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Claude Lévi-Strauss

Claude Lévi-Strauss (/klɔːd ˈlvi ˈstrs/ klawd LAY-vee STROWSS,[2] French: [klod levi stʁos]; 28 November 1908 – 30 October 2009)[3][4][5] was a French anthropologist and ethnologist whose work was key in the development of the theories of structuralism and structural anthropology.[6] He held the chair of Social Anthropology at the Collège de France between 1959 and 1982, was elected a member of the Académie française in 1973 and was a member of the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris. He received numerous honours from universities and institutions throughout the world.

Claude Lévi-Strauss
Lévi-Strauss in 2005
Born(1908-11-28)28 November 1908
Brussels, Belgium
Died30 October 2009(2009-10-30) (aged 100)
Paris, France
NationalityFrench
EducationUniversity of Paris (DrE, 1948)
Spouses
(m. 1932, divorced)
Rose Marie Ullmo
(m. 1946; div. 1954)
Monique Roman
(m. 1954)
SchoolStructuralism
InstitutionsÉcole pratique des hautes études (later École des hautes études en sciences sociales)
Collège de France
Main interests
Notable ideas
Signature

Lévi-Strauss argued that the "savage" mind had the same structures as the "civilized" mind and that human characteristics are the same everywhere.[7][8] These observations culminated in his famous book Tristes Tropiques (1955) which established his position as one of the central figures in the structuralist school of thought. As well as sociology, his ideas reached into many fields in the humanities, including philosophy. Structuralism has been defined as "the search for the underlying patterns of thought in all forms of human activity."[4] He won the 1986 International Nonino Prize in Italy.

Biography edit

Early life and education edit

Gustave Claude Lévi-Strauss was born in 1908 to French-Jewish (turned agnostic) parents who were living in Brussels, where his father was working as a portrait painter at the time.[9][10][11] He grew up in Paris, living on a street of the upscale 16th arrondissement named after the artist Claude Lorrain, whose work he admired and later wrote about.[12] During the First World War, from age 6 to 10, he lived with his maternal grandfather, who was the Rabbi of Versailles.[9][13][14] Despite his religious environment early on, Claude Lévi-Strauss was an atheist or agnostic, at least in his adult life.[15][16]

From 1918 to 1925 he studied at Lycée Janson de Sailly high school, receiving a baccalaureate in June 1925 (age of 16).[9] In his last year (1924), he was introduced to philosophy, including the works of Marx and Kant, and began shifting to the political left (however, unlike many other socialists, he never became communist).[17] From 1925, he spent the next two years at the prestigious Lycée Condorcet preparing for the entrance exam to the highly selective École normale supérieure. However, for reasons that are not entirely clear, he decided not to take the exam. In 1926, he went to Sorbonne in Paris, studying law and philosophy, as well as engaging in socialist politics and activism. In 1929, he opted for philosophy over law (which he found boring), and from 1930 to 1931, put politics aside to focus on preparing for the agrégation in philosophy, in order to qualify as a professor. In 1931, he passed the agrégation, coming in 3rd place, and youngest in his class at age 22. By this time, the Great Depression had hit France, and Lévi-Strauss found himself needing to provide not only for himself but his parents as well.[17]

Early career edit

In 1935, after a few years of secondary school teaching, he took up a last-minute offer to be part of a French cultural mission to Brazil in which he would serve as a visiting professor of sociology at the University of São Paulo while his then-wife, Dina, served as a visiting professor of ethnology.

The couple lived and did their anthropological work in Brazil from 1935 to 1939. During this time, while he was a visiting professor of sociology, Claude undertook his only ethnographic fieldwork. He accompanied Dina, a trained ethnographer in her own right, who was also a visiting professor at the University of São Paulo, where they conducted research forays into the Mato Grosso and the Amazon Rainforest. They first studied the Guaycuru and Bororó Indian tribes, staying among them for a few days. In 1938, they returned for a second, more than half-year-long expedition to study the Nambikwara and Tupi-Kawahib societies. At this time, his wife had an eye infection that prevented her from completing the study, which he concluded. This experience cemented Lévi-Strauss's professional identity as an anthropologist. Edmund Leach suggests, from Lévi-Strauss's own accounts in Tristes Tropiques, that he could not have spent more than a few weeks in any one place and was never able to converse easily with any of his native informants in their native language, which is uncharacteristic of anthropological research methods of participatory interaction with subjects to gain a full understanding of a culture.

In the 1980s, he discussed why he became vegetarian in pieces published in Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica and other publications anthologized in the posthumous book Nous sommes tous des cannibales (2013):

A day will come when the thought that to feed themselves, men of the past raised and massacred living beings and complacently exposed their shredded flesh in displays shall no doubt inspire the same repulsion as that of the travellers of the 16th and 17th century facing cannibal meals of savage American primitives in America, Oceania, Asia or Africa.

Expatriation edit

Lévi-Strauss returned to France in 1939 to take part in the war effort and was assigned as a liaison agent to the Maginot Line. After the French capitulation in 1940, he was employed at a lycée in Montpellier, but then was dismissed under the Vichy racial laws (Lévi-Strauss's family, originally from Alsace, was of Jewish ancestry). By the same laws, he was denaturalized, of his French citizenship and forced to escape persecution.[18]

Around that time, he and his first wife separated. She stayed behind and worked in the French resistance, while he managed to escape Vichy France by boat to Martinique,[19] from where he was finally able to continue travelling. (Victor Serge describes conversations with Lévi-Strauss aboard the freighter Capitaine Paul-Lemerle from Marseilles to Martinique in his Notebooks.).[20]

In 1941, he was offered a position at the New School for Social Research in New York City and granted admission to the United States. A series of voyages brought him, via South America, to Puerto Rico, where he was investigated by the FBI after German letters in his luggage aroused the suspicions of customs agents. Lévi-Strauss spent most of the war in New York City. Along with Jacques Maritain, Henri Focillon, and Roman Jakobson, he was a founding member of the École Libre des Hautes Études, a sort of university-in-exile for French academics.

The war years in New York were formative for Lévi-Strauss in several ways. His relationship with Jakobson helped shape his theoretical outlook (Jakobson and Lévi-Strauss are considered to be two of the central figures on which structuralist thought is based).[21] In addition, Lévi-Strauss was also exposed to the American anthropology espoused by Franz Boas, who taught at Columbia University. In 1942, while having dinner at the Faculty House at Columbia, Boas died in Lévi-Strauss's arms.[22] This intimate association with Boas gave his early work a distinctive American inclination that helped facilitate its acceptance in the U.S.

After a brief stint from 1946 to 1947 as a cultural attaché to the French embassy in Washington, DC, Lévi-Strauss returned to Paris in 1948. At this time, he received his state doctorate from the Sorbonne by submitting, in the French tradition, both a "major" and a "minor" doctoral thesis. These were La vie familiale et sociale des indiens Nambikwara (The Family and Social Life of the Nambikwara Indians) and Les structures élémentaires de la parenté (The Elementary Structures of Kinship).[23]: 234 

Later life and death edit

In 2008, he became the first member of the Académie française to reach the age of 100 and one of the few living authors to have his works published in the Bibliothèque de la Pléiade. On the death of Maurice Druon on 14 April 2009, he became the Dean of the Académie, its longest-serving member.

He died on 30 October 2009, a few weeks before his 101st birthday.[3] The death was announced four days later.[3]

French President Nicolas Sarkozy described him as "one of the greatest ethnologists of all time".[24] Bernard Kouchner, the French Foreign Minister, said Lévi-Strauss "broke with an ethnocentric vision of history and humanity ... At a time when we are trying to give meaning to globalization, to build a fairer and more humane world, I would like Claude Lévi-Strauss's universal echo to resonate more strongly".[25] In a similar vein, a statement by Lévi-Strauss was broadcast on National Public Radio in the remembrance produced by All Things Considered on 3 November 2009: "There is today a frightful disappearance of living species, be they plants or animals. And it's clear that the density of human beings has become so great, if I can say so, that they have begun to poison themselves. And the world which I am finishing my existence is no longer a world that I like."[citation needed] The Daily Telegraph said in its obituary that Lévi-Strauss was "one of the dominating postwar influences in French intellectual life and the leading exponent of Structuralism in the social sciences".[26] Permanent secretary of the Académie française Hélène Carrère d'Encausse said: "He was a thinker, a philosopher.... We will not find another like him".[27]

Career and development of structural anthropology edit

The Elementary Structures of Kinship was published in 1949 and quickly came to be regarded as one of the most important anthropological works on kinship. It was even reviewed favorably by Simone de Beauvoir, who saw it as an important statement of the position of women in non-Western cultures. A play on the title of Durkheim's famous Elementary Forms of the Religious Life, Lévi-Strauss' Elementary Structures re-examined how people organized their families by examining the logical structures that underlay relationships rather than their contents. While British anthropologists such as Alfred Reginald Radcliffe-Brown argued that kinship was based on descent from a common ancestor, Lévi-Strauss argued that kinship was based on the alliance between two families that formed when women from one group married men from another.[28]

Throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s, Lévi-Strauss continued to publish and experienced considerable professional success. On his return to France, he became involved with the administration of the CNRS and the Musée de l'Homme before finally becoming a professor (directeur d'études) of the fifth section of the École Pratique des Hautes Études, the 'Religious Sciences' section where Marcel Mauss was previously professor, the title of which chair he renamed "Comparative Religion of Non-Literate Peoples".

While Lévi-Strauss was well known in academic circles, in 1955 he became one of France's best-known intellectuals by publishing Tristes Tropiques in Paris that year by Plon (best-known translated into English in 1973, published by Penguin). Essentially, this book was a memoir detailing his time as a French expatriate throughout the 1930s and his travels. Lévi-Strauss combined exquisitely beautiful prose, dazzling philosophical meditation, and ethnographic analysis of the Amazonian peoples to produce a masterpiece. The organizers of the Prix Goncourt, for instance, lamented that they were not able to award Lévi-Strauss the prize because Tristes Tropiques was nonfiction.[citation needed]

Lévi-Strauss was named to a chair in social anthropology at the Collège de France in 1959. At roughly the same time he published Structural Anthropology, a collection of his essays that provided both examples and programmatic statements about structuralism. At the same time as he was laying the groundwork for an intellectual program, he began a series of institutions to establish anthropology as a discipline in France, including the Laboratory for Social Anthropology where new students could be trained, and a new journal, l'Homme, for publishing the results of their research.

The Savage Mind edit

In 1962, Lévi-Strauss published what is for many people his most important work, La Pensée Sauvage, translated into English as The Savage Mind (and later as Wild Thought). The French title is an untranslatable pun, as the word pensée means both 'thought' and 'pansy', while sauvage has a range of meanings different from English 'savage'. Lévi-Strauss supposedly suggested that the English title be Pansies for Thought, borrowing from a speech by Ophelia in Shakespeare's Hamlet (Act IV, Scene V). French editions of La Pensée Sauvage are often printed with an image of wild pansies on the cover.

The Savage Mind discusses not just "primitive" thought, a category defined by previous anthropologists, but also forms of thought common to all human beings. The first half of the book lays out Lévi-Strauss's theory of culture and mind, while the second half expands this account into a theory of history and social change. This latter part of the book engaged Lévi-Strauss in a heated debate with Jean-Paul Sartre over the nature of human freedom. On the one hand, Sartre's existentialist philosophy committed him to a position that human beings fundamentally were free to act as they pleased. On the other hand, Sartre also was a leftist who was committed to ideas such as that individuals were constrained by the ideologies imposed on them by the powerful. Lévi-Strauss presented his structuralist notion of agency in opposition to Sartre. Echoes of this debate between structuralism and existentialism eventually inspired the work of younger authors such as Pierre Bourdieu.

