their own kinsmen behind the camera or before it in the particularly those between ‘‘owners’’ and ‘‘managers’’
broadcasting studios? It might not amount to much in of country and/or associated ritual. These social rela-
Western aesthetic terms, true, but to suggest that there tions within the existing community must be taken
is some kind of devious intention behind the failure to into account for indigenous film productions dealing
teach them to conform to Western aesthetics in film with country/ritual to take place. All this was clearly
production (as seems to be suggested by ‘‘We have set out and discussed by Eric Michaels a decade ago, but
taught them English grammar, syntax, and semantics it seems to have escaped Weiner. Instead, he suggests
but have made no attempt to teach them iambic pen- that Ginsburg supports the notion that film is better
tameter’’) seems to suggest that ‘‘we’’ are the privileged able to capture experiential and phenomenal wholeness
viewers and have the right to interrogate the ‘‘quality’’ (of what? of culture? of a ritual? better than what else?).
of their products. As I have suggested to Weiner before, Weiner’s thinking here is very hard to follow. Why in-
it is not ‘‘we’’ who are the intended viewers. The aes- voke Collier’s statement about ‘‘the realism of time and
thetics, embedded or otherwise, are directed at viewers motion’’? Does Ginsburg support Collier’s view? There
whose pleasure arises precisely from the difference be- is no evidence to suggest so. On the contrary, anyone
tween conventional Western visual productions, with who works in the film/media area is fully aware of the
which they are highly familiar, and those which they constructed nature of all films and videos and of the
identify as their own. The long landscape pan found in problems of ‘‘realism.’’ Where does Ginsburg claim
virtually all Aboriginal videos, discussed by Michaels, some special virtue for film in conveying ‘‘the real’’? Or
provides an outstanding example of this. Western view- is it something to do with conveying ‘‘the essence of
ers simply can’t ‘‘see’’ what there is in the landscape; culture’’? It would have sharpened the debate consider-
it’s just a long boring shot of nothing. But Aboriginal ably if we had been told exactly what ‘‘the essence of
viewers ‘‘read’’ this leisurely image through codes aris- culture’’ is or how it could be grasped, understood, con-
ing within their mythological systems, linking space, veyed, and translated in any medium.
place, and ancestral meaning. The fact that the land- There may be a further point here. Is Weiner sug-
scape is on video allows a collective re-experiencing of gesting that only the deeply embedded ethnographic
these codes, memories, and meanings; of course, it practice of ‘‘traditional’’ anthropology can discover or
might be better to be there in the place, but if one can’t reveal ‘‘authentic social relations’’? Or does his re-
be there, then seeing it on video seems better than sponse arise from some misapprehension that Ginsburg
never seeing it at all. is endorsing indigenous film-making as ‘‘better than’’
Although Weiner promises to discuss the role of film the anthropologist’s account? It is true that many
in anthropology, that is, as an ethnographic tool and an voices have been raised in recent years in protest of
object of ethnographic inspection, the abstruse discus- Westerners’ representing indigenous cultures in film,
sion which follows does not do this at all. Rather, the particularly ethnographic film. Perhaps the majority of
approach of various ‘‘primitive’’ societies to revelation such complaints have arisen from a certain theoretical
and elicitation is discussed, and then it is suggested that position, one commonly encountered in cultural stud-
there is a fundamental split between a ‘‘dialectical’’ and ies. This is not to dismiss the issue; it is a fundamen-
a ‘‘social constructionist’’ analysis. It would have been tally important one for anthropology. But Ginsburg’s
helpful to have a fuller discussion of what characterises writings are not directed towards this complaint. No-
these two approaches and what difference it would where does she claim that indigenous film/video-mak-
make to use the ‘‘dialectical’’ approach (apparently the ers are rightly supplanting the textual interpretations of
one favoured by Weiner) in evaluating the role of media anthropology. On the contrary, she is occupied with the
in indigenous communities. Or is it that a dialectical way in which new media forms allow a different kind
approach would not pay attention to such phenomena of relation between representation and an indigenous
at all? Unfortunately, no such discussion takes place; audience. Of course the products of such an encounter
rather, Ginsburg is suddenly accused of a disreputable are not going to be in harmony with the aims of tradi-
marxism insofar as she is charged with seeing ‘‘the rela- tional anthropological ethnography, but neither do they
tions of film production standing for the entirety of a discount or discard them.
social world.’’ A footnote promises to explicate this bi- A further analytical point: Weiner seems not to grasp
zarre charge, but actually we read a quote from Marx that different ‘‘visual media’’ have different forms of
in which he describes the production of the relations of construction, different effects on viewers, and different
production in the economy as a whole. This seems not entailments in terms of representation. He speaks of
to have anything to do with the ‘‘social relations’’ ‘‘television,’’ ‘‘videos,’’ ‘‘films,’’ and ‘‘photographs’’ as if
which Ginsburg has discussed in various places; as I un- all these, by virtue of being aspects of Western technol-
derstand it, she is concerned largely with the existing ogies, could somehow be equated. For example, he sug-
prior social relations among film/video-makers and gests that Ginsburg has failed to understand that the
community as subject and audience at once. To clarify Western home-video-maker is not creating images of
this point, in Australia, Aboriginal film-makers are con- his/her cultural and social life and that she ‘‘dismisses’’
strained in terms of who holds the camera, who directs such efforts. He supports this with a long quote from
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 219
Bourdieu concerning the Western bourgeoisie’s use of who may be found in our own streets or even in our
photography. But the contexts in which photography is own hearts.
embedded are a far cry from the production of videos by Anthropology’s modernist foundations are certainly
Inuit or others. And the ‘‘ease’’ of the Westerner in front shaky. It is hard to know how long anthropologists can
of the video, in his example the surveillance camera at go on clinging to the space of ‘‘the other,’’ a strange, un-
the bank or shopping mall, is hardly comparable with canny, and inexplicable space where only the Western
the situation of indigenous people brought into relation observer can enter and mediate. Difference is possible
with an indigenous video-maker talking about kinship in all kinds of registers. How can video/film-making by
inside their igloo. indigenous people be imperialistic, when the cultural
Weiner raises an important question when he asks imperialism of the global system has already en-
who indigenous film-makers represent and who author- croached on and subsumed the former spaces of inter-
ises them. This question must be answered empirically, subjectivity? This post-histoire world may transform
in relation to the actual context in which each and ev- the registers of ‘‘difference,’’ but does this necessarily
ery such record is made. Certainly there is the possibil- imply ‘‘postculture’’? Is this not a concealed evolu-
ity that certain kinds of ‘‘indigenous people’’ are more tionism, when all is said and done?
likely to be engaged in such representation than others If the illusion of absolute difference, a radical alterity,
and that these individuals, perhaps educated, urbanised is challenged, so is the illusion of times and spaces sepa-
people with a strong and sophisticated political com- rated by the world of Western technology. It may be sad,
mitment, are not ‘‘identical’’ with those they represent. particularly for Westerners, that this has happened, but
But this hardly suggests ‘‘dilettantism’’ or that such to believe this necessarily obliterates the task of anthro-
people are posing as ‘‘ritual experts.’’ pology is to take an alarmingly essentialist and pessi-
Perhaps the fundament of Weiner’s complaint can be mistic stance towards the emergence of the post-every-
discerned when he locates evidence of ‘‘the postmodern thing world which now confronts us. Anthropology has
status of Ginsburg’s project.’’ This is contrasted with never, in its praxis or writings, been capable of repre-
anthropology’s modernist goals. But anthropological senting ‘‘the total situation’’: it is the modernist delu-
modernism is described in a throwaway remark as that sion of grandeur to suppose that it could be so. Never-
of seeing ‘‘within art an alienating doubling of the theless the anthropologist, by training, practice, and
world.’’ Which modernist anthropology focuses on this intellectual/philosophical intuition, is always the ‘‘out-
issue? On the contrary, modernist anthropology as I un- sider’’ to whatever situation is being analysed. That is
derstand it is dedicated to the principle that ‘‘the real’’ the source of anthropology’s power and enduring value,
can be represented in anthropologists’ texts. The ‘‘depth as against the simplicitous gestures of an ideologically
of understanding’’ which Weiner claims is sacrificed by constructed ‘‘cultural studies.’’
attending to indigenous media must therefore be the Weiner’s conclusion is particularly opaque, like the
depth of understanding which the anthropologist, and aviator glasses of the Inuit director. Who is it who de-
only the anthropologist, is able to bring forth. cides what ‘‘virtue’’ should be? Who says that indige-
Weiner is also substantially concerned with the ques- nous media producers are simply providing a ‘‘contrived
tion of aesthetics. He sees a small collection of video effect within the confines of the screen’’? Is the anthro-
clips (shown, for example, during Ginsburg’s presenta- pologist to be the principal arbiter of what is ‘‘good’’ for
tion in Sydney) as evidence of ‘‘overwhelming ineffec- native peoples or of what is valuable in their representa-
tiveness.’’ For whom? Mainly, it seems, for a Western tions? Modernist anthropology clings to its paradigms
viewer with certain stylistic expectations of film and by its fieldnotes. The contemporary reality of global
video. But behind this is an even more heinous crime: cultural circulation embraces ‘‘indigenous’’ people, and
presenting the possibility of erasing ‘‘the precinematic they in turn make interventions within it to the extent
relation to the visual of indigenous and non-Western that they are able to do so within the national imaginar-
people.’’ ‘‘Self-expression’’ seems to be the demon here. ies of the states within which their existences are mod-
Weiner locates it in the past tense: was self-expression ernistically (and thus anachronistically) circumscribed.
