Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-m9kch Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T11:30:00.825Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Comments

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2024

Susan Pollock*
Affiliation:
Institut für Vorderasiatische Archäologie Freie Universität Berlin Fabeckstrasse 23–25 14195 Berlin Germany Email: spollock@zedat.fu-berlin.de
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Matthew Greer offers us a powerful, refreshing and thought-provoking critique of posthumanist approaches in archaeology as he sees them through the lens of Black Studies. He asks us to leave aside—temporarily—concerns with anthropocentrism to concentrate instead on the human side of the equation, while nonetheless positioning himself in line with posthumanist efforts to dismantle the human–non-human divide. The crux of Greer's arguments is that posthumanist approaches do not go far enough in distancing themselves from humanism for two reasons. First, humanity remains (tacitly) equated with white, heterosexual, economically well-off men, a single group that forms the scale against which all other people are measured. Second, posthumanist approaches do not acknowledge that racism and related forms of oppression were integral to the emergence of humanism and not a by-product of it.

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is used to distribute the re-used or adapted article and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

Matthew Greer offers us a powerful, refreshing and thought-provoking critique of posthumanist approaches in archaeology as he sees them through the lens of Black Studies. He asks us to leave aside—temporarily—concerns with anthropocentrism to concentrate instead on the human side of the equation, while nonetheless positioning himself in line with posthumanist efforts to dismantle the human–non-human divide. The crux of Greer's arguments is that posthumanist approaches do not go far enough in distancing themselves from humanism for two reasons. First, humanity remains (tacitly) equated with white, heterosexual, economically well-off men, a single group that forms the scale against which all other people are measured. Second, posthumanist approaches do not acknowledge that racism and related forms of oppression were integral to the emergence of humanism and not a by-product of it.

A central feature of humanism, according to Greer, is that it is grounded in exclusion of those who are defined as not fully human. In an argument reminiscent of Edward Said's definition of Orientalism, Greer contends that this exclusion, this creation of non-human people, is part and parcel of defining who is human; humanism is ‘an intellectual project devoted to colonialism, slavery and racial capitalism’. The solution he proposes is to embrace ‘counter-humanism’, a critical approach developed in Black Studies.

In order to highlight the problems he identifies in both humanist and posthumanist approaches to the human, Greer adopts a terminology in which ‘human’ refers to a culturally constructed, ontological category consisting of those who are considered human in specific cultural-historical contexts, whereas Homo sapiens designates people in general. The distinction is a crucial one for his argument. The vocabulary is, however, a problem. Homo sapiens is fundamentally a biological label, and its use risks leading down the slippery slope of biologism. We may be ‘biological creatures living in material worlds’, but biology has also been used to racialize, discriminate and oppress. And from an archaeological viewpoint, does this mean that other (sub)species of Homo are categorically excluded?

A related point is Greer's contention that counter-humanism incorporates alternative understandings of humanity in which all ways of being human are considered valid. Although this may hold the promise of moving us away from a monolithic and ultimately oppressive categorization, it still begs the question of what it is that constitutes ‘being human’. Is it indeed a ‘purely’ biological category? The issue of categorization more generally would merit some further consideration here. I was also surprised to find no mention of Kimberlé Crenshaw's work on intersectionality. While it does not resolve problems of categorization, it does place a focus on relations among categories, in particular those that produce oppression and discrimination, and relationality is central to much of Greer's discussion.

Greer shows us that Black Studies offers a powerful critique that warrants serious attention and engagement. But it is not the only possible entry point to these issues. Other work originating from critical, non-Western-centric traditions would offer possibilities to further enrich—and perhaps also to challenge—Greer's Black Studies-based approach. I think here especially of the writings of Indigenous scholars such as Zoe Todd (Reference Todd2016) or Max Liboiron (Reference Liboiron2021). Feminist literature is replete with the differing concerns of feminists from non-Western traditions, such as scholars from western Asia and north Africa (e.g. Mir-Hosseini Reference Mir-Hosseini1999; Moghissi Reference Moghissi and Hoffman2019).

In a number of places in the text, I found myself wishing that Greer would address directly the question of who is meant by the referent ‘we’ (see Davis et al. Reference Davis, Moulton, Van Sant and Williams2019). In the hands of some actors and discourses, ‘we’ turns into a power play, a means of appropriation of an Other under the semantic pretence of acting inclusively. The appropriation of ‘we’ is a counterpoint to the notion of moral community as discussed by David Morris (Reference Morris1996) or Judith Butler's (Reference Butler2010) concept of whose life is (not) grievable. Moral communities, too, depend on exclusion: ‘We do not acknowledge the destruction of beings outside our moral community as suffering’ (Morris Reference Morris1996, 40).

In the end, Greer makes a potent argument for a focus on humans, one that may not sit well with all posthumanists. That position is in some respects not so far from that of Díaz de Liaño and Fernandez-Götz (Reference Díaz de Liaño and Fernandez-Götz2021), who contend that the problem is not that archaeology has traditionally been too anthropocentric but that it has not devoted enough attention to humans. Greer insists that we add a crucial element—it is not only a question of a focus on humans, but rather on who is and what it means to be considered human.

References

Butler, J., 2010. Frames of War: When is life grievable? London: Verso.Google Scholar
Davis, J., Moulton, A.A., Van Sant, L. & Williams, B., 2019. Anthropocene, Capitalocene, … Plantationocene?: A manifesto for ecological justice in an age of global crises. Geography Compass 13(5), e12438.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Díaz de Liaño, G. & Fernandez-Götz, M., 2021. Posthumanism, New Humanism and beyond. Cambridge Archaeological Journal 31(3), 543–9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Liboiron, M., 2021. Pollution is Colonialism. Durham (NC): Duke University Press.Google Scholar
Mir-Hosseini, Z., 1999. Islam and Gender: The religious debate in contemporary Iran. Princeton (NJ): Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Moghissi, H., 2019. Between a rock and a hard place: the ‘Arab Spring’, women, and lessons from Iran, in Making the New Middle East: Politics, culture, and human rights, ed. Hoffman, V.J.. Syracuse (NY): Syracuse University Press, 338–53.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morris, D.B., 1996. About suffering: voice, genre, and moral community. Daedalus 125(1), 2541.Google Scholar
Todd, Z., 2016. An Indigenous feminist's take on the ontological turn: ‘ontology’ is just another word for colonialism. Journal of Historical Sociology 29(1), 422.CrossRefGoogle Scholar