Mythologiques edit

Now a worldwide celebrity, Lévi-Strauss spent the second half of the 1960s working on his master project, a four-volume study called Mythologiques. In it, he followed a single myth from the tip of South America and all of its variations from group to group north through Central America and eventually into the Arctic Circle, thus tracing the myth's cultural evolution from one end of the Western Hemisphere to the other. He accomplished this in a typically structuralist way, examining the underlying structure of relationships among the elements of the story rather than focusing on the content of the story itself. While Pensée Sauvage was a statement of Lévi-Strauss's big-picture theory, Mythologiques was an extended, four-volume example of analysis. Richly detailed and extremely long, it is less widely read than the much shorter and more accessible Pensée Sauvage, despite its position as Lévi-Strauss's masterwork.

 
Claude Lévi-Strauss, receiving the Erasmus Prize (1973)

Lévi-Strauss completed the final volume of Mythologiques in 1971. On 14 May 1973, he was elected to the Académie française, France's highest honour for a writer.[29] He was a member of other notable academies worldwide, including the American Academy of Arts and Letters. In 1956, he became foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences.[30] He then became a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1960 and the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1967.[31] He received the Erasmus Prize in 1973, the Meister-Eckhart-Prize for philosophy in 2003, and several honorary doctorates from universities such as Oxford, Harvard, Yale, and Columbia. He also was the recipient of the Grand-croix de la Légion d'honneur, was a Commandeur de l'ordre national du Mérite, and Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres. In 2005, he received the XVII Premi Internacional Catalunya (Generalitat of Catalonia). After his retirement, he continued to publish occasional meditations on art, music, philosophy, and poetry.

Anthropological theories edit

Lévi-Strauss sought to apply the structural linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure to anthropology.[32] At the time, the family was traditionally considered the fundamental object of analysis but was seen primarily as a self-contained unit consisting of a husband, a wife, and their children. Nephews, cousins, aunts, uncles, and grandparents all were treated as secondary. Lévi-Strauss argued that akin to Saussure's notion of linguistic value, families acquire determinate identities only through relations with one another. Thus, he inverted the classical view of anthropology, putting the secondary family members first and insisting on analyzing the relations between units instead of the units themselves.[33]

 
A diagram illustrating Lévi-Strauss's theory of kinship. In such a case, one can infer that D is positive.

In his own analysis of the formation of the identities that arise through marriages between tribes, Lévi-Strauss noted that the relation between the uncle and the nephew was to the relation between brother and sister, as the relation between father and son is to that between husband and wife,[34] that is, A is to B as C is to D. Therefore, if we know A, B, and C, we can predict D. An example of this law is illustrated in the diagram. The four relation units are marked with A to D. Lévi-Strauss noted that if A is positive, B is negative, and C is negative, then it can inferred that D is positive, thereby satisfying the constraint 'A is to B as C is to D'; in this case, the relations are contrasting. The goal of Lévi-Strauss's structural anthropology, then, was to simplify the masses of empirical data into generalized, comprehensible relations between units, which allow for predictive laws to be identified, such as A is to B as C is to D.[33]

Lévi-Strauss's theory is set forth in Structural Anthropology (1958). Briefly, he considers culture a system of symbolic communication, to be investigated with methods that others have used more narrowly in the discussion of novels, political speeches, sports, and movies. His reasoning makes the best sense when contrasted against the background of an earlier generation's social theory. He wrote about this relationship for decades.

A preference for "functionalist" explanations dominated the social sciences from the turn of the 20th century through the 1950s, which is to say that anthropologists and sociologists tried to state the purpose of a social act or institution. The existence of a thing was explained, if it fulfilled a function. The only strong alternative to that kind of analysis was a historical explanation, accounting for the existence of a social fact by stating how it came to be.

The idea of social function developed in two different ways, however. The English anthropologist Alfred Reginald Radcliffe-Brown, who had read and admired the work of the French sociologist Émile Durkheim, argued that the goal of anthropological research was to find the collective function, such as what a religious creed or a set of rules about marriage did for the social order as a whole. Behind this approach was an old idea, the view that civilization developed through a series of phases from the primitive to the modern, everywhere in the same manner. All of the activities in a given kind of society would partake of the same character; some sort of internal logic would cause one level of culture to evolve into the next. On this view, a society can easily be thought of as an organism, the parts functioning together as do the parts of a body. In contrast, the more influential functionalism of Bronisław Malinowski described the satisfaction of individual needs, what a person derived by participating in a custom.

In the United States, where the shape of anthropology was set by the German-educated Franz Boas, the preference was for historical accounts. This approach had obvious problems, which Lévi-Strauss praises Boas for facing squarely. Historical information seldom is available for non-literate cultures. The anthropologist fills in with comparisons to other cultures and is forced to rely on theories that have no evidential basis, the old notion of universal stages of development or the claim that cultural resemblances are based on some unrecognized past contact between groups. Boas came to believe that no overall pattern in social development could be proven; for him, there was no single history, only histories.

There are three broad choices involved in the divergence of these schools; each had to decide:

  1. what kind of evidence to use;
  2. whether to emphasize the particulars of a single culture or look for patterns underlying all societies; and
  3. what the source of any underlying patterns might be, the definition of common humanity.

Social scientists in all traditions relied on cross-cultural studies,[citation needed] as it was always necessary to supplement information about a society with information about others. Thus, some idea of a common human nature was implicit in each approach. The critical distinction, then, remained twofold:

  • Does a social fact exist because it is functional for the social order, or because it is functional for the person?
  • Do uniformities across cultures occur because of organizational needs that must be met everywhere, or because of the uniform needs of human personality?

For Lévi-Strauss, the choice was for the demands of the social order. He had no difficulty bringing out the inconsistencies and triviality of individualistic accounts. Malinowski said, for example, that magic beliefs come into being when people need to feel a sense of control over events when the outcome is uncertain. In the Trobriand Islands, he found proof of this claim in the rites surrounding abortions and weaving skirts. But in the same tribes, there is no magic attached to making clay pots even though it is no more certain a business than weaving. So, the explanation is not consistent. Furthermore, these explanations tend to be used in an ad hoc, superficial way – one postulates a trait of personality when needed. However, the accepted way of discussing organizational function did not work either. Different societies might have institutions that were similar in many obvious ways and yet, served different functions. Many tribal cultures divide the tribe into two groups and have elaborate rules about how the two groups may interact. However, exactly what they may do—trade, intermarry—is different in different tribes; for that matter, so are the criteria for distinguishing the groups. Nor will it do to say that dividing in two is a universal need of organizations, because there are a lot of tribes that thrive without it.

For Lévi-Strauss, the methods of linguistics became a model for all his earlier examinations of society. His analogies usually are from phonology (though also later from music, mathematics, chaos theory, cybernetics, and so on). "A really scientific analysis must be real, simplifying, and explanatory," he writes.[35] Phonemic analysis reveals features that are real, in the sense that users of the language can recognize and respond to them. At the same time, a phoneme is an abstraction from language – not a sound, but a category of sound defined by the way it is distinguished from other categories through rules unique to the language. The entire sound structure of a language may be generated from a relatively small number of rules.

In the study of the kinship systems that first concerned him, this ideal of explanation allowed a comprehensive organization of data that partly had been ordered by other researchers. The overall goal was to find out why family relations differed among various South American cultures. The father might have great authority over the son in one group, for example, with the relationship rigidly restricted by taboos. In another group, the mother's brother would have that kind of relationship with the son, while the father's relationship was relaxed and playful.

A number of partial patterns had been noted. Relations between the mother and father, for example, had some sort of reciprocity with those of father and son– if the mother had a dominant social status and was formal with the father, for example, then the father usually had close relations with the son. But these smaller patterns joined in inconsistent ways. One possible way of finding a master order was to rate all the positions in a kinship system along several dimensions. For example, the father was older than the son, the father produced the son, the father had the same sex as the son, and so on; the matrilineal uncle was older and of the same sex, but did not produce the son, and so on. An exhaustive collection of such observations might cause an overall pattern to emerge.

However, for Lévi-Strauss, this kind of work was considered "analytical in appearance only". It results in a chart that is far more difficult to understand than the original data and is based on arbitrary abstractions (empirically, fathers are older than sons, but it is only the researcher who declares that this feature explains their relations). Furthermore, it does not explain anything. The explanation it offers is tautological—if age is crucial, then age explains a relationship. And it does not offer the possibility of inferring the origins of the structure.

A proper solution to the puzzle is to find a basic unit of kinship which can explain all the variations. It is a cluster of four roles – brother, sister, father, son. These are the roles that must be involved in any society that has an incest taboo requiring a man to obtain a wife from some man outside his own hereditary line.[clarification needed] A brother may give away his sister, for example, whose son might reciprocate in the next generation by allowing his sister to marry exogamously. The underlying demand is a continued circulation of women to keep various clans peacefully related.

Right or wrong, this solution displays the qualities of structural thinking. Even though Lévi-Strauss frequently speaks of treating culture as the product of the axioms and corollaries that underlie it, or the phonemic differences that constitute it, he is concerned with the objective data of field research. He notes that it is logically possible for a different atom of kinship structure to exist–sister, sister's brother, brother's wife, daughter – but there are no real-world examples of relationships that can be derived from that grouping. The trouble with this view has been shown by Australian anthropologist Augustus Elkin, who insisted on the point that in a four-class marriage system, the preferred marriage was with a classificatory mother's brother's daughter and never with the true one. Lévi-Strauss's atom of kinship structure deals only with consanguineal kin. There is a big difference between the two situations, in that the kinship structure involving the classificatory kin relations allows for the building of a system which can bring together thousands of people. Lévi-Strauss's atom of kinship stops working once the true MoBrDa is missing.[clarification needed] Lévi-Strauss also developed the concept of the house society to describe those societies where the domestic unit is more central to the social organization than the descent group or lineage.

The purpose of structuralist explanation is to organize real data in the simplest effective way. All science, he says, is either structuralist or reductionist.[36] In confronting such matters as the incest taboo, one is facing an objective limit of what the human mind has accepted so far. One could hypothesize some biological imperative underlying it, but so far as social order is concerned, the taboo has the effect of an irreducible fact. The social scientist can only work with the structures of human thought that arise from it. And structural explanations can be tested and refuted. A mere analytic scheme that wishes causal relations into existence is not structuralist in this sense.

Lévi-Strauss's later works are more controversial, in part because they impinge on the subject matter of other scholars. He believed that modern life and all history were founded on the same categories and transformations that he had discovered in the Brazilian backcountryThe Raw and the Cooked, From Honey to Ashes, The Naked Man (to borrow some titles from the Mythologiques). For instance, he compares anthropology to musical serialism and defends his "philosophical" approach. He also pointed out that the modern view of primitive cultures was simplistic in denying them a history. The categories of myth did not persist among them because nothing had happened–it was easy to find the evidence of defeat, migration, exile, and repeated displacements of all the kinds known to recorded history. Instead, the mythic categories had encompassed these changes.