‘‘a component of the relational strategies of such peo- It is this relation which Ginsburg is articulating, and
ple’’? Probably not, although there could be arguments the regrets of anthropologists in the last excolonial
about what ‘‘self-expression’’ might mean. But this, too, backwaters are understandable but not supportable.
is not the real problem. The real problem is that of ‘‘cul-
tural difference.’’ The complaint now seems to be that
anthropology must bring forward the register of cultural a ng e l a p i c c i n i
difference that is its sole raison d’être. But who decided Board of Celtic Studies, c/o Department of
this? Certainly this is one view, but it is hardly one uni- Geography, University of Wales Swansea, Singleton
versally held. In any case, the ‘‘differences’’ which may Park, Swansea SA2 8PP, U.K. 4 ix 96
occupy our attention can no longer be those between
some imaginary construct of ‘‘ourselves’’—i.e., West- Weiner’s provocative paper deals with issues at the very
erners—and ‘‘others,’’ that is, natives, or people occu- centre of anthropology by questioning the appropriate-
pying the planet in some imagined pristine state of pre- ness of transposing Western formulations of representa-
technological expressivity, but rather all the ‘‘others’’ tion and subjectivity onto non-Western cultures. He ar-
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220 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
gues that assumed concerns with both representation Weiner’s argument is further supported by the fact
and subjectivity lie at the core of recent affirmations of that the film maker, as social being, makes particular
indigenous filmic productions as ‘‘grounds’’ of identity choices and frames certain elements (both textually and
formation and reproduction by recent anthropologists. visually) and not others. Therefore, we must consider
If, as Faye Ginsburg claims, the use of media technology the theory embedded in textual narrative and the
offers a ‘‘new opportunity for influence and self-expres- ‘‘metaphysic’’ re-posited in our image-producing tech-
sion’’ (Ginsburg 1991:97) for indigenous peoples, then, nology. In other words, the very means by which we
as Weiner counters, we are justified in questioning commit image to frame necessitates that we live our
whether ‘‘self-expression was a component of the rela- world contingent on the reality of the frame. That de-
tional strategies of such people’’ in the first place. sire to represent brings with it a whole set of cultural
Weiner thus usefully problematises the continued un- assumptions which have nothing to do with a transpar-
critical anthropological approach to film as a transpar- ent transfer of culture to celluloid. Of course, this
ent technology and claims that such an approach con- should not come as a surprise to anthropologists; it has
stitutes a final totalising anthropological project. been a long time, indeed, since anyone believed that
Alongside Weiner’s core thesis that we must not shy ‘‘the camera never lies.’’ Weiner reminds us, however,
away from critically theorising the very material pro- that what is in question is not the difference between
cess of film making are several important themes. For the constructed and the real in cultural terms, because
one, the privileging of film over other artistic endeav- any cultural production is always a dialectical relation
ours as authentically representing culture is untenable between the two—that the very presence of the camera
in that film, like painting, writing, or opera, is a situated constructs our view of the proceedings in such a way
cultural product which, like any cultural product, arises that any concept of ‘‘our’’ view is impossible without
out of sets of varying social relations. Weiner forcefully the camera.
presents the theoretical argument that we must situate We must, therefore, acknowledge cultural differences
any critique of indigenous ethnographic film alongside in signifying practices where signifying practices are at
critiques of other indigenous cultural productions. We all relevant. Weiner argues that as Westerners we do not
also need to consider the inherent racism of overvaluing understand the complex relationships between visible
any indigenous film as saying something critical (for us and invisible because for those of us who already live in
as Western academics) about indigenous social relations the mass visualised world all is spectacle. I would add
and then address the question of how we are to differen- that the reproduction of images in Western society is
tiate and evaluate the cultural productions of varying also something that needs to be considered (Benjamin
groups, both Western and indigenous. 1992 [1936]). This is a crucial aspect of the theoretical
First, however, I am interested in working through argument which Weiner does not address, although I re-
Weiner’s argument that indigenous anthropological alise that his concern is to problematise the issue of
film is primarily a new form of indigenous cultural pro- subjectivity and representation in the first place. The
duction. He successfully problematises the idea held by very possibility of representing the self in multiplicity
some that film is a phenomenal form of social rela- is another aspect of the impact of Western film technol-
tions—that films ‘‘embody in their own internal struc- ogy on indigenous social relations. The desire to trans-
ture and meaning the forms and values of the social re- form the world around them into a dizzying infinity of
lations they mediate.’’ Certainly Spivak argued that the fun-house mirrors certainly suggests that the way in
formulation of the representable is ‘‘always a produc- which film makers see themselves and the world they
tion rather than [a] ground’’ (1987:212). Are there not live in is dramatically different from that of those who
numerous, often conflicting, social relations at play in do not seek to represent. Furthermore, the reproduction
both the production and the repeated consumption of of images is contingent on the emergence, the growth,
such films? Films may be open commentaries on social in fact, of mechanised, economised society. How do re-
relations, but they do not ‘‘embody,’’ for this would sug- produced images make sense in societies that do not de-
gest that such relations are seamless totalities in the fine themselves in terms of growth and mass produc-
Heideggerian sense of modernity’s project of the total tion? A correlate of this might be, How does mass
picture. Instead, Weiner argues that we must distin- production make sense in largely non-visualised socie-
guish between ‘‘the representation of relations and a re- ties? Although an aside, I feel this could have interest-
lation to representative praxis.’’ If we consider the ing implications when we examine globalised econo-
Western filmic tradition, it should be clear that film can mies and the use of the southern hemisphere as a
arise only as an outcome of social relations. By adopting production line for the north.
the signifying practices of the West, indigenous anthro- In response to Weiner’s questioning of the uncritical
pological film makers are transforming their own rela- assumption that representation and subjectivity are
tions to representation and subjectivity as well as the global concerns, I would like to problematise also the
relations of the peoples they represent. As Weiner ar- very idea of ‘‘Western subjectivity.’’ Are all Western vi-
gues, because film is a cultural product it has particular sualist societies visual in the same way? Is this stress
foundations in Western visualism, and this suggests on Western visualism itself not a further example of
that film has the potential to subvert non-Western monolithic cultural classification? In arguing against
means of ‘‘knowing.’’ Ginsburg’s equation of indigenous myth and ritual with
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 221
film and video production, Weiner points out that myth not what we would normally categorise as ‘‘indige-
and ritual are ‘‘social strategies of elicitation’’ rather nous’’ (although many modern Celts would argue
than signs as communication (which is how he defines against this [see Piccini 1996 with accompanying com-
film and video). Certainly equating film and video with mentary by Davies and Shanks]), the issues of film as
myth and ritual subsumes specific social relations ‘‘ground’’ rather than ‘‘product’’ and differences in sig-
within Western modes of seeing and being seen, thus nifying practices are relevant within Western society
working to erase cultural difference. However, I feel too.
that perhaps this argument overgeneralises Western The one group that does seem to share a seemingly
productions. Is not our ability to differentiate between all-encompassing concern with visualism and represen-
ritual as a unified moment of cultural production and tation is that made up of broadly Western tourists. I find
consumption from Western cultural products which are this strand of Weiner’s paper extremely interesting. My
meant to be consumed at a later date the symptom of a present work involves exploring how people consume
more general divorce between the means of production heritage representations in Wales (Piccini 1997). Go to
and consumption characteristic of capitalism and, par- any heritage site or ‘‘living history’’ museum, such as
ticularly, the late capitalism of which Jameson (1984) the Museum of Welsh Life at St. Fagans outside Cardiff,
writes? Certainly Western society appears to be con- Castell Henllys Iron Age Hillfort in north Pembroke-
cerned in the main with communication, but I would shire, or Celtica in Machynlleth (Montgomeryshire),
think that this very fetishisation of communicative and you will find people filming. What they are filming
signs is similar to the masking of social relations that is all about who they are in relation to their ideas about
Weiner describes among the indigenous peoples of Pa- the past and who they may once have been. For Welsh
pua New Guinea and Australia. Perhaps in our trans- visitors such sites have to do with a certain affirmation
forming everything to spectacle we are engaging in far of being Welsh, and even for those who do not claim
more complex masking strategies, constructing more Welsh identity the interest in coming to sites such as
echoing ‘‘social silences,’’ than is generally thought. these has to do with trying to understand how we as
Moreover, here in the U.K. certain stereotypes have humans once lived and ordered our lives.2 Their video
been circulated over the past two centuries regarding productions, then, are about placing themselves in
the visual aesthetic (or lack of it) in Wales, a ‘‘truth’’ some relation to the past which bears on general no-
repeated by the well-known architect of Portmeirion, tions of their own identities. Indeed, Weiner argues
Clough Williams-Ellis, but problematised in the past quite successfully that tourist videos are often more
10–15 years by such writers as Peter Lord and Pyrs technologically literate explorations of Western identi-
Gruffudd (Lord 1990, Gruffudd 1995).1 What is now ar- ties than the video productions of indigenous peoples in
gued, of course, is that Wales’s visual culture cannot be that as Westerners we are constantly filming and being
defined in terms of England’s, thus highlighting the im- filmed and therefore much of what constitutes our un-
possibility of generalising the Western visual experi- derstanding of ourselves has to do with such representa-
ence. Previously, it was assumed by (largely Anglo) aca- tive practices. But as he points out, if this is the case,
demics that representation was of given importance to then surely we must treat all filmic texts equally in that
all people in the same way and that the Welsh were they would all seem to have equal status as texts of
simply bad at it. This bears a striking similarity to the identity formation. And if this is so, ‘‘if cultural differ-
discomfort Weiner feels when watching the superficial ence can now only take place within the arena of elec-
irony of some of the indigenous films screened by Gins- tronically generated visual and audio images, how
burg. It would seem that rather than being inferior cul- much scope is there for the uncovering or revelation of
tural products, both current indigenous films and the such difference?’’
