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| Review | Journal of Social History, 40.4 | The History Cooperative
40.4  
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Summer, 2007
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REVIEWS


Critical Junctions: Anthropology and History beyond the Cultural Turn. Edited by Don Kalb and Herman Tak (New York: Berghahn Books, 2005. viii plus 185 pp. $45.00 [paper, 2006. $22.50]).

This collection of essays, which was in the works over a decade, may be new to social historians interested in the historical anthropology's encounter with the cultural turn, but it will be old news to those steeped in the historiography of the last decade on history and theory. The volume has a foot solidly anchored in the debate over the cultural (or "linguistic") turn circa 1995; few of the references in the essays are to critical analysis—either theoretical or empirical—produced in the New Millenium, Indeed, the editors, both well-regarded social anthropologists who have taught at the University of Utrecht in the Netherlands, developed the collection from a special 1996 issue of Focaal European Journal of Anthropology and a subsequent meeting that same year of the American Anthropological Association. The authors are predominantly historical anthropologists (a couple of them are historians by training, and a couple of them also have training in sociology). Though these essays originate in the mid-90s, the editors encouraged authors to rewrite their essays over the next years (and some clearly did), and in an Introduction, the editors locate the eight essays in an updated conversation. So, despite a sense that this debate is stale, the collection—both the editors' Introduction and the theoretically engaged essays—provides several important lessons for historians. 1
      The volume proceeds from the view shared by the authors that the cultural turn's "obsession" with " 'meaning,' symbols and signs" has led (citing the anthropologist Eric Wolf) to "analytic 'deforestation.' " If historian critics have argued against what they see as an ahistorical relativism of the 'turn,' editors Kalb and Tak focus on what Sherry Ortner bemoans as the poststructuralist " 'lack of a systemic sociology' " which has heretofore been fundamental to symbolic anthropology. The result of the "turn," according to the editors, is a "turning away from 'the social' and the political, [and] the relative neglect of praxis.... " (2) One of the "main culprits" of the reductionism, they then note, has been class analysis, and the volume's not-so-modest project is no less than the reinvigoration of class in historical anthropology, a project with which I am wholly sympathetic. 2
      This project will not be new to some historians. Critics of the cultural turn from within the historical profession, especially male labor historians in the 1990s (most notably Bryan Palmer1), spoke often passionately against the evisceration of a materialist basis for class in the rush to take the cultural turn. But this volume has several virtues. First, the authors make the case in less overheated terms with which I think historians who have themselves embraced the cultural may be more receptive to engage. The editors stake out an appealing middle ground that builds on the expanded notion of class that the cultural turn itself advanced against a narrow economism of an earlier generation. Second, the volume reminds us of the legacy of anthropology to historical thinking. 3
      To begin, I suspect that when most historians think of the cultural turn, they think of French social theorists such as Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Ferdinand de Saussure, Jacques Lacan, and Pierre Bourdieu. Kalb and Tak offer an expanded genealogy which emphasizes the critical role played by anthropologists such as Clifford Geertz, Eric Wolf, George Marcus and James Clifford. At the same time, citing the influence that British Marxist historians like E. P. Thompson, Raymond Williams and Eric Hobsbawm had on an earlier generation of New Social Historians—work too little read today—they urge a resurrection of the quite dynamic notions of class and culture that were both materialist and cultural and introduced forty years ago. . . .

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