He argued for a view of human life as existing in two timelines simultaneously, the eventful one of history and the long cycles in which one set of fundamental mythic patterns dominates and then perhaps another. In this respect, his work resembles that of Fernand Braudel, the historian of the Mediterranean and 'la longue durée,' the cultural outlook and forms of social organization that persisted for centuries around that sea. He is right in that history is difficult to build up in a non-literate society, nevertheless, Jean Guiart's anthropological and José Garanger's archaeological work in central Vanuatu, bringing to the fore the skeletons of former chiefs described in local myths, who had thus been living persons, shows that there can be some means of ascertaining the history of some groups which otherwise would be deemed a historical. Another issue is the experience that the same person can tell one a myth highly charged in symbols, and some years later a sort of chronological history claiming to be chronic of a descent line (e.g., in the Loyalty islands and New Zealand), the two texts having in common that they each deal in topographical detail with the land-tenure claims of the said descent line (see Douglas Oliver on the Siwai in Bougainville). Lévi-Strauss would agree to these aspects be explained inside his seminar but would never touch them on his own. The anthropological data content of the myths was not his problem. He was only interested in the formal aspects of each story, considered by him as the result of the workings of the collective unconscious of each group, which idea was taken from the linguists, but cannot be proved in any way although he was adamant about its existence and would never accept any discussion on this point.

Structuralist approach to myth edit

Similar to his anthropological theories, Lévi-Strauss identified myths as a type of speech through which a language could be discovered. His work is a structuralist theory of mythology which attempted to explain how seemingly fantastical and arbitrary tales could be so similar across cultures. Because he had the believe that there was no one "authentic" version of a myth, rather that they were all manifestations of the same language, he sought to find the fundamental units of myth, namely, the mytheme. Lévi-Strauss broke each of the versions of a myth down into a series of sentences, consisting of a relation between a function and a subject. Sentences with the same function were given the same number and bundled together. These are mythemes.[37]

What Lévi-Strauss believed he had discovered when he examined the relations between mythemes was that a myth consists of juxtaposed binary oppositions. Oedipus, for example, consists of the overrating of blood relations and the underrating of blood relations, the autochthonous origin of humans, and the denial of their autochthonous origin. Influenced by Hegel, Lévi-Strauss believed that the human mind thinks fundamentally in these binary oppositions and their unification (the thesis, antithesis, synthesis triad), and that these are what makes meaning possible.[38] Furthermore, he considered the job of myth to be a sleight of hand, an association of an irreconcilable binary opposition with a reconcilable binary opposition, creating the illusion, or belief, that the former had been resolved.[37]

Lévi-Strauss sees a basic paradox in the study of myth. On one hand, mythical stories are fantastic and unpredictable: the content of myth seems completely arbitrary. On the other hand, the myths of different cultures are surprisingly similar:[35]: 208 

On the one hand it would seem that in the course of a myth anything is likely to happen. ... But on the other hand, this apparent arbitrariness is belied by the astounding similarity between myths collected in widely different regions. Therefore the problem: If the content of myth is contingent [i.e., arbitrary], how are we to explain the fact that myths throughout the world are so similar?

Lévi-Strauss proposed that universal laws must govern mythical thought and resolve this seeming paradox, producing similar myths in different cultures. Each myth may seem unique, but he proposed it is just one particular instance of a universal law of human thought. In studying myth, Lévi-Strauss tries "to reduce apparently arbitrary data to some kind of order, and to attain a level at which a kind of necessity becomes apparent, underlying the illusions of liberty."[39] Laurie suggests that for Levi-Strauss, "operations embedded within animal myths provide opportunities to resolve collective problems of classification and hierarchy, marking lines between the inside and the outside, the Law and its exceptions, those who belong and those who do not."[40]

According to Lévi-Strauss, "mythical thought always progresses from the awareness of oppositions toward their resolution."[35]: 224  In other words, myths consist of:

  1. elements that oppose or contradict each other and
  2. other elements that "mediate", or resolve, those oppositions.

For example, Lévi-Strauss thinks the trickster of many Native American mythologies acts as a "mediator". Lévi-Strauss's argument hinges on two facts about the Native American trickster:

  1. the trickster has a contradictory and unpredictable personality;
  2. the trickster is almost always a raven or a coyote.

Lévi-Strauss argues that the raven and coyote "mediate" the opposition between life and death. The relationship between agriculture and hunting is analogous to the opposition between life and death: agriculture is solely concerned with producing life (at least up until harvest time); hunting is concerned with producing death. Furthermore, the relationship between herbivores and beasts of prey is analogous to the relationship between agriculture and hunting: like agriculture, herbivores are concerned with plants; like hunting, beasts of prey are concerned with catching meat. Lévi-Strauss points out that the raven and coyote eat carrion and are therefore halfway between herbivores and beasts of prey: like beasts of prey, they eat meat; like herbivores, they do not catch their food. Thus, he argues, "we have a mediating structure of the following type":[35]: 224 

 

By uniting herbivore traits with traits of beasts of prey, the raven and coyote somewhat reconcile herbivores and beasts of prey: in other words, they mediate the opposition between herbivores and beasts of prey. As we have seen, this opposition ultimately is analogous to the opposition between life and death. Therefore, the raven and coyote ultimately mediate the opposition between life and death. This, Lévi-Strauss believes, explains why the coyote and raven have contradictory personalities when they appear as the mythical trickster:

The trickster is a mediator. Since his mediating function occupies a position halfway between two polar terms, he must retain something of that duality—namely an ambiguous and equivocal character.[35]: 226 

Because the raven and coyote reconcile profoundly opposed concepts (i.e., life and death), their own mythical personalities must reflect this duality or contradiction: in other words, they must have a contradictory, "tricky" personality.

This theory about the structure of myth helps support Lévi-Strauss's more basic theory about human thought. According to this more basic theory, universal laws govern all areas of human thought:

If it were possible to prove in this instance, too, that the apparent arbitrariness of the mind, its supposedly spontaneous flow of inspiration, and its seemingly uncontrolled inventiveness [are ruled by] laws operating at a deeper level...if the human mind appears determined even in the realm of mythology, a fortiori it must also be determined in all its spheres of activity.[39]

Out of all the products of culture, myths seem the most fantastic and unpredictable. Therefore, Lévi-Strauss claims, that if even mythical thought obeys universal laws, then all human thought must obey universal laws.

The Savage Mind: bricoleur and engineer edit

Lévi-Strauss developed the comparison of the Bricoleur and Engineer in The Savage Mind.

Bricoleur has its origin in the old French verb bricoler, which originally referred to extraneous movements in ball games, billiards, hunting, shooting and riding, but which today means do-it-yourself building or repairing things with the tools and materials on hand, puttering or tinkering as it were. In comparison to the true craftsman, whom Lévi-Strauss calls the Engineer, the Bricoleur is adept at many tasks and at putting preexisting things together in new ways, adapting his project to a finite stock of materials and tools.

The Engineer deals with projects in their entirety, conceiving and procuring all the necessary materials and tools to suit his project. The Bricoleur approximates "the savage mind" and the Engineer approximates the scientific mind. Lévi-Strauss says that the universe of the Bricoleur is closed, and he often is forced to make do with whatever is at hand, whereas the universe of the Engineer is open in that he is able to create new tools and materials. However, both live within a restrictive reality, and so the Engineer is forced to consider the preexisting set of theoretical and practical knowledge, of technical means, in a similar way to the Bricoleur.

Criticism edit

Lévi-Strauss's theory on the origin of the Trickster has been criticized on a number of points by anthropologists.

Stanley Diamond notes that while the secular civilized often consider the concepts of life and death to be polar, primitive cultures often see them "as aspects of a single condition, the condition of existence."[41]: 308  Diamond remarks that Lévi-Strauss did not reach such a conclusion by inductive reasoning, but simply by working backwards from the evidence to the "a priori mediated concepts"[41]: 310  of "life" and "death", which he reached by assumption of a necessary progression from "life" to "agriculture" to "herbivorous animals", and from "death" to "warfare" to "beasts of prey". For that matter, the coyote is well known to hunt in addition to scavenging and the raven also has been known to act as a bird of prey, in contrast to Lévi-Strauss's conception. Nor does that conception explain why a scavenger such as a bear would never appear as the Trickster. Diamond further remarks that "the Trickster names 'raven' and 'coyote' which Lévi-Strauss explains can be arrived at with greater economy on the basis of, let us say, the cleverness of the animals involved, their ubiquity, elusiveness, capacity to make mischief, their undomesticated reflection of certain human traits."[41]: 311  Finally, Lévi-Strauss's analysis does not appear to be capable of explaining why representations of the Trickster in other areas of the world make use of such animals as the spider and mantis.

Edmund Leach wrote that "The outstanding characteristic of his writing, whether in French or English, is that it is difficult to understand; his sociological theories combine baffling complexity with overwhelming erudition. Some readers even suspect that they are being treated to a confidence trick."[42] Sociologist Stanislav Andreski criticized Lévi-Strauss's work generally, arguing that his scholarship was often sloppy and moreover that much of his mystique and reputation stemmed from his "threatening people with mathematics", a reference to Lévi-Strauss's use of quasi-algebraic equations to explain his ideas.[43] Drawing on postcolonial approaches to anthropology, Timothy Laurie has suggested that "Lévi-Strauss speaks from the vantage point of a State intent on securing knowledge for the purposes of, as he himself would often claim, salvaging local cultures...but the salvation workers also ascribe to themselves legitimacy and authority in the process."[44]

Personal life edit

He married Dina Dreyfus in 1932. They later divorced. He was then married to Rose Marie Ullmo from 1946 to 1954. They had one son, Laurent. His third and last wife was Monique Roman; they were married in 1954. They had one son, Matthieu.[45]

Honours and tributes edit

Ribbon bar Country Honour
  France Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour
  France Commandeur of the National Order of Merit
  France Commander of the Ordre des Palmes Académiques
  France Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres
  Belgium Commander of the Order of the Crown
  Brazil Commander of the Order of the Southern Cross
  Brazil Grand cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit
  Japan Grand cross of the Order of the Rising Sun

Works edit

  • 1926. Gracchus Babeuf et le communisme. L'églantine.
  • 1948. La Vie familiale et sociale des Indiens Nambikwara. Paris: Société des Américanistes.
  • 1949. Les Structures élémentaires de la parenté
    • The Elementary Structures of Kinship, translated by J. H. Bell, J. R. von Sturmer, and R. Needham. 1969.[46]
  • 1952. Race et histoire, (as part of the series The Race Question in Modern Science). UNESCO.[47]
  • 1955. "The Structural Study of Myth." Journal of American Folklore 68(270):428–44.[37]
  • 1955. Tristes Tropiques ['Sad Tropics'],
    • A World on the Wane, translated by J. Weightman and D. Weightman. 1973.
  • 1958. Anthropologie structurale
    • Structural Anthropology, translated by C. Jacobson and B. G. Schoepf. 1963.
  • 1962. Le Totemisme aujourdhui
    • Totemism, translated by R. Needham. 1963.
  • 1962. La Pensée sauvage
    • The Savage Mind. 1966.
  • 1964–1971. Mythologiques I–IV, translated by J. Weightman and D. Weightman.
    • 1964. Le Cru et le cuit (The Raw and the Cooked, 1969)
    • 1966. Du miel aux cendres (From Honey to Ashes, 1973)
    • 1968. L'Origine des manières de table (The Origin of Table Manners, 1978)
    • 1971. L'Homme nu (The Naked Man, 1981)
  • 1973. Anthropologie structurale deux
    • Structural Anthropology, Vol. II, translated by M. Layton. 1976
  • 1972. La Voie des masques
    • The Way of the Masks, translated by S. Modelski, 1982.
  • Lévi-Strauss, Claude (2005), Myth and Meaning, First published 1978 by Routledge & Kegan Paul, U.K, Taylor & Francis Group, ISBN 0-415-25548-1, retrieved 5 November 2010
  • 1978. Myth and Meaning. UK: Routledge & Kegan Paul.[48]
  • 1983. Le Regard éloigné
  • 1984. Paroles donnés
    • Anthropology and Myth: Lectures, 1951–1982, translated by R. Willis. 1987.
  • 1985. La Potière jalouse
    • The Jealous Potter, translated by B. Chorier. 1988.
  • 1991. Histoire de Lynx
    • The Story of Lynx, translated by C. Tihanyi. 1996.[49]
  • 1993. Regarder, écouter, lire
    • Look, Listen, Read, translated by B. Singer. 1997.
  • 1994. Saudades do Brasil. Paris: Plon.
  • 1994. Le Père Noël supplicié. Pin-Balma: Sables Éditions.
  • 2011. L'Anthropologie face aux problèmes du monde moderne. Paris: Seuil.
  • 2011. L'Autre face de la lune, Paris: Seuil.