past artistic productions of Wales do not arise out of Returning to indigenous film, Weiner also critiques
universal concerns with representation and subjectivity appeals to filmic realism by the many anthropologists
and thus reflect a certain awkwardness characteristic of who continue to argue that any obvious filmic tech-
cultural productions generated in foreign media. And, nique is somehow disingenuous and overtly Western.
as Weiner also points out, today in the U.K. film and He points out that this stress on realism ‘‘presupposes
video are seen as important ‘‘grounds’’ of identity for- the role and function of the picture as self-representa-
mation, particularly for the outlying Celtic nations of
Cornwall, Isle of Man, Northern Ireland, Scotland, and 2. In our Board of Celtic Studies project The Social Construction
Wales (see esp. Drummond, Paterson, and Willis 1993). of Heritage and its Meanings in Modern Wales, David Herbert, Pyrs
It is interesting, then, that although these cultures are Gruffudd, and I have been observing and interviewing producers
and consumers of Welsh heritage to explore the changing meanings
of heritage in contemporary Welsh life. The results of large-scale
1. This sort of statement is, however, still repeated even now. Dur- quantitative survey, in-depth interviewing, and non-invasive ob-
ing interviews about their perceptions of Welsh heritage several servation all show that people (whether museum visitors or not)
people have explained a continued Welsh emphasis on family life, value a certain knowledge of the past and argue that they cannot
gwerin (the folk), rugby, religion, and the industrial past by saying know who they are without knowing who they have been. Even
that ‘‘of course the Welsh are not a visual people, they prefer mem- those heritage-centre and museum visitors who explain their visits
ory’’ (information gathered in the course of two years’ fieldwork for in terms of ‘‘leisure pursuits’’ bring up in conversation the impor-
the Social Construction of Heritage and its Meanings in Modern tance of ‘‘knowing’’ about the past in their contemporary identities
Wales Project). (Gruffudd, Herbert, and Piccini n.d.).
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222 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
tion and as a document of subjectivity, and it is this re- understood not only by Western academic audiences
lational eidos of Western visualist culture which itself but by the societies the films purport to represent.
. . . impelled as well as was enabled by the development Ultimately, what Weiner’s paper suggests to me (and
of visual image technology’’ and asks whether it would it is something he himself begins to address) is that the
not be better to foreground film as cultural production separate category of ethnographic film is no longer via-
by using overtly artificial film techniques such as mon- ble—that documentary is as much a cultural product as
tage. Weiner appears to be in problematic territory here Independence Day. The most important aspect of his
in that his calls for filmic complexity would seem, argument, then, is that to laud indigenous ethnographic
much like Ginsburg et al.’s calls for realism, again to film simply because it is indigenous is theoretically un-
hold up Western film making as the measure for indige- sound and that, in fact, the continued attribution to eth-
nous cultural production. His calls for the use of mon- nographic film of a certain ‘‘truth value’’ over other
tage bear a striking resemblance to Clifford’s celebra- genres of cultural expression suggests the sort of totalis-
tion of the ethnographic surreal, usefully critiqued by ing project anthropologists have been seeking to decon-
Roberts (1996), in which easily markable ‘‘weird’’ cul- struct for some time now. Perhaps what now needs to
tural juxtapositions are held up as saying something happen is for indigenous film makers to begin to use
critical about indigenous relations to the Western film techniques to say something specific about their
world. This elevation of the cleverly and often superfi- own relation to Western subjectivity, to engage with
cially postmodern is contingent upon a certain un- the medium and their relation to the medium rather
dermining of the distinction between the Western self than attempt to represent social relations as a whole.
and others which an uncritical celebration of the ‘‘sur- By resorting to clever-clever plays on Western ways of
real’’ with its dependence on the ‘‘exotic’’ entails. knowing, indigenous peoples seem almost to be repre-
Weiner quite rightly critiques, however, the rather fa- senting themselves as we, as Westerners, would wish
cile cleverness of some indigenous film, pointing to them to be. This seems to be the most significant impli-
Western films such as Robert Altman’s The Player and cation of Weiner’s argument—an argument that was
the Australian documentary Sylvanian Waters as possi- long overdue.
ble ways forward, but I would argue that more appro-
priate cues come, perhaps, from recent Latin American
and Asian cinema. Although film, through its techno- c hr i s t o p h e r p i nn e y
logical limitations, determines to a great extent exactly School of Oriental and African Studies, University of
what can be done with it, I feel that it would perhaps London, London WC1H OXG, England. 8 viii 96
be more interesting to encourage even greater experi-
mentation with the medium. It is likely that, as has Weiner’s collection of thoughts is stimulating and exas-
been happening within indigenous literatures, for ex- perating by turns. Weiner, a theorist and ethnographer
ample, new twists on originally Western genres will be of immense skill, is right to draw attention to the resis-
produced. tance of some cultural forms to visualism and public
How are we to evaluate these indigenous cultural pro- representation. I applaud his insistence that it is anthro-
ductions? And if we must first of all critically examine pology’s job to remind us that many traditions consider
the adoption of Western representative practices, then identity immanent in the world rather than a matter for
by what criteria can we judge Western art forms pro- human action and intention. As with claims for local
duced by non-Western peoples? And will cultural differ- agency which resurrect bourgeois notions of utility
ence be ironed out into sameness simply through the (Chakrabarty 1989), the current eagerness to bestow
adoption of specifically Western artistic traditions, as representational autonomy can cloak an insidious eth-
Weiner seems to be arguing? This appears to be the ulti- nocentrism. In an age when broadcasters and cultural
mate reasoning behind his call for a close look at theo- commentators seem to be convinced that all Indian
ries of representation so that we can begin to determine peasants have satellite dishes to receive MTV, anthro-
‘‘whether modes of cinematic creation are serving to pologists need to reiterate the strength of local disdain
erase the pre-cinematic relation to the visual of indige- and indifference. In this respect, Weiner’s comments on
nous and non-Western people.’’ A central task for an- the aporias among ‘‘dialectical’’ societies are of value.
thropologists now should be to compare the use of the However, his attack on Ginsburg is almost wholly
camera in Western and non-Western societies. It would misplaced. To conflate the position of Ginsburg and
be very interesting to compare filmic productions to ex- MacDougall with the naive realism of Collier, as
plore exactly who includes what and how—to explore Weiner does, is absurd. Some ‘‘visual anthropologists’’
issues of silences and gaps, the unspoken that consti- do deserve to have a large bucket of Heidegger poured
tutes every society. Also crucial is the issue of con- over them, but Ginsburg is not one of them. On the con-
sumption. Weiner mentions that he wants to know trary, for manoeuvering visual anthropology out of
more about whether the films he saw worked for others, what she describes as its ‘‘atavistic and myopic’’ back-
the seemingly intended indigenous audiences, or yard (1994a:6) Ginsburg deserves all our thanks. But
whether they fell short of the mark. We need, then, to perhaps Ginsburg’s real sin in Weiner’s eyes is that she
explore the ways in which these films are watched and lays the groundwork for a rethinking of the constraints
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 223
of the anthropology of art, a subdiscipline that is bereft could not be made that took as its chief concern the
of any theoretical coherence. Ginsburg’s initial audi- concealment and non-visualisation of knowledge. In-
ence was those who study and make ‘‘ethnographic deed, what more Adornoesque project could there be
film,’’ and her lecture/article is part of an attempt to re- than such a filmic equivalent of atonality? However,
engineer Sol Worth’s prescient call for a shift towards the object of Weiner’s critique is not an insensitive
an anthropology of visual communication. But this frenzy of Cartesian perspectivalism aimed at a peak-
transformation has implications for the anthropology of time Western audience but films made by local film-
art, a subdiscipline hazily concerned with a disparate makers who are under no compulsion to conform to any
collection of objects and practices that sundry anthro- inspectional regime. That such films are being made
pologists consider to be ‘‘art.’’ As Alfred Gell has re- and have, certainly in the case of the Kayapo and many
cently observed, anthropological ‘‘art’’ is frequently native Australian groups, become deeply integrated into
‘‘those types of artefacts one might find on display as social practice confirms what most already know: cul-
‘art’ only in a very sleepy provincial town’’ (1996:35), tural practices are situated in mediascapes, exist in vari-
this reflecting anthropology’s reliance on Western aes- ous states of flux, and are remade every day in slightly
thetic theory. For Gell, Weiner is a potential saviour, different ways. But for Weiner the films are alien agents,
but the Adornoesque high-modernist vision of art as potentially distorting an underlying essence. Although
negative dialectic that Weiner offers here is as problem- throughout the article Weiner attributes to Ginsburg
atic as any view descended from Winckelmann. It is the assumption that the indigenous media that interest
equally ethnocentric and has the added disadvantage of her are merely a ‘‘reflection’’ of the societies that pro-
bearing almost no relation whatsoever to any practice duce them, Ginsburg herself continually stresses ‘‘the
ever recorded by an anthropologist, art historian, critic, impact of such visual media on the production of cul-
or any other interested party. ture’’ (1994a:8) and how local use of new media ‘‘might
In short, Weiner elides Adorno’s programmatic state- transform our objects of analysis’’ (p. 6). The ‘‘represen-
ment of what art should be like (‘‘the . . . valid intuition tational’’ trope that so alarms Weiner (unless it is the
that art opposes conventional sociality and culture’’) ‘‘self-mockery’’ of Sylvanian Waters or The Player) pre-
with what art as social practice actually is. He invokes sumes a stasis, but paradoxically it is Weiner rather
Adorno’s claim that ‘‘art is the social antithesis of soci- than Ginsburg who appears to have more invested in a
ety,’’ but this is mere wishful thinking that should be static and essentialized model of culture. His argument
rendered as a desire that it should be the social antithe- puts me in mind of Dumont’s assertion on the first page
sis of society. Are there any examples of this outside of Homo Hierarchicus that the reader seeking informa-
Western avantgardism? To say that these views are eth- tion on modern India in it will be disappointed. It is per-
nocentric deals with only part of the problem, for even haps no coincidence that Dumont has never considered
Adorno was at pains to point out that this was true only the role of Indian cinema (the largest cinema industry
for a particular (fleeting) moment in the history of Euro- in the world, producing feature films since 1913) in the
pean art production. We might also phrase the proposi- constitution of Indian society. The ongoing preoccupa-
tion thus: ‘‘good’’ art is the antithesis of society, and tion with romantic love and the nature of individual ac-
good art is good if it does what Adorno and Weiner tion and social destiny in Hindi film is irreconcilable
think it ought to do. with a Dumontian perspective. Dumont of course is
Adorno’s view on negative aesthetics was indissolu- concerned with a ‘‘model’’ of Indian social organisation,
bly linked to a theory of mass culture, and, depress- but it is a phantasm, a model which (quite deliberately)
ingly, Weiner appears to reproduce this linkage in his has almost no relation to India’s modernity.