Interviews edit

  • 1978. "Comment travaillent les écrivains," interviewed by Jean-Louis de Rambures. Paris.
  • 1988. "De près et de loin," interviewed by Didier Eribon (Conversations with Claude Lévi-Strauss, trans. Paula Wissing, 1991)
  • 2005. "Loin du Brésil," interviewed by Véronique Mortaigne, Paris, Chandeigne.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Claude Lévi-Strauss, "Introduction à l'oeuvre de Marcel Mauss" in Mauss, Sociologie et Anthropologie, Paris, 1950.
  2. ^ "Lévi-Strauss." Random House Webster's Unabridged Dictionary.
  3. ^ a b c Rothstein, Edward (3 November 2009). "Claude Lévi-Strauss dies at 100". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
  4. ^ a b Doland, Angela (4 November 2009). "Anthropology giant Claude Levi-Strauss dead at 100". Seattle Times. Associated Press. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  5. ^ "Claude Levi-Strauss, Scientist Who Saw Human Doom, Dies at 100". Bloomberg. 3 November 2009. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  6. ^ Briggs, Rachel; Meyer, Janelle. . Anthropological Theories: A Guide Prepared By Students For Students. Dept. of Anthropology, University of Alabama. Archived from the original on 27 November 2015. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  7. ^ (in Portuguese) "Claude Lévi-Strauss - Biografia". Uol Educação Brasil. Access date: 9 December 2009.
  8. ^ Ashbrook, Tom (November 2009). "Claude Levi-Strauss". On Point
  9. ^ a b c Loyer, Emmanuelle (18 January 2019). "Chapter 2: Revelations (1908–1924)". Lévi-Strauss: A Biography (3rd ed.). John Wiley & Sons. pp. 35–50. ISBN 978-1-5095-1201-0.
  10. ^ Voss, Susan M. (1977). "Claude Levi-Strauss: The Man and His Works". Nebraska Anthropologist. 3: 21–38.
  11. ^ Conversation with Jean José Marchand
  12. ^ Wiseman, p. 6
  13. ^ He writes: 'This casual attitude to the supernatural was all the more surprising for me... I lived during the First World War with my grandfather, who was Rabbi of Versailles. The house was attached to the synagogue by a long inner passage, along which it was difficult to venture without a feeling of anguish, and which in itself formed an impassable frontier between the profane world and that other which was lacking precisely in the human warmth that was a necessary precondition to its being experienced as sacred...'
    • Handelman, Susan A. (2012). Slayers of Moses, The: The Emergence of Rabbinic Interpretation in Modern Literary Theory. SUNY Press. p. 92. ISBN 978-1-4384-0564-3.
    • Levi-Strauss, Claude (2012). Tristes Tropiques. Penguin. ISBN 978-1-101-57560-4.
  14. ^ "Catherine Clément raconte le grand ethnologue qui fête ses 99 ans," interview, Le Journal du Dimanche, 25 November 2007
  15. ^ Loyer, Emmanuelle (2019). "Revolutions (1924–1931): Politics vs. Philosophy". Lévi-Strauss: A Biography. John Wiley & Sons. p. 67. ISBN 978-1-5095-1201-0. While himself an atheist, or at least an agnostic, he endorsed this messianic vision: 'Our task today is that of the prophet and martyr: to achieve within ourselves – and not just in our thoughts, but in our lives – a new order.'
  16. ^ "Personally, I've never been confronted with the question of God," says one such politely indifferent atheist, Dr. Claude Lévi-Strauss, professor of social anthropology at the Collège de France." Theology: Toward a Hidden God, Time.com.
  17. ^ a b Loyer, Emmanuelle (2019). "Revolutions (1924–1931): Politics vs. Philosophy". Lévi-Strauss: A Biography. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 51–71. ISBN 978-1-5095-1201-0.
  18. ^ "Claude Lévi-Strauss and the Influential Theory of Structuralism". ThoughtCo. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  19. ^ Jennings, Eric (June 2002). "Last Exit from Vichy France: The Martinique Escape Route and the Ambiguities of Emigration". The Journal of Modern History. 74 (2): 289–324. doi:10.1086/343409. S2CID 142116998.
  20. ^ Serge, Victor (2019). Notebooks: 1936-1947. New York Review Books. pp. 61–66.
  21. ^ Johnson, C. (2003). Claude Levi-Strauss: The Formative Years. Cambridge University Press. pp. 1, 92, 172.
  22. ^ Silverman, Sydel, ed. (2004). Totems and Teachers: Key Figures in the History of Anthropology. Rowman Altamira. p. 16. ISBN 9780759104600.
  23. ^ Moore, Jerry D. (2004). Visions of Culture: An Introduction to Anthropological Theories and Theorists. Rowman Altamira.
  24. ^ "Anthropologist Levi-Strauss dies". BBC. 3 November 2009. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  25. ^ . Euronews. 3 November 2009. Archived from the original on 8 November 2009. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  26. ^ "Claude Lévi-Strauss". The Daily Telegraph. 3 November 2009. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  27. ^ Davies, Lizzy (3 November 2009). "French anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss dies aged 100". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 November 2009.
  28. ^ Boon, James, and David Schneider. 1974. "Kinship vis-a-vis Myth Contrasts in Levi-Strauss' Approaches to Cross-Cultural Comparison." American Anthropologist (New Series) 76(4):799–817. JSTOR 674306/
  29. ^ . Académie française. Archived from the original on 31 March 2012.
  30. ^ "Claude Levi-Strauss (1908 - 2009)". Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 26 July 2015.
  31. ^ "Claude Levi-Strauss". www.nasonline.org. Retrieved 28 November 2022.
  32. ^ Moore, Jerry D. (2009). "Claude Levi-Strauss: Structuralism". Visions of Culture: An Introduction to Anthropologically Theories and Theorists. Walnut Creek, California: Altamira. pp. 231–247.
  33. ^ a b Phillips, John W. "Structural Linguistics and Anthropology". National University of Singapore.
  34. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1967). Structural Anthropology. Garden City, N.Y.: Anchor Books. pp. 37–46.
  35. ^ a b c d e Lévi-Strauss, Claude. [1958] 1963. Structural Anthropology, translated by C. Jacobson and B. G. Schoepf.
  36. ^ "Definition of reductionist | Dictionary.com". www.dictionary.com. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  37. ^ a b c Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1955. "The Structural Study of Myth 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine." Journal of American Folklore 68(270):428–44. doi:10.2307/536768. JSTOR 536768.
  38. ^ Unknown (7 July 2014). "G324: Advanced Media Portfolio 0188 0194 0217: Claude Levi-Strauss - Binary Opposites". G324. Retrieved 15 October 2022.
  39. ^ a b Lévi-Strauss, Claude. [1964] 1969. The Raw and the Cooked, translated by J. Weightman and D. Weightman. p. 10.
  40. ^ Laurie, Timothy (2015), "Becoming-Animal Is A Trap For Humans", Deleuze and the Non-Human, edited by H. Stark and J. Roffe.
  41. ^ a b c Diamond, Stanley (1974). In Search of the Primitive. New Brunswick: Transaction Books. ISBN 0-87855-045-3.
  42. ^ Leach, Edmund (1974), Claude Levi-Strauss (Revised ed.), New York: Viking Press, p. 3
  43. ^ Andreski, Stanislav (1972). The Social Sciences as Sorcery. Deutsch. p. 85. ISBN 9780233962269.
  44. ^ Laurie, Timothy (2012), "Epistemology as Politics and the Double-Bind of Border Thinking: Lévi-Strauss, Deleuze and Guattari, Mignolo", PORTAL: Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies, 9 (2): 1–20, doi:10.5130/portal.v9i2.1826, hdl:10453/44227
  45. ^ Bloch, Maurice (3 November 2009). "Claude Lévi-Strauss obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 March 2021.
  46. ^ Levi-Strauss, Claude. [1949] 1969. The Elementary Structures of Kinship [Les Structure Elementaries de la Parente], translated by J. H. Bell, J. R. von Sturmer, and R. Needham, edited by R. Needham.
  47. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude. 1952. Race and History, (The Race Question in Modern Science). UNESCO.
  48. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude. [1978] 2005. Myth and Meaning. UK: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-25548-1. Retrieved 5 November 2010.
  49. ^ Lévi-Strauss, Claude. [1991] 1996. The Story of Lynx, translated by C. Tihanyi. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-47471-2. Retrieved 5 November 2010.

Sources edit

  • Doja, Albert (2008): "Claude Lévi-Strauss at his Centennial: toward a future anthropology." Theory, Culture & Society 25(7/8):321–40. doi:10.1177/0263276408097810.
  • —— 2010. "Claude Lévi-Strauss (1908-2009): The apotheosis of heroic anthropology." Anthropology Today 26(5):18–23. doi:10.1111/j.1467-8322.2010.00758.x.
  • Leach, Edmund. 1970. Lévi-Strauss. Fontana/Collins ISBN 0-00-632255-7. .
  • Wiseman, Boris. 1998. Introducing Lévi-Strauss. Totem Books.
  • ——, ed. 2009. The Cambridge Companion to Lévi-Strauss. Cambridge University Press.

Further reading edit

  • Appiah, Kwame Anthony. 2020. "The Key to All Mythologies" (book review). The New York Review of Books 67(2):18–20.
    • This is a review of Emmanuelle Loyer, Lévi-Strauss: A Biography, translated by Ninon Vinsonneau and Jonathan Magidoff, Polity, 2019, 744 pp.; and Maurice Godelier, Claude Lévi-Strauss: A Critical Study of His Thought, translated from the French by Nora Scott, Verso, 2019, 540 pp.
    • Appiah concludes his review (p. 20): "Lévi-Strauss... was... an inspired interpreter, a brilliant reader.... When the landmarks of science succeed in advancing their subject, they need no longer be consulted: physicists don't study Newton; chemists don't pore over Lavoisier.... If some part of Lévi-Strauss's scholarly oeuvre survives, it will be because his scientific aspirations have not."
  • Descola, Philippe. 2009. "Claude Lévi-Strauss: a Career Spanning a Century." Pp. 36 in The Letter of the Collège de France 4.
  • Erlanger, Steven (28 November 2008). "100th-Birthday Tributes Pour in for Lévi-Strauss". The New York Times. Paris. Retrieved 22 April 2015.
  • Ginzburg, Carlo, Safran, Yehuda, Sherer Daniel. "An Interview with Carlo Ginzburg, by Yehuda Safran and Daniel Sherer." Potlatch 5 (2022), special issue on Carlo Ginzburg. Extensive discussion of Claude Lévi-Strauss.
  • Hénaff, Marcel (1998), Claude Lévi-Strauss and the Making of Structural Anthropology, Originally published 1991 as Claude Lévi-Strauss, translated by Baker), Mary, Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, ISBN 0-8166-2760-6, retrieved 5 November 2010
  • Pace, David (1983), Claude Levi-Strauss: The Bearer of Ashes, Boston, Massachusetts & London, UK: Routledge & Kegan Paul, ISBN 0-7100-9297-0, retrieved 5 November 2010
  • Taylor, Mark Kline (1986), Beyond Explanation: Religious Dimensions in Cultural Anthropology, Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press, ISBN 0-86554-165-5, retrieved 5 November 2010.
  • Wilcken, Patrick (2011), Claude Lévi-Strauss: The Poet in the Laboratory, London, UK: Bloomsbury, ISBN 978-0-7475-8362-2, retrieved 20 November 2011[permanent dead link]
  • "Claude Lévi-Strauss" (obituary). The Economist. 12 November 2009.

External links edit

  • What Lévi-Strauss owes to Amerindians, film directed by Edson Matarezio
  • Profile of Lévi-Strauss in The Nation
  • Various excerpts from Structural Anthropology at marxists.org
  • List of works by Claude Lévi-Strauss
  • Excerpts from La Pensée Sauvage
  • , 1991 – Super 16 Film
  • , 3 and 4 October 1984, UC Berkeley (audio file)
  • Examines the structural differences between barter and monetary commodity exchanges and oral and written linguistic exchanges
  • Claude Lévi-Strauss: Tristes Tropiques, in English, translated by John Russell, 1961
  • "Claude Lévi-Strauss, social constructivism and syllables across languages"
  • Claude Lévi-Strauss and his Mythologiques — An interdisciplinary internet project by scholars of the University of Hildesheim (Germany): http://www.mythologica.eu 22 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine

claude, lévi, strauss, lévi, strauss, redirects, here, clothing, manufacturer, levi, strauss, other, uses, levi, strauss, disambiguation, ɔː, klawd, strowss, french, klod, levi, stʁos, november, 1908, october, 2009, french, anthropologist, ethnologist, whose, . Levi Strauss redirects here For the clothing manufacturer see Levi Strauss For other uses see Levi Strauss disambiguation Claude Levi Strauss k l ɔː d ˈ l eɪ v i ˈ s t r aʊ s klawd LAY vee STROWSS 2 French klod levi stʁos 28 November 1908 30 October 2009 3 4 5 was a French anthropologist and ethnologist whose work was key in the development of the theories of structuralism and structural anthropology 6 He held the chair of Social Anthropology at the College de France between 1959 and 1982 was elected a member of the Academie francaise in 1973 and was a member of the School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences in Paris He received numerous honours from universities and institutions throughout the world Claude Levi StraussLevi Strauss in 2005Born 1908 11 28 28 November 1908Brussels BelgiumDied30 October 2009 2009 10 30 aged 100 Paris FranceNationalityFrenchEducationUniversity of Paris DrE 1948 SpousesDina Dreyfus m 1932 divorced wbr Rose Marie Ullmo m 1946 div 1954 wbr Monique Roman m 1954 wbr SchoolStructuralismInstitutionsEcole pratique des hautes etudes later Ecole des hautes etudes en sciences sociales College de FranceMain interestsAnthropologySocietyLinguisticsKinshipNotable ideasStructuralismMythographyStructuralist theory of mythologyCulinary triangleBricolageMythemeAlliance theoryFloating signifier 1 SignatureLevi Strauss argued that the savage mind had the same structures as the civilized mind and that human characteristics are the same everywhere 7 8 These observations culminated in his famous book Tristes Tropiques 1955 which established his position as one of the central figures in the structuralist school of thought As well as sociology his ideas reached into many fields in the humanities including philosophy Structuralism has been defined as the search for the underlying patterns of thought in all forms of human activity 4 He won the 1986 International Nonino Prize in Italy Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Early career 1 2 1 Expatriation 1 3 Later life and death 2 Career and development of structural anthropology 3 The Savage Mind 4 Mythologiques 5 Anthropological theories 6 Structuralist approach to myth 7 The Savage Mind bricoleur and engineer 7 1 Criticism 8 Personal life 9 Honours and tributes 10 Works 10 1 Interviews 11 See also 12 References 12 1 Sources 13 Further reading 14 External linksBiography editEarly life and education edit Gustave Claude Levi Strauss was born in 1908 to French Jewish turned agnostic parents who were living in Brussels where his father was working as a portrait painter at the time 9 10 11 He grew up in Paris living on a street of the upscale 16th arrondissement named after the artist Claude Lorrain whose work he admired and later wrote about 12 During the First World War from age 6 to 10 he lived with his maternal grandfather who was the Rabbi of Versailles 9 13 14 Despite his religious environment early on Claude Levi Strauss was an atheist or agnostic at least in his adult life 15 16 From 1918 to 1925 he studied at Lycee Janson de Sailly high school receiving a baccalaureate in June 1925 age of 16 9 In his last year 1924 he was introduced to philosophy including the works of Marx and Kant and began shifting to the political left however unlike many other socialists he never became communist 17 From 1925 he spent the next two years at the prestigious Lycee Condorcet preparing for the entrance exam to the highly selective Ecole normale superieure However for reasons that are not entirely clear he decided not to take the exam In 1926 he went to Sorbonne in Paris studying law and philosophy as well as engaging in socialist politics and activism In 1929 he opted for philosophy over law which he found boring and from 1930 to 1931 put politics aside to focus on preparing for the agregation in philosophy in order to qualify as a professor In 1931 he passed the agregation coming in 3rd place and youngest in his class at age 22 By this time the Great Depression had hit France and Levi Strauss found himself needing to provide not only for himself but his parents as well 17 Early career edit In 1935 after a few years of secondary school teaching he took up a last minute offer to be part of a French cultural mission to Brazil in which he would serve as a visiting professor of sociology at the University of Sao Paulo while his then wife Dina served as a visiting professor of ethnology The couple lived and did their anthropological work in Brazil from 1935 to 1939 During this time while he was a visiting professor of sociology Claude undertook his only ethnographic fieldwork He accompanied Dina a trained ethnographer in her own right who was also a visiting professor at the University of Sao Paulo where they conducted research forays into the Mato Grosso and the Amazon Rainforest They first studied the Guaycuru and Bororo Indian tribes staying among them for a few days In 1938 they returned for a second more than half year long expedition to study the Nambikwara and Tupi Kawahib societies At this time his wife had an eye infection that prevented her from completing the study which he concluded This experience cemented Levi Strauss s professional identity as an anthropologist Edmund Leach suggests from Levi Strauss s own accounts in Tristes Tropiques that he could not have spent more than a few weeks in any one place and was never able to converse easily with any of his native informants in their native language which is uncharacteristic of anthropological research methods of participatory interaction with subjects to gain a full understanding of a culture In the 1980s he discussed why he became vegetarian in pieces published in Italian daily newspaper La Repubblica and other publications anthologized in the posthumous book Nous sommes tous des cannibales 2013 A day will come when the thought that to feed themselves men of the past raised and massacred living beings and complacently exposed their shredded flesh in displays shall no doubt inspire the same repulsion as that of the travellers of the 16th and 17th century facing cannibal meals of savage American primitives in America Oceania Asia or Africa Expatriation edit Levi Strauss returned to France in 1939 to take part in the war effort and was assigned as a liaison agent to the Maginot Line After the French capitulation in 1940 he was employed at a lycee in Montpellier but then was dismissed under the Vichy racial laws Levi Strauss s family originally from Alsace was of Jewish ancestry By the same laws he was denaturalized of his French citizenship and forced to escape persecution 18 Around that time he and his first wife separated She stayed behind and worked in the French resistance while he managed to escape Vichy France by boat to Martinique 19 from where he was finally able to continue travelling Victor Serge describes conversations with Levi Strauss aboard the freighter Capitaine Paul Lemerle from Marseilles to Martinique in his Notebooks 20 In 1941 he was offered a position at the New School for Social Research in New York City and granted admission to the United States A series of voyages brought him via South America to Puerto Rico where he was investigated by the FBI after German letters in his luggage aroused the suspicions of customs agents Levi Strauss spent most of the war in New York City Along with Jacques Maritain Henri Focillon and Roman Jakobson he was a founding member of the Ecole Libre des Hautes Etudes a sort of university in exile for French academics The war years in New York were formative for Levi Strauss in several ways His relationship with Jakobson helped shape his theoretical outlook Jakobson and Levi Strauss are considered to be two of the central figures on which structuralist thought is based 21 In addition Levi Strauss was also exposed to the American anthropology espoused by Franz Boas who taught at Columbia University In 1942 while having dinner at the Faculty House at Columbia Boas died in Levi Strauss s arms 22 This intimate association with Boas gave his early work a distinctive American inclination that helped facilitate its acceptance in the U S After a brief stint from 1946 to 1947 as a cultural attache to the French embassy in Washington DC Levi Strauss returned to Paris in 1948 At this time he received his state doctorate from the Sorbonne by submitting in the French tradition both a major and a minor doctoral thesis These were La vie familiale et sociale des indiens Nambikwara The Family and Social Life of the Nambikwara Indians and Les structures elementaires de la parente The Elementary Structures of Kinship 23 234 Later life and death edit nbsp Wikinews has related news French structuralist Claude Levi Strauss dies at age 100 In 2008 he became the first member of the Academie francaise to reach the age of 100 and one of the few living authors to have his works published in the Bibliotheque de la Pleiade On the death of Maurice Druon on 14 April 2009 he became the Dean of the Academie its longest serving member He died on 30 October 2009 a few weeks before his 101st birthday 3 The death was announced four days later 3 French President Nicolas Sarkozy described him as one of the greatest ethnologists of all time 24 Bernard Kouchner the French Foreign Minister said Levi Strauss broke with an ethnocentric vision of history and humanity At a time when we are trying to give meaning to globalization to build a fairer and more humane world I would like Claude Levi Strauss s universal echo to resonate more strongly 25 In a similar vein a statement by Levi Strauss was broadcast on National Public Radio in the remembrance produced by All Things Considered on 3 November 2009 There is today a frightful disappearance of living species be they plants or animals And it s clear that the density of human beings has become so great if I can say so that they have begun to poison themselves And the world which I am finishing my existence is no longer a world that I like citation needed The Daily Telegraph said in its obituary that Levi Strauss was one of the dominating postwar influences in French intellectual life and the leading exponent of Structuralism in the social sciences 26 Permanent secretary of the Academie francaise Helene Carrere d Encausse said He was a thinker a philosopher We will not find another like him 27 Career and development of structural anthropology editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Elementary Structures of Kinship was published in 1949 and quickly came to be regarded as one of the most important anthropological works on kinship It was even reviewed favorably by Simone de Beauvoir who saw it as an important statement of the position of women in non Western cultures A play on the title of Durkheim s famous Elementary Forms of the Religious Life Levi Strauss Elementary Structures re examined how people organized their families by examining the logical structures that underlay relationships rather than their contents While British anthropologists such as Alfred Reginald Radcliffe Brown argued that kinship was based on descent from a common ancestor Levi Strauss argued that kinship was based on the alliance between two families that formed when women from one group married men from another 28 Throughout the late 1940s and early 1950s Levi Strauss continued to publish and experienced considerable professional success On his return to France he became involved with the administration of the CNRS and the Musee de l Homme before finally becoming a professor directeur d etudes of the fifth section of the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes the Religious Sciences section where Marcel Mauss was previously professor the title of which chair he renamed Comparative Religion of Non Literate Peoples While Levi Strauss was well known in academic circles in 1955 he became one of France s best known intellectuals by publishing Tristes Tropiques in Paris that year by Plon best known translated into English in 1973 published by Penguin Essentially this book was a memoir detailing his time as a French expatriate throughout the 1930s and his travels Levi Strauss combined exquisitely beautiful prose dazzling philosophical meditation and ethnographic analysis of the Amazonian peoples to produce a masterpiece The organizers of the Prix Goncourt for instance lamented that they were not able to award Levi Strauss the prize because Tristes Tropiques was nonfiction citation needed Levi Strauss was named to a chair in social anthropology at the College de France in 1959 At roughly the same time he published Structural Anthropology a collection of his essays that provided both examples and programmatic statements about structuralism At the same time as he was laying the groundwork for an intellectual program he began a