critique of the lack of ‘‘complexity’’ in the videos (Sun, Weiner lauds Robert Altman’s The Player for its
Moon, and Feather, Petit à Petit, and Qaggiq) that Gins- ‘‘mordant commentar[y] on Southern Californian social
burg showed. Weiner describes the videos as, variously, relations’’ and Sylvanian Waters’s parody of Australian
‘‘banal,’’ ‘‘a giggle,’’ and ‘‘all-too-predictable,’’ recalling home videos but asks whether, in the case of the Zacha-
Huyssen’s (1986:25) comment on the ‘‘lack of breadth rias Kunuk’s Qaggiq, the camera is ‘‘passively recording
and generosity’’ in Adorno’s canon. . . . relationships, or more actively creating them
The second major problem with Weiner’s critique is through its particular mediatory capacities.’’ The impli-
its invocation of an essentialism and a nostalgia for pre- cation here seems to be that films about film cultures
mediated societies. If Weiner seems to have some of the are fine: should we on the same principle give credence
failings of Adorno, he seems to have many of Heidegger only to ethnographies about literate societies? Simi-
as well. Indeed, he seems to exemplify those anthropol- larly, does this mean that ironic films about Bollywood
ogists who view mass media as ‘‘disruptive if not cor- (Bombay) are OK? If so, would films by villagers who
rupting of the integrity of small-scale non-western soci- like watching Hindi movies be OK? What about films
eties’’ (Ginsburg 1994a:9). Now, Weiner’s objections by people in the next village who see the cinema as a
might have substance if applied to (say) an American vector of moral degeneracy but want to make a film
documentary about the Foi or the Avatip that sought about their concerns?
to represent those societies primarily through the visual Mokuka, I am sure, is right, rather than Weiner.
image, although there is no reason a successful film Along with Ginsburg I read him as declaring that film
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224 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
technology does not have an essentialised cultural iden- of film thus becomes a revealing trope. It is clearly a
tity. This is not to say that film will not have a dramatic revelation for Weiner, but a revelation of the sort fore-
impact on a society, but it is to claim that those effects cast by Ginsburg.
will not be predictable and will not reflect any inher- Finally, ‘‘complexity’’ is in the eye of the beholder. I
ently ‘‘Western’’ practice. I recall a conversation with thought The Player was lousy.
an Indian peasant about the history of bicycle manufac-
ture: I eventually agreed with him that cycles had origi-
nated in a nearby town; it seemed utterly pointless to marilyn strathern
argue otherwise. Cubitt’s technological determinism is Department of Social Anthropology, University of
wholly erroneous and misleading: just watch a Hindi Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 3RF, England. 26 viii 96
film.
Film’s xeno-staus is also underwritten, for Weiner, by One of Weiner’s several pertinent insights is of more
its readily identifiable auteurs. Contra Ginsburg, he than particular interest: that the reflexive effects of ana-
seeks to distance such individualistic artefacts from the lytical engagement are only made tangible (visible) by
anonymous and organic realm of myth and ritual: focussing attention elsewhere. The engagement be-
‘‘while we must always be aware of who authors a film tween himself and Ginsburg replays, it seems to me,
or video, we cannot ask who authors a myth or ritual.’’ two positions which anthropologists have long occu-
Instead of authorship, however, we should enquire into pied. I want to make this evident by focussing ‘‘else-
enunciative modality and dwell not on auteurs but on where.’’
film as social performance: how and when films are First, however, it is Weiner who has called for the en-
shown and mediated in a given cultural situation. gagement. We might say that he is acting out his quite
These are exactly the questions that Malinowski sug- significant characterisation of anthropology as the
gested we should ask about myth. Anthropological promise of a description of total system (Weiner) against
questions about film, myth, and ritual are parallel: why the perspectivism of its members (Ginsburg)—not that
and by whom they are made operational in the present. he pretends to a totalising view, but the theoretical po-
At two points Weiner touches on the relationship of sitions he summons necessarily have that aim. At the
media to cultural difference. He asks how American same time Ginsburg, in acting along with the subjectiv-
and Soviet film might be seen to reflect differences be- ity of the film-makers she describes, is immersed in a
tween those two societies and writes of ‘‘an ersatz dif- social encounter (adopting a perspectivist position
ference . . . in video clips.’’ There is a crucial method- among them) which works precisely because it does not
ological issue to be teased out here: the problem of what require the externality of theorising. This throws light,
Carlo Ginzburg, following Gombrich, terms ‘‘physiog- I think, on one of naive disappointments of academic
nomic reading.’’ In a critique of Fritz Saxl’s attempt to anthropology, that its practical extension—into devel-
relate Durer’s changing style to his religious crises, opment projects among others—does not often result in
Ginzburg (1989:5) noted that returns that can be re-co-opted as new theoretical in-
sights. Hence the intellectually untenable debate be-
the historian reads into [images] what he has al- tween pure and applied anthropology (to put it at its
ready learned by other means, or what he believes crudest) continues to be socially active in colleagues’ re-
he knows and wants to ‘‘demonstrate.’’ . . . The lations with one another. This hardly means that
more or less conscious basis of this approach, natu- ‘‘grand theory’’ is irrelevant to anthropology: on the
rally, is the conviction that works of art, in a broad contrary, Weiner is able to use theoretical resources—
sense, furnish a mine of firsthand information that reflection on the status of the categories we use—to
can explicate, without intermediaries, the mentality raise some extremely important issues about conceal-
and emotive life of a distant age. ment and display. He also gives us a language, as I have
been trying to show, in which to reflect on the nature
Weiner’s implied question of what film in itself can tell of the engagement with Ginsburg. But if Weiner’s argu-
us about social relations is, without doubt, enormously ment is correct, I imagine Ginsburg’s reaction would be
important. that this activity (reflection as theory) is irrelevant to
Weiner concludes his article with comments on the world she participates in as an anthropologist
Qaggiq which are reminiscent of Swinton’s (1978) nos- among other social actors.
talgia for ‘‘traditional’’ non-perspectival Inuit art. Film- What is confusing perhaps is that such participation,
engendered idioms—‘‘acting, overacting, projecting, sustained in the anthropologists’ relations with those
and overprojecting’’—are conjured and opposed to who become the objects of their study, does not neces-
worlds which prize silence and the absence of subjec- sarily take the form of socal interaction. Ginsburg’s
tive expression. Qaggiq captures this tension and is for stance belongs to the imagined reciprocity often con-
Weiner a trace of an incommensurability, but might tained in the desire to make one’s own analysis (tech-
this not also be seen as culture in the making? Poised nology) enabling. Don’t we all do it? Recall the charac-
at a moment of change, the expressionless, sunglass- teristics of their own modes of presentation that
wearing Inuit director extolling the expressive potential anthropologists have ascribed to the societies they de-
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 225
scribe—holism, classification, rationality, not to speak of light? (Extramission was dissolved, she notes, when
of ‘‘system.’’ This becomes a kind of cultural generos- an analogy was drawn with the camera obscura.) The
ity, and serious politics, when anthropologists also give book poses the question of what the pictorial turn has
away—or have demanded of them—other constructs to do with sight and vision.
dear to their own background. Think of the efforts that It would seem to be an ancient question for Euro-
have gone into showing that people everywhere have Americans and their forebears. Since Weiner himself
‘‘history’’ or ‘‘law’’ or ‘‘social cohesion’’ or ‘‘tradition’’ cites the example of the epiphany, it is interesting to
or ‘‘culture,’’ for that matter. I don’t see that imagining note Soskice’s (1996) comments on the medieval
people as having ‘‘visual representation,’’ or literalising church. She points to ambivalence towards the ‘‘physio-
that into ‘‘having a camera,’’ is any different. Some of logical vision’’ of the eye by contrast with the ‘‘intellec-
these items remain within the covers of anthropolo- tual visions’’ of the soul. This was part of an equivoca-
gists’ monographs; others become tools in conflicts of tion about the celebration of the visible body and flesh
interest or illuminations of identity and self-expression. found in the doctrines of resurrection and incarnation.