series of institutions to establish anthropology as a discipline in France including the Laboratory for Social Anthropology where new students could be trained and a new journal l Homme for publishing the results of their research The Savage Mind editIn 1962 Levi Strauss published what is for many people his most important work La Pensee Sauvage translated into English as The Savage Mind and later as Wild Thought The French title is an untranslatable pun as the word pensee means both thought and pansy while sauvage has a range of meanings different from English savage Levi Strauss supposedly suggested that the English title be Pansies for Thought borrowing from a speech by Ophelia in Shakespeare s Hamlet Act IV Scene V French editions of La Pensee Sauvage are often printed with an image of wild pansies on the cover The Savage Mind discusses not just primitive thought a category defined by previous anthropologists but also forms of thought common to all human beings The first half of the book lays out Levi Strauss s theory of culture and mind while the second half expands this account into a theory of history and social change This latter part of the book engaged Levi Strauss in a heated debate with Jean Paul Sartre over the nature of human freedom On the one hand Sartre s existentialist philosophy committed him to a position that human beings fundamentally were free to act as they pleased On the other hand Sartre also was a leftist who was committed to ideas such as that individuals were constrained by the ideologies imposed on them by the powerful Levi Strauss presented his structuralist notion of agency in opposition to Sartre Echoes of this debate between structuralism and existentialism eventually inspired the work of younger authors such as Pierre Bourdieu Mythologiques editNow a worldwide celebrity Levi Strauss spent the second half of the 1960s working on his master project a four volume study called Mythologiques In it he followed a single myth from the tip of South America and all of its variations from group to group north through Central America and eventually into the Arctic Circle thus tracing the myth s cultural evolution from one end of the Western Hemisphere to the other He accomplished this in a typically structuralist way examining the underlying structure of relationships among the elements of the story rather than focusing on the content of the story itself While Pensee Sauvage was a statement of Levi Strauss s big picture theory Mythologiques was an extended four volume example of analysis Richly detailed and extremely long it is less widely read than the much shorter and more accessible Pensee Sauvage despite its position as Levi Strauss s masterwork nbsp Claude Levi Strauss receiving the Erasmus Prize 1973 Levi Strauss completed the final volume of Mythologiques in 1971 On 14 May 1973 he was elected to the Academie francaise France s highest honour for a writer 29 He was a member of other notable academies worldwide including the American Academy of Arts and Letters In 1956 he became foreign member of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences 30 He then became a member of the American Philosophical Society in 1960 and the United States National Academy of Sciences in 1967 31 He received the Erasmus Prize in 1973 the Meister Eckhart Prize for philosophy in 2003 and several honorary doctorates from universities such as Oxford Harvard Yale and Columbia He also was the recipient of the Grand croix de la Legion d honneur was a Commandeur de l ordre national du Merite and Commandeur des Arts et des Lettres In 2005 he received the XVII Premi Internacional Catalunya Generalitat of Catalonia After his retirement he continued to publish occasional meditations on art music philosophy and poetry Anthropological theories editThis section has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message This section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed May 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Levi Strauss sought to apply the structural linguistics of Ferdinand de Saussure to anthropology 32 At the time the family was traditionally considered the fundamental object of analysis but was seen primarily as a self contained unit consisting of a husband a wife and their children Nephews cousins aunts uncles and grandparents all were treated as secondary Levi Strauss argued that akin to Saussure s notion of linguistic value families acquire determinate identities only through relations with one another Thus he inverted the classical view of anthropology putting the secondary family members first and insisting on analyzing the relations between units instead of the units themselves 33 nbsp A diagram illustrating Levi Strauss s theory of kinship In such a case one can infer that D is positive In his own analysis of the formation of the identities that arise through marriages between tribes Levi Strauss noted that the relation between the uncle and the nephew was to the relation between brother and sister as the relation between father and son is to that between husband and wife 34 that is A is to B as C is to D Therefore if we know A B and C we can predict D An example of this law is illustrated in the diagram The four relation units are marked with A to D Levi Strauss noted that if A is positive B is negative and C is negative then it can inferred that D is positive thereby satisfying the constraint A is to B as C is to D in this case the relations are contrasting The goal of Levi Strauss s structural anthropology then was to simplify the masses of empirical data into generalized comprehensible relations between units which allow for predictive laws to be identified such as A is to B as C is to D 33 Levi Strauss s theory is set forth in Structural Anthropology 1958 Briefly he considers culture a system of symbolic communication to be investigated with methods that others have used more narrowly in the discussion of novels political speeches sports and movies His reasoning makes the best sense when contrasted against the background of an earlier generation s social theory He wrote about this relationship for decades A preference for functionalist explanations dominated the social sciences from the turn of the 20th century through the 1950s which is to say that anthropologists and sociologists tried to state the purpose of a social act or institution The existence of a thing was explained if it fulfilled a function The only strong alternative to that kind of analysis was a historical explanation accounting for the existence of a social fact by stating how it came to be The idea of social function developed in two different ways however The English anthropologist Alfred Reginald Radcliffe Brown who had read and admired the work of the French sociologist Emile Durkheim argued that the goal of anthropological research was to find the collective function such as what a religious creed or a set of rules about marriage did for the social order as a whole Behind this approach was an old idea the view that civilization developed through a series of phases from the primitive to the modern everywhere in the same manner All of the activities in a given kind of society would partake of the same character some sort of internal logic would cause one level of culture to evolve into the next On this view a society can easily be thought of as an organism the parts functioning together as do the parts of a body In contrast the more influential functionalism of Bronislaw Malinowski described the satisfaction of individual needs what a person derived by participating in a custom In the United States where the shape of anthropology was set by the German educated Franz Boas the preference was for historical accounts This approach had obvious problems which Levi Strauss praises Boas for facing squarely Historical information seldom is available for non literate cultures The anthropologist fills in with comparisons to other cultures and is forced to rely on theories that have no evidential basis the old notion of universal stages of development or the claim that cultural resemblances are based on some unrecognized past contact between groups Boas came to believe that no overall pattern in social development could be proven for him there was no single history only histories There are three broad choices involved in the divergence of these schools each had to decide what kind of evidence to use whether to emphasize the particulars of a single culture or look for patterns underlying all societies and what the source of any underlying patterns might be the definition of common humanity Social scientists in all traditions relied on cross cultural studies citation needed as it was always necessary to supplement information about a society with information about others Thus some idea of a common human nature was implicit in each approach The critical distinction then remained twofold Does a social fact exist because it is functional for the social order or because it is functional for the person Do uniformities across cultures occur because of organizational needs that must be met everywhere or because of the uniform needs of human personality For Levi Strauss the choice was for the demands of the social order He had no difficulty bringing out the inconsistencies and triviality of individualistic accounts Malinowski said for example that magic beliefs come into being when people need to feel a sense of control over events when the outcome is uncertain In the Trobriand Islands he found proof of this claim in the rites surrounding abortions and weaving skirts But in the same tribes there is no magic attached to making clay pots even though it is no more certain a business than weaving So the explanation is not consistent Furthermore these explanations tend to be used in an ad hoc superficial way one postulates a trait of personality when needed However the accepted way of discussing organizational function did not work either Different societies might have institutions that were similar in many obvious ways and yet served different functions Many tribal cultures divide the tribe into two groups and have elaborate rules about how the two groups may interact However exactly what they may do trade intermarry is different in different tribes for that matter so are the criteria for distinguishing the groups Nor will it do to say that dividing in two is a universal need of organizations because there are a lot of tribes that thrive without it For Levi Strauss the methods of linguistics became a model for all his earlier examinations of society His analogies usually are from phonology though also later from music mathematics chaos theory cybernetics and so on A really scientific analysis must be real simplifying and explanatory he writes 35 Phonemic analysis reveals features that are real in the sense that users of the language can recognize and respond to them At the same time a phoneme is an abstraction from language not a sound but a category of sound defined by the way it is distinguished from other categories through rules unique to the language The entire sound structure of a language may be generated from a relatively small number of rules In the study of the kinship systems that first concerned him this ideal of explanation allowed a comprehensive organization of data that partly had been ordered by other researchers The overall goal was to find out why family relations differed among various South American cultures The father might have great authority over the son in one group for example with the relationship rigidly restricted by taboos In another group the mother s brother would have that kind of relationship with the son while the father s relationship was relaxed and playful A number of partial patterns had been noted Relations between the mother and father for example had some sort of reciprocity with those of father and son if the mother had a dominant social status and was formal with the father for example then the father usually had close relations with the son But these smaller patterns joined in inconsistent ways One possible way of finding a master order was to rate all the positions in a kinship system along several dimensions For example the father was older than the son the father produced the son the father had the same sex as the son and so on the matrilineal uncle was older and of the same sex but did not produce the son and so on An exhaustive collection of such observations might cause an overall pattern to emerge However for Levi Strauss this kind of work was considered analytical in appearance only It results in a chart that is far more difficult to understand than the original data and is based on arbitrary abstractions empirically fathers are older than sons but it is only the researcher who declares that this feature explains their relations Furthermore it does not explain anything The explanation it offers is tautological if age is crucial then age explains a relationship And it does not offer the possibility of inferring the origins of the structure A proper solution to the puzzle is to find a basic unit of kinship which can explain all the variations It is a cluster of four roles brother sister father son These are the roles that must be involved in any society that has an incest taboo requiring a man to obtain a wife from some man outside his own hereditary line clarification needed A brother may give away his sister for example whose son might reciprocate in the next generation by allowing his sister to marry exogamously The underlying demand is a continued circulation of women to keep various clans peacefully related Right or wrong this solution displays the qualities of structural thinking Even though Levi Strauss frequently speaks of treating culture as the product of the axioms and corollaries that underlie it or the phonemic differences that constitute it he is concerned with the objective data of field research He notes that it is logically possible for a different atom of kinship structure to exist sister sister s brother brother s wife daughter but there are no real world examples of relationships that can be derived from that grouping The trouble with this view has been shown by Australian anthropologist Augustus Elkin who insisted on the point that in a four class marriage system the preferred marriage was with a classificatory mother s brother s daughter and never with the true one Levi Strauss s atom of kinship structure deals only with consanguineal kin There is a big difference between the two situations in that the kinship structure involving the classificatory kin relations allows for the building of a system which can bring together thousands of people Levi Strauss s atom of kinship stops working once the true MoBrDa is missing clarification needed Levi Strauss also developed the concept of the house society to describe those societies where the domestic unit is more central to the social organization than the descent group or lineage The purpose of structuralist explanation is to organize real data in the simplest effective way All science he says is either structuralist or reductionist 36 In confronting such matters as the incest taboo one is facing an objective limit of what the human mind has accepted so far One could hypothesize some biological imperative underlying it but so far as social order is concerned the taboo has the effect of an irreducible fact The social scientist can only work with the structures of human thought that arise from it And structural explanations can be tested and refuted A mere analytic scheme that wishes causal relations into existence is not structuralist in this sense Levi Strauss s later works are more controversial in part because they impinge on the subject matter of other scholars He believed that modern life and all history were founded on the same categories and transformations that he had discovered in the Brazilian backcountry The Raw and the Cooked From Honey to Ashes The Naked Man to borrow some titles from the Mythologiques For instance he compares anthropology to musical serialism and defends his philosophical approach He also pointed out that the modern view of primitive cultures was simplistic in denying them a history The categories of myth did not persist among them because nothing had happened it was easy to find the evidence of defeat migration exile and repeated displacements of all the kinds known to recorded history Instead the mythic categories had encompassed these changes He argued for a view of human life as existing in two timelines simultaneously the eventful one of history and the long cycles in which one set of fundamental mythic patterns dominates and then perhaps another In this respect his work resembles that of Fernand Braudel the historian of the Mediterranean and la longue duree the cultural outlook and forms of social organization that persisted for centuries around that sea He is right in that history is difficult to build up in a non literate society nevertheless Jean Guiart s anthropological and Jose Garanger s archaeological work in central Vanuatu bringing to the fore the skeletons of former chiefs described in local myths who had thus been living persons shows that there can be some means of ascertaining the history of some groups which otherwise would be deemed a historical Another issue is the experience that the same person can tell one a myth highly charged in symbols and some years later a sort of chronological history claiming to be chronic of a descent line e g in the Loyalty islands and New Zealand the two texts having in common that they each deal in topographical detail with the land tenure claims of the said descent line see Douglas Oliver on the Siwai in Bougainville Levi Strauss would agree to these aspects be explained inside his seminar but would never touch them on his own The anthropological data content of the myths was not his problem He was only interested in the formal aspects of each story considered by him as the result of the workings of the collective unconscious of each group which idea was taken from the linguists but cannot be proved in any way although he was adamant about its existence and would never accept any discussion on this point Structuralist approach to myth editMain article Structuralist theory of mythology Similar to his anthropological theories Levi Strauss identified myths as a type of speech through which a language could be discovered His work is a structuralist theory of mythology which attempted to explain how seemingly fantastical and arbitrary tales could be so similar across cultures Because he had the believe that there was no one authentic version of a myth rather that they were all manifestations of the same language he sought to find the fundamental units of myth namely the mytheme Levi Strauss broke each of the versions of a myth down into a series of sentences consisting of a relation between a function and a subject Sentences with the same function were given the same number and bundled together These are mythemes 37 What Levi Strauss believed he had discovered when he examined the relations between mythemes was that a myth consists of juxtaposed binary oppositions Oedipus for example consists of the overrating of blood relations and the underrating of blood relations the autochthonous origin of humans and the denial of their autochthonous origin Influenced by Hegel Levi Strauss believed that the human mind thinks fundamentally in these binary oppositions and their unification the thesis antithesis synthesis triad and that these are what makes meaning possible 38 Furthermore he considered the job of myth to be a sleight of hand an association of an irreconcilable binary opposition with a reconcilable binary opposition creating the illusion or belief that the former had been resolved 37 Levi Strauss sees a basic paradox in the study of myth On one hand mythical stories are fantastic and unpredictable the content of myth seems completely arbitrary On the other hand the myths of different cultures are surprisingly similar 35 208 On the one hand it would seem that in the course of a myth anything is likely to happen But on the other hand this apparent arbitrariness is belied by the astounding similarity between myths collected in widely different regions Therefore the problem If the content of myth is contingent i e arbitrary how are we to explain the fact that myths throughout the world are so similar Levi Strauss proposed that universal laws must govern mythical thought and resolve this seeming paradox producing similar myths in different cultures Each myth may seem unique but he proposed it is just one particular instance of a universal law of human thought In studying myth Levi Strauss tries to reduce apparently arbitrary data to some kind of order and to attain a level at which a kind of necessity becomes apparent underlying the illusions of liberty 39 Laurie suggests that for Levi Strauss operations embedded within animal myths provide opportunities to resolve collective problems of classification and hierarchy marking lines between the inside and the outside the Law and its exceptions those who belong and those who do not 40 According to Levi Strauss mythical thought always progresses from the awareness of oppositions toward their resolution 35 224 In other words myths consist of elements that oppose or contradict each other and other elements that mediate or resolve those oppositions For example Levi Strauss thinks the trickster of many Native American mythologies acts as a mediator Levi Strauss s argument hinges on two facts about the Native American trickster the trickster has a contradictory and unpredictable personality the trickster is almost always a raven or a coyote Levi Strauss argues that the raven and coyote mediate the opposition between life and death The relationship between agriculture and hunting is analogous to the opposition between life and death agriculture is solely concerned with producing life at least up until harvest time hunting is concerned with producing death Furthermore the relationship between herbivores and beasts of prey is analogous to the relationship between agriculture and hunting like agriculture herbivores are concerned with plants like hunting beasts of prey are concerned with catching meat Levi Strauss points out that the raven and coyote eat carrion and are therefore halfway between herbivores and beasts of prey like beasts of prey they eat meat like herbivores they do not catch their food Thus he argues we have a mediating structure of the following type 35 224 nbsp By uniting herbivore traits with traits of beasts of prey the raven and coyote somewhat reconcile herbivores and beasts of prey in other words they mediate the opposition between herbivores and beasts of prey As we have seen this opposition ultimately is analogous to the opposition between life and death Therefore the raven and coyote ultimately mediate the opposition between life and death This Levi Strauss believes explains why the coyote and raven have contradictory personalities when they appear as the mythical trickster The trickster is a mediator Since his mediating function occupies a position halfway between two polar terms he must retain something of that duality namely an ambiguous and equivocal character 35 226 Because the raven and coyote reconcile profoundly opposed concepts i e life and death their own mythical personalities must reflect this duality or contradiction in other words they must have a contradictory tricky personality This theory about the structure of myth helps support Levi Strauss s more basic theory about human thought According to this more basic theory universal laws govern all areas of human thought If it were possible to prove in this instance too that the apparent arbitrariness of the mind its supposedly spontaneous flow of inspiration and its seemingly uncontrolled inventiveness are ruled by laws operating at a deeper level if the human mind appears determined even in the realm of mythology a fortiori it must also be determined in all its spheres of activity 39 Out of all the products of culture myths seem the most fantastic and unpredictable Therefore Levi Strauss claims that if even mythical thought obeys universal laws then all human thought must obey universal laws The Savage Mind bricoleur and engineer editLevi Strauss developed the comparison of the Bricoleur and Engineer in The Savage Mind Bricoleur has its origin in the old French verb bricoler which originally referred to extraneous movements in ball games billiards hunting shooting and riding but which today means do it yourself building or repairing things with the tools and materials on hand puttering or tinkering as it were In comparison to the true craftsman whom Levi Strauss calls the Engineer the Bricoleur is adept at many tasks and at putting preexisting things together in new ways adapting his project to a finite stock of materials and tools The Engineer deals with projects in their entirety conceiving and procuring all the necessary materials and tools to suit his project The Bricoleur approximates the savage mind and the Engineer approximates the scientific mind Levi Strauss says that the universe of the Bricoleur is closed and he often is forced to make do with whatever is at hand whereas the universe of the Engineer is open in that he is able to create new tools and materials However both live within a restrictive reality and so the Engineer is forced to consider the preexisting set of theoretical and practical knowledge of technical means in a similar way to the Bricoleur Criticism edit Levi Strauss s theory on the origin of the Trickster has been criticized on a number of points by anthropologists Stanley Diamond notes that while the secular civilized often consider the concepts of life and death to be polar primitive cultures often see them as aspects of a single condition the condition of existence 41 308 Diamond remarks that Levi Strauss did not reach such a conclusion by inductive reasoning but simply by working backwards from the evidence to the a priori mediated concepts 41 310 of life and death which he reached by assumption of a necessary progression from life to agriculture to herbivorous animals and from death to warfare to beasts of prey For that matter the coyote is well known to hunt in addition to scavenging and the raven also has been known to act as a bird of prey in contrast to Levi Strauss s conception Nor does that conception explain why a scavenger such as a bear would never appear as the Trickster Diamond further remarks that the Trickster names raven and coyote which Levi Strauss explains can be arrived at with greater economy on the basis of let us say the cleverness of the animals involved their ubiquity elusiveness capacity to make mischief their undomesticated reflection of certain human traits 41 311 Finally Levi Strauss s analysis does not appear to be capable of explaining why representations of the Trickster in other areas of the world make use of such animals as the spider and mantis Edmund Leach wrote that The outstanding characteristic of his writing whether in French or English is that it is difficult to understand his sociological theories combine baffling complexity with overwhelming erudition Some readers even suspect that they are being treated to a confidence trick 42 Sociologist Stanislav Andreski criticized Levi Strauss s work generally arguing that his scholarship was often sloppy and moreover that much of his mystique and reputation stemmed from his threatening people with mathematics a reference to Levi Strauss s use of quasi algebraic equations to explain his ideas 43 Drawing on postcolonial approaches to anthropology Timothy Laurie has suggested that Levi Strauss speaks from the vantage point of a State intent on