This seems to me to be a mode of connecting to the peo- Aquinas questioned the Anunciation: why should ‘‘the
ple whose works and lives are being studied which con- angel of the announcement have appeared bodily to the
stitutes an equally significant characterisation of an- Virgin’’ when Augustine had taught that ‘‘intellectual
thropology. vision is better than physical vision’’ (Soskice 1996:
Such endeavours belong to the world of (political) ac- 321). The answer: Mary saw the angel precisely because
tion, as Ginsburg makes clear: to be made operable con- the messenger’s announcement was that God was to be
cepts have to be, like taking action itself, singular and made flesh and the flesh made visible. Augustine,
unified. Theorising requires instead exactly the kind of Soskice adds, had taken the view that corporeal vision
nuanced situatedness that Weiner provides: one idea was nothing without the understanding or interpreta-
carries conviction to the extent that it is set among and tion, the intellectual vision, of what was seen; one had
illuminates others (a theory speaks to other theories). also to behold spiritually. Insofar as the workings of
These are unavoidable realities, and I don’t see how one sight were understood as part of human corporeality,
could define an anthropology that did without either. they were to that extent, like all human senses, imper-
Ways of seeing 1. Let me focus attention elsewhere. fect.
It is a curiosity that visual anthropology is not by and The inadequacy of sight, the unreliability of the
large interested in vision. From one point of view this senses for understanding the world, was played out
is a necessary occlusion (the eyes don’t see each other, again in a later epoch. Not only was the eye proved to
let alone each eye itself). From another, it has some con- be an imperfect instrument (by the standards of instru-
sequences for ethnographic interpretation. mentation), incapable of perfect resolution, but some-
‘‘Ways of seeing’’ has become a habitual metaphor for thing invisible was (in the form of ‘‘ether’’) the source
shifts of perspective in the description of social life and of universal energy. This imaginary substance was to be
‘‘perspective’’ a metaphor for the location of the anthro- transformed into the invisible waves and particles of
pological observer. I have been impressed in my brief modern science. Beer’s (1996) contribution to the same
encounters with students in visual anthropology with collection speaks of the 19th-century discoveries of the
how readily they adapt the medium to showing diver- relationship between vision, sound, and heat when each
sity in ways of seeing the world. Indeed, putting the is imagined as waves and of the natural science that put
camera into the hands of the filmed, so to speak, seems its subject matter into a dark continent. That is, the
an obvious extension of this viewpoint, another set of subject of science became by and large what could not
perspectives that can be gathered up into the composite be seen without instruments, whether large-scale or
eye of the observer. What has equally impressed me is small-scale. It deployed the same imagery of revelation,
that all these visual metaphors have worked as just we might add, that fuelled social science. Social science
that, as metaphors. They are about the gathering of would not exist if it were not investigating invisible
knowledge, not about (so to speak) ways of seeing. phenomena—statistical variations, structural princi-
This is a topic that Brennan and Jay (1996) address in ples, patterns of behaviour. Such entities do not appear
the context of psychoanalytic theory, literature, and art to the eye. And even if they did appear to the eye, some-
criticism. The ocularcentrism of 20th-century Euro- thing would be lacking, for (as was reported in 1855
American society rests at once on its apparatus for con- [Beer 1996:90]) the eyes have a perceptible defect of cen-
veying images, on its assimilation of knowledge to tering, which means that we cannot clearly see horizon-
sight, and on the ‘‘optical unconscious’’ appearing as a tal and vertical lines at the same distance simulta-
new continent (I am quoting) ripe for exploration. If neously. But the trick of science—the power people
there is a chiasmic intertwining of the eye and the gaze, accord it, however qualified or provisional scientific
Jay asks, or between viewing texts and reading pictures, claims themselves are—is to produce a perfect vision of
can one talk of a ‘‘pictorial [a.k.a. linguistic] turn’’? what has been made visible through its efforts.
What do we mean by ‘‘the gaze’’? asks Brennan; does it Ways of seeing 2. We are made aware on all sides of
echo the old physiological theory of extramission, the the revelatory power of the techniques that 20th-cen-
notion that the eye not only receives but gives out rays tury Euro-Americans use to make things visible to
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226 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
themselves. They have invented a battery of techniques of the film they had to make and all the relationships
for ensuring accumulatable, permanent visibility in this entailed. Perhaps the counterpart they found in
their libraries, records, films. What makes things invisi- their subjects, the actors with whom they interacted,
ble can come to appear as no more than a technical bar- lay in what the actors were themselves producing,
rier to such recording. Indeed, the habit of valorising namely, social life. In any case, they could not make the
what has been made visible leads to the latter-day as- film without some engagement in that themselves.
sumption that sight just happens to be there, a human Making social life had to be as ‘‘real’’ as making the
capacity like any other which technology can enlarge film.
and enhance.
What has this to do with film-making? There is a
small reason one might have imagined that ethno- terry turner
graphic film would address the question of (in)visibility Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago,
and imperfect sight as an interplay between physical Chicago, Ill. 60637, U.S.A. 26 viii 96
and intellectual vision. The reason is that the process
of film-making involves a supersensitivity to technol- Weiner represents his paper as a commentary on the
ogy, to the shaping effect of the camera, an elected de- work of Faye Ginsburg and, to a lesser degree, myself
pendence on the apparatus of seeing. But by and large with indigenous video and television and, more broadly,
its experimentation has been with film technique as on indigenous peoples’ use of video and other new tech-
such, as Weiner notes, not with vision. And perhaps nologies of visual representation. It therefore comes as
this is because ethnographic film-makers are instead de- something of a shock to realize that he has made no ef-
flected into social realities. So we have other sensitivi- fort to view any indigenous videos beyond the few brief
ties. Ethnographic films tend to be about the complex- cuts used by Ginsburg to illustrate one of her lectures
ity (to re-use Ginsburg’s term) of social perspective, or to read more than a couple of papers by Ginsburg and
cultural standpoint, personal experience, and above all one by me out of the many we and others have devoted
the actors’ view as a coeval subjectivity—in other to this subject. Of my papers on the topic (Turner
words, intellectual vision; ways of seeing are all about 1990a, b, c, 1991, 1992a, b, 1995a) he cites only one
the knowledge one creates. (1992a); of Ginsburg’s he seems to use only two (1994a,
I return to the (few) visual anthropology students I b). It moreover appears from his misinterpretations of
mentioned at the beginning. Their adroitness was so- the passages he does cite from our papers, his attribu-
cial, not visual. What I referred to as a curiosity was also tion to both of us of ideas we do not hold, and his com-
a lived impasse. The issue was not really where their plaints that we do not deal with issues which we actu-
interests lay; it was that I failed to interest them in oth- ally discuss at length that he has failed to understand
ers. I wanted to draw their attention to some of the top- even the little he has read.
ics Weiner notes with his Melanesianist hat on, to strat- It appears that Weiner’s only real concern with indig-
egies of concealment and display, to non-perspectival enous media and the work of anthropologists like Gins-
placements of images, to the perceptual tricks that peo- burg and myself specifically concerned with them is as
ple play on one another in terms of spatial orientation, a pretext for venting his general views on representa-
to the placement of the observer as simultaneously tion. He is clearly unhappy and frustrated with our
looking at and looking from (e.g., from within a work, as with the phenomenon on which it reports, be-
mask)—the list of optical tactics is long. It is not sur- cause his views require denial on a priori theoretical
prising that a Melanesianist would have sensitivities on grounds that any such thing as indigenous media could
this score. The ethnographic record is full of the sig- exist and a fortiori that any of the specific things that
nificance people accord sight: from washing the eye- Ginsburg and I have said about indigenous media pro-
balls of initiates to ceremonial display under a noonday duction could be true (or at least theoretically correct).
sun and from the encasement of widows in seclusion This settled conviction of the nonexistence of the
to the idea that things will only grow and multiply if whole subject doubtless accounts for his considering it
they are kept hidden or that one can only put the dead unnecessary to look at any indigenous videos or to read
to rest by erasing visible traces of them. I was perplexed more than a few token excerpts from what anthropolo-
as to why none of this translated into lessons for camera gists have written about them. In this respect, at least,
work. he makes good his claim to be a follower of Marcus and
What seemed to me challenges in the construction of Fischer: his paper, with its imputation to Ginsburg, my-
perspective or in the staging of revelation and the im- self, and indigenous film-makers of views we do not
portance of keeping back the invisible simply cut no hold, is a full-scale ‘‘crisis of representation’’ in micro-
ice. I had to be addressing the wrong audience. I was be- cosm (cf. Marcus and Fischer 1986).
ing too literal about the technology, making a naive Weiner’s text makes sweeping (and erroneous) gener-
connection between visual imagery and the visual per- alizations about anthropological evidence and whole
formances that were so often its subject matter. ‘‘Vi- ethnographic areas on the basis of superficial acquain-
sual’’ technology has in fact already done its work, as tance with one or two cases. The most glaring examples
Weiner notes, rendering null differences of vision. For of this are his assertions about Amazonian and, even
these students the context was the technical production more broadly, Amerindian cultures, which are sup-
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 227
ported by citations of only two sources, Stephen Hugh- sion he has seen that they do not provide enough
Jones’s and Gerardo Reichel-Dolmatoff’s books on two ethnographic contextual information for him to under-
closely related Tukanoan groups. Weiner cites these stand them (as if they were anthropological films made
two works as the basis for his claim that my detailed for his edification rather than for indigenous audiences
account of representational practices in another Ama- that would need no special background information)
zonian group, the Kayapo, makes them ‘‘quite unique and that they are not esthetically ‘‘effective’’ for him (as
among Amazonian societies’’ because other Amazonian if they were Western art films). It clearly never occurs
cultures, represented by the two Tukanoan groups to to him that the activities, purposes, and products of in-
which he refers, lack representation (Turner 1992a). digenous video makers as such might be worthy of his
Ironically, the covers of both of the works he cites are attention in their own right. How could they be, after
decorated with reproductions of elaborate indigenous all, when his whole theoretical position defines them
paintings—visual representations—of hallucinogen-in- out of existence?
spired shamanic visions. One thus does not even have The limitations of Weiner’s grand-theoretical precon-
to read a word of either book to see that Weiner has got ceptions are exemplified by his complex misunder-
it wrong. The Tukanoans, of course, like the Kayapo standing of the Kayapo video maker Mokuka’s response
and all other Amazonian groups, and indeed all cultures to a questioner at a film festival, as quoted by Ginsburg:
in the ethnographic record, possess culturally specific ‘‘Just because I hold a white man’s camera, that doesn’t
forms of representation, visual, linguistic, and other- mean I am not a Kayapo. . . . If you were to hold one
wise. Weiner would have done better to have made a of our head-dresses would that make you an Indian?’’
genuine attempt to deal with the ethnographically doc- Weiner claims that Mokuka here makes a ‘‘category
umented case of Amazonian representational practices mistake,’’ failing to recognize that the point at issue
I presented, despite its inconsistency with his grand- was not cultural identity (Indian or Western) but praxis
theoretical scheme, than to avoid discussing it on spuri- (whether or not holding the camera makes Mokuka a
ous grounds of ethnographic atypicality. film maker). Mokuka was attending the festival at
In a similar vein, Weiner makes much of the fact that which he made the quoted remark as a video maker
Ginsburg mentions esthetics in only one of her papers, showing films he had made. If someone had asked him
claiming that this signals a major ‘‘critical ellipsis’’ in Weiner’s question, he would presumably have answered
her ‘‘program.’’ He goes on to claim that this supposed that making videos made him a video maker. The con-
lack holds true of indigenous media work and ‘‘ethno- text in which he was asked the question to which he
graphic film realism’’ in general—this despite the fact was actually responding (I know, because I was the
that in the article of mine that he cites (1992a) I devote translator) was one in which precisely the issue that
a lengthy discussion to Kayapo esthetic values and the Weiner makes central to his case against indigenous
ways in which Kayapo videos exemplify them. Weiner media—whether the video camera does not impose
in other places treats Ginsburg’s and my work with in- conventions of representation so at variance with indig-
digenous media as theoretically interchangeable; why enous cultures that it transforms anyone who uses it
not here? into a Westerner, or at least a faux indigène—was up-
In sum, and speaking only for my own work (Gins- permost. Weiner goes on to object to the second part of
burg will speak for hers), I find that where I have offered Mokuka’s statement on the grounds that if he were to
ethnographically grounded theoretical arguments that hold (i.e., put on) a Kayapo headdress he would ‘‘not use
contradict Weiner’s general claims, he simply avoids it to constitute my self-identity or to negotiate that
dealing with them, even though he cites the paper in identity or construct an image of it for others.’’ Weiner
which they appeared. This might be more understand- seems unaware that these are precisely the reasons Kay-
able if he were actually covering a large number of Gins- apo wear their headdresses and that this is exactly Mo-
burg’s and my papers; as it is, since his total sample kuka’s point: Weiner and other non-Kayapo might hold
seems to be effectively limited, in my case at least, to or put on a Kayapo headdress but would not do so for
one, it is difficult to avoid the impression that he is sim- the same purposes, ‘‘to constitute their self-identity’’ as
ply ducking what does not fit his grand theory. Kayapo, just as he does not use the camera to constitute
Indigenous media making for indigenous audiences his self-identity as Western. Mokuka is saying that it is
raises issues about the media makers, their products, not the brute material or technical properties of a thing
their audiences, and the effect of video and telemedia but the way it is used and the purposes of that use that
on their cultures distinct from the more familiar issues confer the crucial cultural meanings of that use, includ-
raised by visual representation of non-Western cultures ing the ‘‘self-identity’’ of the user. The ‘‘category mis-
by Western anthropologists, not to mention non-ethno- take’’ is thus Weiner’s, not Mokuka’s.
graphic Western documentary and Western art film. Weiner argues that Ginsburg’s use of Mokuka’s state-
Weiner recognizes no such distinctions, eliding indige- ment shows that she confuses ‘‘the representation of re-
nous video indiscriminately with ‘‘all visual anthropol- lations’’ with ‘‘a relation to representative praxis’’ (in-
ogy,’’ Western documentary and art film, television, cluding under the latter term the camera itself),
and general Heideggerian reflections on visual represen- meaning that she does not problematize the way the
tation in Western culture. He raises as serious objec- camera is inserted into the social organization of the in-
tions to the few snippets of indigenous video and televi- digenous subjects who employ it to represent their so-
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228 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
cial relations separately from analyzing their represen- which they are constituted. The result of these twin re-
tations. It seems to me, however, that Ginsburg spends ductionisms is to forestall the possibility of understand-
a lot of time doing precisely this, and I have devoted a ing representation as a complex process of syntagmatic
whole paper and extensive parts of several others to the connection of multiple elements of context, significa-
process through which the camera is incorporated into tion, syntagm, and paradigm, which I take to be funda-
and positioned within the social relations of Kayapo mental not merely to an understanding of the nature of
communities (Turner 1991; see also 1990a, b, c, and representation as a praxis but also to the differentiation
1992a). Ginsburg’s citation of Mokuka in this connec- of modes and genres of representation in different cul-
tion is entirely appropriate, for this was Mokuka’s tures, periods, and contexts.
whole point: it is the way he uses, positions, and points Weiner borrows from Heidegger an abstract, syn-
the camera (and edits the resulting shots), not the cam- chronic conception of the nature of representation as a
era itself, that creates the Kayapo meanings of his vid- totalizing visual relationship between an alienated
eos and reflects his identity as a Kayapo video maker. (Western) subject and the world. He then commits the
Part of Weiner’s problem may simply be that he has fundamental category mistake of taking his philosophi-
obviously never used a camera himself. If he had, he cal conception of the nature of representation (uni-
could never have said that ‘‘we look through the view- formly applicable in principle to all parts of the repre-
finder and the implement itself disappears from the sentational relationship) as tantamount to an empirical
frame which it creates.’’ That, however, is not what description of representation as praxis—as a diachronic
happens when you try to take a picture! The camera as activity of construction. To understand a representation
implement not only ‘‘creates’’ a frame, it is the frame, as a construction means to grasp that its meaning is
and anyone who has tried to use one knows what a con- conveyed only through the union of its component fea-
tinual and self-conscious struggle is involved in focus- tures or parts. Such an understanding is the opposite of
ing and fitting it around what one wants to appear in imputing to every part or component feature full and
the picture—as well as trying to remain aware of what equal participation in the meaning of the whole. Taking
is going on outside the frame that needs to be brought the latter course, Weiner imputes to the most minimal,
into it. Anybody who uses a camera ‘‘without attending technical features of the camera and its uses a fully de-
to it as such,’’ as Weiner says that ‘‘we’’ (i.e., all ‘‘West- termining effect on the structural, meaningful, episte-
erners,’’ with a few favored exceptions like Heidegger mological, and ideological properties of the representa-
and himself) do, is going to produce pictures as silly as tions it is used to produce. The result is that the camera
Weiner’s Heideggerian description of the process of tak- and the elementary techniques of using it assume for
ing them. Weiner the character and powers of fetishes, fraught
Weiner’s unfamiliarity with the use of cameras may with the whole ‘‘cosmology’’ of Western culture and ca-
be related to his overvaluation of the power of the cam- pable of inculcating it through the condensed relation
era as an instrument of cultural indoctrination. He asks of representation that they embody and reproduce.
rhetorically of the work of indigenous film makers, The confusion to which this fetishized way of think-
‘‘What is the use of a new cultural identity, if it does ing about filmic representation leads is well exempli-
not differ in its theory, cosmology, and mode of being fied by Weiner’s misinterpretation of my account of the
from our own?’’ (I note in passing that Weiner regularly training in basic camera and editing techniques which
makes his points in the form of such rhetorical ques- I provided to Kayapo video makers taking part in the
tions, thus avoiding the normal concomitants of autho- Kayapo Video Project. In the passage he cites, I wrote
rial responsibility for the assertions they contain, such that I ‘‘tried to limit editing assistance and advice to ele-
as the provision of apposite evidence and logically com- mentary technical procedures of insertion and assem-
pelling arguments). Here he is implicitly asserting that bly, compatibility of adjacent cuts, use of cutaways and
indigenous video makers, whom Ginsburg and I have inserts, and avoiding abrupt camera movements and
interpreted to be expressing indigenous cultural identi- zooms’’ (1992a:7). Weiner says that this is ‘‘tantamount
ties even as they transform and objectify them in new to saying something like ‘We have taught them English
ways, are merely expressing Western cultural identity grammar, syntax, and semantics but have made no at-
(i.e., Western ‘‘theory, cosmology, and mode of being’’) tempt to teach them iambic pentameter, the sonnet, or
because it is imbued and inculcated willy-nilly by the the couplet.’ ’’ Not so. The correct analogy to the basic
technical properties of the camera and filmic medium. techniques of holding and using a camera in my list
Two kinds of reductionism are involved in this claim: would rather be to the basic features of language in gen-
a technological reduction of the construction of mean- eral, like the distinction of bundles of phonetic features
ing to the mechanical techniques through which it is as phonemes, the differentiation between the levels of
effected and an atomistic reduction of the meanings of phonology and morphology, and the generic process of
complex symbolic and representational constructs to linking the morphological units that carry signification
their minimal elements. The former is analogous to re- through the forms of combination comprising syntax.