securing knowledge for the purposes of as he himself would often claim salvaging local cultures but the salvation workers also ascribe to themselves legitimacy and authority in the process 44 Personal life editHe married Dina Dreyfus in 1932 They later divorced He was then married to Rose Marie Ullmo from 1946 to 1954 They had one son Laurent His third and last wife was Monique Roman they were married in 1954 They had one son Matthieu 45 Honours and tributes editRibbon bar Country Honour nbsp France Grand Cross of the National Order of the Legion of Honour nbsp France Commandeur of the National Order of Merit nbsp France Commander of the Ordre des Palmes Academiques nbsp France Commander of the Ordre des Arts et des Lettres nbsp Belgium Commander of the Order of the Crown nbsp Brazil Commander of the Order of the Southern Cross nbsp Brazil Grand cross of the National Order of Scientific Merit nbsp Japan Grand cross of the Order of the Rising SunWorks edit1926 Gracchus Babeuf et le communisme L eglantine 1948 La Vie familiale et sociale des Indiens Nambikwara Paris Societe des Americanistes 1949 Les Structures elementaires de la parente The Elementary Structures of Kinship translated by J H Bell J R von Sturmer and R Needham 1969 46 1952 Race et histoire as part of the series The Race Question in Modern Science UNESCO 47 1955 The Structural Study of Myth Journal of American Folklore 68 270 428 44 37 1955 Tristes Tropiques Sad Tropics A World on the Wane translated by J Weightman and D Weightman 1973 1958 Anthropologie structurale Structural Anthropology translated by C Jacobson and B G Schoepf 1963 1962 Le Totemisme aujourdhui Totemism translated by R Needham 1963 1962 La Pensee sauvage The Savage Mind 1966 1964 1971 Mythologiques I IV translated by J Weightman and D Weightman 1964 Le Cru et le cuit The Raw and the Cooked 1969 1966 Du miel aux cendres From Honey to Ashes 1973 1968 L Origine des manieres de table The Origin of Table Manners 1978 1971 L Homme nu The Naked Man 1981 1973 Anthropologie structurale deux Structural Anthropology Vol II translated by M Layton 1976 1972 La Voie des masques The Way of the Masks translated by S Modelski 1982 Levi Strauss Claude 2005 Myth and Meaning First published 1978 by Routledge amp Kegan Paul U K Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 0 415 25548 1 retrieved 5 November 2010 1978 Myth and Meaning UK Routledge amp Kegan Paul 48 1983 Le Regard eloigne The View from Afar translated by J Neugroschel and P Hoss 1985 1984 Paroles donnes Anthropology and Myth Lectures 1951 1982 translated by R Willis 1987 1985 La Potiere jalouse The Jealous Potter translated by B Chorier 1988 1991 Histoire de Lynx The Story of Lynx translated by C Tihanyi 1996 49 1993 Regarder ecouter lire Look Listen Read translated by B Singer 1997 1994 Saudades do Brasil Paris Plon 1994 Le Pere Noel supplicie Pin Balma Sables Editions 2011 L Anthropologie face aux problemes du monde moderne Paris Seuil 2011 L Autre face de la lune Paris Seuil Interviews edit 1978 Comment travaillent les ecrivains interviewed by Jean Louis de Rambures Paris 1988 De pres et de loin interviewed by Didier Eribon Conversations with Claude Levi Strauss trans Paula Wissing 1991 2005 Loin du Bresil interviewed by Veronique Mortaigne Paris Chandeigne See also editAlliance theory Comparative mythology Evolutionary Principle List of important publications in anthropology Little ArpadReferences edit Claude Levi Strauss Introduction a l oeuvre de Marcel Mauss in Mauss Sociologie et Anthropologie Paris 1950 Levi Strauss Random House Webster s Unabridged Dictionary a b c Rothstein Edward 3 November 2009 Claude Levi Strauss dies at 100 The New York Times Retrieved 4 November 2009 a b Doland Angela 4 November 2009 Anthropology giant Claude Levi Strauss dead at 100 Seattle Times Associated Press Retrieved 22 April 2015 Claude Levi Strauss Scientist Who Saw Human Doom Dies at 100 Bloomberg 3 November 2009 Retrieved 3 November 2009 Briggs Rachel Meyer Janelle Structuralism Anthropological Theories A Guide Prepared By Students For Students Dept of Anthropology University of Alabama Archived from the original on 27 November 2015 Retrieved 22 April 2015 in Portuguese Claude Levi Strauss Biografia Uol Educacao Brasil Access date 9 December 2009 Ashbrook Tom November 2009 Claude Levi Strauss On Point a b c Loyer Emmanuelle 18 January 2019 Chapter 2 Revelations 1908 1924 Levi Strauss A Biography 3rd ed John Wiley amp Sons pp 35 50 ISBN 978 1 5095 1201 0 Voss Susan M 1977 Claude Levi Strauss The Man and His Works Nebraska Anthropologist 3 21 38 Conversation with Jean Jose Marchand Wiseman p 6 He writes This casual attitude to the supernatural was all the more surprising for me I lived during the First World War with my grandfather who was Rabbi of Versailles The house was attached to the synagogue by a long inner passage along which it was difficult to venture without a feeling of anguish and which in itself formed an impassable frontier between the profane world and that other which was lacking precisely in the human warmth that was a necessary precondition to its being experienced as sacred Handelman Susan A 2012 Slayers of Moses The The Emergence of Rabbinic Interpretation in Modern Literary Theory SUNY Press p 92 ISBN 978 1 4384 0564 3 Levi Strauss Claude 2012 Tristes Tropiques Penguin ISBN 978 1 101 57560 4 Catherine Clement raconte le grand ethnologue qui fete ses 99 ans interview Le Journal du Dimanche 25 November 2007 Loyer Emmanuelle 2019 Revolutions 1924 1931 Politics vs Philosophy Levi Strauss A Biography John Wiley amp Sons p 67 ISBN 978 1 5095 1201 0 While himself an atheist or at least an agnostic he endorsed this messianic vision Our task today is that of the prophet and martyr to achieve within ourselves and not just in our thoughts but in our lives a new order Personally I ve never been confronted with the question of God says one such politely indifferent atheist Dr Claude Levi Strauss professor of social anthropology at the College de France Theology Toward a Hidden God Time com a b Loyer Emmanuelle 2019 Revolutions 1924 1931 Politics vs Philosophy Levi Strauss A Biography John Wiley amp Sons pp 51 71 ISBN 978 1 5095 1201 0 Claude Levi Strauss and the Influential Theory of Structuralism ThoughtCo Retrieved 15 October 2022 Jennings Eric June 2002 Last Exit from Vichy France The Martinique Escape Route and the Ambiguities of Emigration The Journal of Modern History 74 2 289 324 doi 10 1086 343409 S2CID 142116998 Serge Victor 2019 Notebooks 1936 1947 New York Review Books pp 61 66 Johnson C 2003 Claude Levi Strauss The Formative Years Cambridge University Press pp 1 92 172 Silverman Sydel ed 2004 Totems and Teachers Key Figures in the History of Anthropology Rowman Altamira p 16 ISBN 9780759104600 Moore Jerry D 2004 Visions of Culture An Introduction to Anthropological Theories and Theorists Rowman Altamira Anthropologist Levi Strauss dies BBC 3 November 2009 Retrieved 3 November 2009 Death of French anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss Euronews 3 November 2009 Archived from the original on 8 November 2009 Retrieved 3 November 2009 Claude Levi Strauss The Daily Telegraph 3 November 2009 Archived from the original on 12 January 2022 Retrieved 3 November 2009 Davies Lizzy 3 November 2009 French anthropologist Claude Levi Strauss dies aged 100 The Guardian Retrieved 3 November 2009 Boon James and David Schneider 1974 Kinship vis a vis Myth Contrasts in Levi Strauss Approaches to Cross Cultural Comparison American Anthropologist New Series 76 4 799 817 JSTOR 674306 Claude Levi Strauss Academie francaise Archived from the original on 31 March 2012 Claude Levi Strauss 1908 2009 Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Retrieved 26 July 2015 Claude Levi Strauss www nasonline org Retrieved 28 November 2022 Moore Jerry D 2009 Claude Levi Strauss Structuralism Visions of Culture An Introduction to Anthropologically Theories and Theorists Walnut Creek California Altamira pp 231 247 a b Phillips John W Structural Linguistics and Anthropology National University of Singapore Levi Strauss Claude 1967 Structural Anthropology Garden City N Y Anchor Books pp 37 46 a b c d e Levi Strauss Claude 1958 1963 Structural Anthropology translated by C Jacobson and B G Schoepf Definition of reductionist Dictionary com www dictionary com Retrieved 15 October 2022 a b c Levi Strauss Claude 1955 The Structural Study of Myth Archived 5 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Journal of American Folklore 68 270 428 44 doi 10 2307 536768 JSTOR 536768 Unknown 7 July 2014 G324 Advanced Media Portfolio 0188 0194 0217 Claude Levi Strauss Binary Opposites G324 Retrieved 15 October 2022 a b Levi Strauss Claude 1964 1969 The Raw and the Cooked translated by J Weightman and D Weightman p 10 Laurie Timothy 2015 Becoming Animal Is A Trap For Humans Deleuze and the Non Human edited by H Stark and J Roffe a b c Diamond Stanley 1974 In Search of the Primitive New Brunswick Transaction Books ISBN 0 87855 045 3 Leach Edmund 1974 Claude Levi Strauss Revised ed New York Viking Press p 3 Andreski Stanislav 1972 The Social Sciences as Sorcery Deutsch p 85 ISBN 9780233962269 Laurie Timothy 2012 Epistemology as Politics and the Double Bind of Border Thinking Levi Strauss Deleuze and Guattari Mignolo PORTAL Journal of Multidisciplinary International Studies 9 2 1 20 doi 10 5130 portal v9i2 1826 hdl 10453 44227 Bloch Maurice 3 November 2009 Claude Levi Strauss obituary The Guardian Retrieved 8 March 2021 Levi Strauss Claude 1949 1969 The Elementary Structures of Kinship Les Structure Elementaries de la Parente translated by J H Bell J R von Sturmer and R Needham edited by R Needham Levi Strauss Claude 1952 Race and History The Race Question in Modern Science UNESCO Levi Strauss Claude 1978 2005 Myth and Meaning UK Routledge ISBN 0 415 25548 1 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Levi Strauss Claude 1991 1996 The Story of Lynx translated by C Tihanyi Chicago University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 47471 2 Retrieved 5 November 2010 Sources edit Doja Albert 2008 Claude Levi Strauss at his Centennial toward a future anthropology Theory Culture amp Society 25 7 8 321 40 doi 10 1177 0263276408097810 2010 Claude Levi Strauss 1908 2009 The apotheosis of heroic anthropology Anthropology Today 26 5 18 23 doi 10 1111 j 1467 8322 2010 00758 x Leach Edmund 1970 Levi Strauss Fontana Collins ISBN 0 00 632255 7 Chapter excerpt from book Wiseman Boris 1998 Introducing Levi Strauss Totem Books ed 2009 The Cambridge Companion to Levi Strauss Cambridge University Press Further reading editMain article List of important publications in anthropology Appiah Kwame Anthony 2020 The Key to All Mythologies book review The New York Review of Books 67 2 18 20 This is a review of Emmanuelle Loyer Levi Strauss A Biography translated by Ninon Vinsonneau and Jonathan Magidoff Polity 2019 744 pp and Maurice Godelier Claude Levi Strauss A Critical Study of His Thought translated from the French by Nora Scott Verso 2019 540 pp Appiah concludes his review p 20 Levi Strauss was an inspired interpreter a brilliant reader When the landmarks of science succeed in advancing their subject they need no longer be consulted physicists don t study Newton chemists don t pore over Lavoisier If some part of Levi Strauss s scholarly oeuvre survives it will be because his scientific aspirations have not Descola Philippe 2009 Claude Levi Strauss a Career Spanning a Century Pp 36 in The Letter of the College de France 4 Erlanger Steven 28 November 2008 100th Birthday Tributes Pour in for Levi Strauss The New York Times Paris Retrieved 22 April 2015 Ginzburg Carlo Safran Yehuda Sherer Daniel An Interview with Carlo Ginzburg by Yehuda Safran and Daniel Sherer Potlatch 5 2022 special issue on Carlo Ginzburg Extensive discussion of Claude Levi Strauss Henaff Marcel 1998 Claude Levi Strauss and the Making of Structural Anthropology Originally published 1991 as Claude Levi Strauss translated by Baker Mary Minneapolis Minnesota University of Minnesota Press ISBN 0 8166 2760 6 retrieved 5 November 2010 Pace David 1983 Claude Levi Strauss The Bearer of Ashes Boston Massachusetts amp London UK Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 0 7100 9297 0 retrieved 5 November 2010 Taylor Mark Kline 1986 Beyond Explanation Religious Dimensions in Cultural Anthropology Macon Georgia Mercer University Press ISBN 0 86554 165 5 retrieved 5 November 2010 Wilcken Patrick 2011 Claude Levi Strauss The Poet in the Laboratory London UK Bloomsbury ISBN 978 0 7475 8362 2 retrieved 20 November 2011 permanent dead link Claude Levi Strauss obituary The Economist 12 November 2009 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Claude Levi Strauss nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Claude Levi Strauss What Levi Strauss owes to Amerindians film directed by Edson Matarezio Profile of Levi Strauss in The Nation Various excerpts from Structural Anthropology at marxists org List of works by Claude Levi Strauss Excerpts from La Pensee Sauvage Documentaire 52 About Tristes Tropiques 1991 Super 16 Film Lecture The Birth of Historical Societies Hitchcock Lectures 3 and 4 October 1984 UC Berkeley audio file Linguistic and Commodity Exchanges Examines the structural differences between barter and monetary commodity exchanges and oral and written linguistic exchanges Claude Levi Strauss Tristes Tropiques in English translated by John Russell 1961 Claude Levi Strauss social constructivism and syllables across languages Claude Levi Strauss and his Mythologiques An interdisciplinary internet project by scholars of the University of Hildesheim Germany http www mythologica eu Archived 22 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Claude Levi Strauss amp oldid 1203222873, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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