ducing the meanings communicated in speech to the ar- This is still a far cry from a specific language like En-
ticulatory mechanisms of vocalization. The latter is glish and farther still from stylistic conventions of
equivalent to the claim that the meaning of discourses English literary genres like those Weiner mentions.
is given by the sum of the significations of the signs of His incorrect analogy thus proceeds directly from the
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 229
reductionist framing of his approach. The elementary identities of their members, rather than simply leaving
features of language or camera technique do not, in and them ‘‘unarticulated’’ as self-unfolding ‘‘grounds’’ or
of themselves, carry full cultural meanings or ‘‘cosmol- ‘‘modes of being’’ (in this connection I might cite my
ogies,’’ whatever might be the value of Whorfian argu- work on Kayapo production of bodiliness and subjectiv-
ments about how such meanings may be encoded in the ity: 1969, 1980, 1995b).
structures of specific languages or specific visual tech- Epiphanies are indexes, indexes are signs, and signs
niques such as fades, montage, or jump-cutting. are representations, so even the Papua New Guinean so-
The issue of reductionism is related to another theme cieties which are Weiner’s preferred examples of sup-
of Weiner’s attack on Ginsburg’s and my work and posed non-Western nonrepresentationalism are not so.
much of anthropology into the bargain: the relation be- The ethnographic fact that such societies may believe
tween dialectical and ‘‘expressive’’ theorizing. Weiner that features of the landscape are epiphanies of ances-
writes, ‘‘What differentiates a social-constructionist tral or supernatural power and remain unaware that
from a dialectical analysis is precisely the manner in they have socially constructed this belief does not enti-
which totality is appealed to.’’ In this context, he ap- tle one to take their beliefs at face value, as Weiner
pears to claim that Ginsburg, because of her ‘‘essen- does, as tokens (representations?) of their essential,
tially marxist framework’’ is therefore not a dialectical nonrepresentationalist cultural reality. Weiner’s whole
thinker: ‘‘behind the marxist metonymy by which confused argument about Ginsburg’s and my ‘‘ex-
Ginsburg sees the relations of film production standing pressivism’’ exemplifies a pervasive feature of his text,
for the entirety of a social world lies that particular con- namely, the projection of his own ideas and perspec-
structionist appeal to totality which is not inscribed in tives onto others, followed by criticism of them in this
dialectical analysis: the lure of the self-evident whole- alienated form while unselfconsciously continuing to
ness of the experiential and the phenomenal and the su- use them himself. In the slightly modified words of the
perior powers of film to capture this wholeness.’’ Wein- epigraph with which Weiner begins his text, in this for-
er’s problem here is not Ginsburg’s or mine, but the getting of himself, one senses the fury of the one who
passage is noteworthy at least for the opposition it ap- has to talk himself out of what he believes, before he
pears to set up between Ginsburg and Marx, as undia- can talk everyone else out of it.
lectical ‘‘social-constructionists,’’ and Weiner, as a
truly dialectical thinker. As the Duke of Wellington
once remarked about a similarly outrageous case of con-
fused identities, ‘‘If you believe that, you’ll believe any- Reply
thing.’’ Continuing in this vein, Weiner returns to the
attack on Ginsburg’s and my supposed commitment to
the undialectical ‘‘Boasian, Benedictian, belief that the j a m e s f. we i ne r
process of forming a community or a cultural tradition Adelaide, S.A., Australia. 5 xi 96
is similar to the production of a work of art. . . . such a
belief is inextricably linked to the expressivist and ex- Rameses means nothing to us . . . We know better
pressionist tendencies in 19th-century social and artis- than to use our science for the reparation of the
tic theory which . . . I maintain are implicit in the ap- mummy, that is, to restore a visible order, whereas
proach of Terry Turner, Faye Ginsburg, and all of visual embalming was a mythical labor aimed at immor-
anthropology.’’ This specimen of rhetorical overkill talizing a hidden dimension. [Baudrillard 1983:19]
bears no relation to my ideas or, so far as I can tell, to
Ginsburg’s and is unsupported by any references or pas- I thank all the participants in this forum for their stimu-
sages quoted from our writings. On the contrary, it is lating responses, and I hope that my reply will give
Weiner, not I or Ginsburg, who persistently does what some indication of the extent to which all have contrib-
he accuses us of, presenting whole ‘‘cultural traditions’’ uted to a successful exposition of some important is-
as expressive totalities embodying a single esthetic sues in contemporary anthropology.
principle, mode of representation, or form of subjectiv- There was a time in anthropology when, if one were
ity. Thus we have Weiner’s postanthropological con- presenting the analysis of a ritual in a seminar, one had
trast between the ‘‘West,’’ a culture supposedly express- to make sure that one provided the audience with all
ing its ‘‘productive’’ type of selfhood through totalizing the information about the ritual one needed in order to
visual representation epitomized by Renaissance per- sustain the analysis. One couldn’t count on everyone’s
spective painting, on the one hand, and contemporary being able to travel to Tikopia or Ghana or New Guinea
television, on the other, and most if not all ‘‘non-West- to see the ritual, nor would one have been able to substi-
ern’’ societies, for which the self, the body, and reality tute for one’s analysis a full-length film version of the
in general are experienced nonrepresentationally as ritual. In Ginsburg’s somewhat impatient advice that I
‘‘unarticulated grounds’’ of ‘‘being’’ which ‘‘unfold,’’ in view more of these films for myself, I hear no response
Heideggerian fashion, through ‘‘epiphanies.’’ On the to my plea that she, the anthropologist, provide me
contrary: all societies, including the Papua New Guin- with a better analysis of them herself. She continues to
ean and Amerindian ones to which Weiner refers, have speak as if the analysis of the films and their productive
ways of producing and articulating the bodies and self- matrix were somehow immanent in the very act of
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230 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
showing them (and, after all, the audience at the Mu- ‘‘symbolic economy,’’ then our symbolic analysis itself
seum of Modern Art thought so, too), and it is her faith becomes a small thing.1 There is no reason such ecologi-
in the transparency of what the films do and mean that cal, economic, and sociological dimensions must drop
impelled me to this exercise in the first place. out of our anthropological analysis of contemporary
Returning to the question of ritual, which Ginsburg ‘‘ritual,’’ whatever its form, cinematographic or other,
originally invoked as a model for what she perceived for it is only by anchoring our symbolic analysis in
was at work in indigenous film and video production, them that such analysis does more than replicate its
there are two points I wish to make. First, in consider- own terms. And so I fully support Strathern’s and Gins-
ing mythico-ritual performances in Australia and Papua burg’s attempts to turn what appears to be a moment of
New Guinea, one must recall the sheer scale and size visuality into a dimension of social relationality, as
of the performance and its associated objects relative to long as we understand that relationality too is always
that of the human community. Throughout Australia, constrained by what lies beyond it.
ceremonial grounds had to be large enough to accom- Hamilton firmly tells us that ‘‘the brute fact’’ (a
modate a number of dancers and viewers, who through phrase also invoked by Appadurai [1991] in a similar
the form of their dance inscribed an iconic version of a context) is that our erstwhile radically non-Western in-
mytho-geographic track of certain creator beings, a terlocutors are ‘‘already ‘viewers,’ with all the disrup-
track that was very large (see, for example, Keen 1994: tion to indigenous subjectivity which this implies,’’
199). Among the Marind-anim of southern New though ‘‘indigenous subjectivity’’ was the very thing
Guinea, certain artefacts such as the bull-roarer were the existence of which I was trying to render problem-
considered to be the voice and other parts of the giant atic. Behind this rueful acknowledgment of brute fact I
creator being Sosom. We witness the attempt to fashion suspect lies barely concealed relief that anthropology
some gigantic version of human action and life, wherein will now be spared the irksome task of learning difficult
the actions of beings had cosmological and geomorphic languages and the distasteful business of living in bor-
consequences that were permanent and vast, and thus ing, out-of-the-way places. But if there are those who
to precipitate human community and sociality as some really think that anthropology can now safely ignore
smaller version, component, or effect of it. But I will no these so-called ex-colonial backwaters, I invite them to
doubt continue to provoke my interlocutors by saying join me on one of my visits to the Foi of Lake Kutubu,
that in filmic representation only the technological re- Papua New Guinea, to watch the Chevron Oil Com-
lations of production supporting the global cinematog- pany in full operation at one of its most important pe-
raphy and video industry are ‘‘vast’’ (though because troleum reservoirs. And I would be truly discouraged if
they are invisible in Ginsburg’s accounts they acquire I had to spell out to my colleagues how and why the
what Gell and Bourdieu would call enchanted quali- work I have done over the past 17 years on Foi language,
ties), whereas the products are themselves a small effect myth, social structure, geography, ritual, and poetry
on a small screen. The effect created, in other words, is was necessary for me to arrive at the stage where I could
that humans and their technology are big and all-power- contemplate an anthropologically informed Foi account
ful in relation to their ‘‘ritual’’ productions, which have of what they have experienced since the Chevron Oil
become small. When a stroke of a politician’s or bureau- Company arrived.
crat’s pen in Canberra can eliminate the elaborate chan- If we neglect this task, then we only have one version
nels of funding that keep some of the central Australian of representation, one version of subjectivity, one ver-
Aboriginal media projects going, whose power and au- sion of power, and that, as Piccini remarks, is our own.
tonomy are more surely and definitely being made visi- This is what I tried to draw attention to, and it is what
ble? At the same time, there may be some comfort in was demonstrated to terrifying effect by Turner’s era-
knowing that a few Aborigines plodding along a ritual sure of the social reality of the non-representational in
dance track, unfilmed and untelevised, may retain their non-Western societies. For Turner and Ginsburg, ‘‘the
own sense of the gigantic in their lives by escaping the real is not only what can be reproduced, but that which
government’s and developer’s miniaturizing atten- is always already reproduced’’ (Baudrillard 1983:146),
tion—an opinion I think I share with Faris. and the evidence for this is that they do not think seri-
The second point about ritual concerns anthropolo- ously about why I should see no difference between
gy’s conventional approach to it. From Malinowski to their position and Collier’s.
Rappaport, anthropologists were convinced that large- What Hamilton, Turner, and Ginsburg hope to sal-
scale, important ritual activity had to have effects and vage from this brute fact is the possibility of the reasser-
consequences beyond the overt performative and sym- tion of the autonomy of our interlocutors. We would
bolic properties of the ritual itself, however central perhaps see the exchange of their non-Western, amod-
these properties were to our analysis of them. Paradoxi-
cally (though only so from today’s perspective, it 1. As Wagner (1984:144) notes,’’ if the action of the ritual is consid-
seems), this tacit acceptance of what lay beyond the rep- ered as wholly symbolic in its effect, then it will be of the same
resentational gave our symbolic analysis that much ‘scale,’ or phenomenal order, as its translation. . . . But if the ritual
communication is freighted with sociological or ecological impli-
more depth. But if such productions are seen to have cations as well, then as mere translation, however sensitive it may
symbolic properties as such only when we take too lit- be, it cannot possibly bring across all of its implications and ef-
erally what ‘‘symbolic’’ means in Bourdieu’s term fects.’’
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w e i n e r Televisualist Anthropology 231
ern culture for a new autonomy and subjectivity as a revealed as a considerable body of literature, ethno-
fair bargain under today’s conditions. But the autonomy graphic and quasi-ethnographic.
and the subjectivity secured are as much an illusion as His testimony at one point was illustrated by refer-
our own. Allow me, then, to turn on my own virtual ence to a central Ngarrindjeri creation myth, the story
projector and present a screening: of the male ancestral creator Ngurunduri, who travelled
In June 1995, the state of South Australia began a for- the length of the Murray estuary and the South Austra-
mal inquiry into whether certain Aboriginal women of lian coastline creating various features of the landscape
the Ngarrindjeri nation, the traditional residents of the as he journeyed. Ngurunduri, so the myth goes, was
Lower Murray River region of this part of Australia, had chasing after his two wives, who had run away from
recently and deliberately fabricated a claim of secret him. In the course of various adventures during which
women’s religious knowledge associated with Hind- he creates all the fresh- and salt-water fish of the Mur-
marsh Island (in the Murray mouth) and its surrounding ray estuary and various features of the landscape and
channels for the purposes of blocking the construction the heavens, he catches up with his wives and kills
of a proposed bridge that was to link the island with the them out of vengeance. This myth was accorded cen-
town of Goolwa on the mainland. The year before, these trality in a compendious summary of precontact Ngar-
women had successfully applied under the terms of rindjeri culture recorded during the 1940s by Ronald
Commonwealth Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander and Catherine Berndt (1993), two young anthropologists
Heritage Protection Act of 1984 to have this site judged working with three aged Ngarrindjeri informants (two
one of particular significance to Ngarrindjeri tradition. men and one woman) who gave accounts of these prac-
The then federal minister for aboriginal affairs re- tices and stories which at that point had been all but
sponded to the application by imposing a 25-year ban on obliterated from Ngarrindjeri communal conscious-
the construction of the bridge. The royal commission’s ness.
inquiry was instigated by the South Australian state A dramatization of this myth, featuring people who
government shortly after the Adelaide media promi- were members of a prominent Ngarrindjeri family as
nently reported the views of a group of ‘‘dissident’’ (as the actors, had been produced in 1987 as a highly suc-
they came to the called) Ngarrindjeri women who pub- cessful and effective video, made with the help of the
licly denied that secret women’s knowledge was part of South Australian Film Corporation and another young
their tradition. South Australian Museum scholar, Steven Hemming, a
In July 1995, in the early days of the inquiry, represen- historian who was to appear before the royal commis-
tatives of the women who had made the original appli- sion in support of the claim of the proponent women.
cation asked for a private audience with the presiding In fact, the man who played Ngurunduri in the video,
commissioner, Iris Stevens. Away from the courtroom, Henry Rankine, was one of the most important support-
full of media reporters, the developers, various anthro- ers of the proponent women and a former member of
pologists, historians, and archaeologists, and their legal the Lower Murray Heritage Committee—a Ngarrindjeri
counsel, the women revealed to the commissioner two committee which negotiated local cultural heritage is-
secret objects associated with the mythological founda- sues with various government and business develop-
tion of the restricted women’s knowledge. Like Gins- ment interests. At one point when his testimony was
burg, these women must have had faith in what they being led by the counsel assisting the commissioner,
surely felt were the immanent meanings visible in the Clarke screened the video (entitled Ngurunduri: A
objects themselves, but to their dismay these meanings Ngarrindjeri Dreaming). The courtroom was not
ultimately failed to be perceived by the commissioner. cleared for this screening. Indeed, the video is a most
Shortly after this, through their own counsel (an Anglo- public artefact in Adelaide. It is screened continu-
Australian Queen’s councillor), the ‘‘proponent’’ Ngar- ously without stop at the South Australian Museum
rindjeri women, as they would come to be called, with- during its public opening hours as part of its permanent
drew in protest from what they declared was a racist in- display of Ngarrindjeri material culture and photo-
quiry into the religious beliefs of Aboriginal people. The graphs.
royal commission thereafter heard testimony, with one In this short response I wish to say only a few things
exception, only from Ngarrindjeri women who had pub- about this incredible appropriation, presentation, repre-
licly disputed the existence of this women’s ritual sentation, and interpretation of images surrounding the
knowledge on Hindmarsh Island. very public issue of cultural difference in Australia (see
A key witness for the royal commission was a young Weiner 1995b, 1997; also 1995c). I could say that at no
cultural geographer from the South Australian Mu- point did any of the participants in this inquiry show
seum, Philip Clarke, who had recently finished his doc- any interest in the myth of Ngurunduri and the implied
toral dissertation at the University of Adelaide on the obliteration of women’s lives and activity within the
cultural history of the Lower Murray region and had ex- context of inscriptive activity along the Murray estua-
tensive knowledge of Ngarrindjeri history and culture. rine coast, nor was it conceded that the myth was now
Clarke was to spend many hours documenting the lack being used by Euro-Australian ‘‘social scientists’’ (I am
of evidence for gender-based restrictions on ritual glad to say that none of those deferring to it in this way
knowledge among the Ngarrindjeri such as were being were anthropologists) to undermine a political claim
put forth by the applicant women in what came to be that the Aboriginal actors in the film were themselves
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232 c u r r e n t an t hr o p o l o g y Volume 38, Number 2, April 1997
supporting. I could say that what was at stake was two the gigantic scale it once literally did. Henry Rankine,
versions of the gigantic, the personalized version of whether as Ngurunduri the film character or as a mem-
Ngurunduri the Creator and the Anglo-Australian ver- ber of various Ngarrindjeri committees who must travel
sion of a man-made nature, wherein, under the accords back and forth between Ngarrindjeri communities and
made by the Australian states of Victoria, South Austra- the board rooms and council chambers of different gov-
lia, and New South Wales earlier this century, the large- ernmental and business organizations in South Austra-
scale use of the Murray-Darling River system for ag- lia, traces the path along which will sprout new mari-
ricultural irrigation permanently altered the estuarine nas, highways, and ecological caravan parks and
geography of the South Australian coast and gave to the convention centers, as well as Aboriginal ‘‘culture cen-
farmers’ water pipes the same place-making power that ters,’’ and the sites of productivity in this contemporary
Ngurunduri’s club, canoe, and spear once had (this evi- Ngarrindjeri mythographic inscription will be created
dence, recounted by an official of the South Australian as a result of conflicts over land and power between the
Water Commission, of the recent, ‘‘anthropogenic’’ al- Ngarrindjeri and the non-Aboriginal people and govern-
teration of the coastline was adduced by the royal com- ment of South Australia. It is left to the anthropologist
mission as a counterweight to the ‘‘mythic’’ rationale to continue as he or she has always done—to return the
for its contours and its sacredness given by the Ngar- sense of the gigantic, that is, the global, to myth, both
rindjeri proponents). How are we to juxtapose these ac- Western and non-Western, in cases like this and to rein-
counts except as explanatory, theoretical totalities (a sert these images into an ethnographic analysis out of
point for which I thank Faris)? We can reverse Lévi- which the creative incommensurability of cultural dif-
Strauss’s famous description of mythopoeia: it is the ference can once more emerge as our irreducible subject
mythographic that is determined in our theories of matter and ultimate goal.
knowledge as much as the other way around, and this
includes visual interpretation as well as all of the ‘‘hy-
draulic’’ theories appealed to, Aboriginal and Western,
in the course of the Hindmarsh Island Bridge Royal
Commission. References Cited
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