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James C. Scott

James C. Scott (born December 2, 1936)[2] is an American political scientist and anthropologist specializing in comparative politics. He is a comparative scholar of agrarian and non-state societies, subaltern politics, and anarchism. His primary research has centered on peasants of Southeast Asia and their strategies of resistance to various forms of domination.[3] The New York Times described his research as "highly influential and idiosyncratic".[4]

James C. Scott
Scott in 2016
Born (1936-12-02) December 2, 1936 (age 86)
Alma mater
Scientific career
FieldsPolitical science, anthropology
Institutions
Doctoral studentsBen Kerkvliet
Melissa Nobles
Erik Ringmar
Eric Tagliacozzo

Scott received his bachelor's degree from Williams College and his MA and PhD in political science from Yale. He taught at the University of Wisconsin–Madison until 1976 and then at Yale, where he is Sterling Professor of Political Science. Since 1991 he has directed Yale's Program in Agrarian Studies.[5] He lives in Durham, Connecticut, where he once raised sheep.[3][6]

Early life and career Edit

Scott was born in Mount Holly, New Jersey, in 1936.[7] He attended the Moorestown Friends School, a Quaker Day School, and in 1953 matriculated at Williams College in Massachusetts.[6] On the advice of Indonesia scholar William Hollinger he wrote an honors thesis on the economic development of Burma.[6] Scott received his bachelor's degree from Williams College in 1958, and his PhD in political science from Yale University in 1967.[7]

Upon graduation, Scott received a Rotary International Fellowship to study in Burma, where he was recruited by an American student activist who had become an anti-communist organizer for the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA). Scott agreed to do reporting for the agency, and at the end of his fellowship, took a post in the Paris office of the National Student Association, which accepted CIA money and direction in working against communist-controlled global student movements over the next few years.[8]

Scott began graduate study in political science at Yale in 1961. His dissertation on political ideology in Malaysia, which was supervised by Robert E. Lane, analysed interviews with Malaysian civil servants. In 1967, he took a position as an assistant professor in political science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. As a Southeast Asia specialist teaching during the Vietnam War, he offered popular courses on the war and peasant revolutions.[9] In 1976, having earned tenure at Madison, Scott returned to Yale and settled on a farm in Durham, Connecticut, with his wife. They started with a small farm, then purchased a larger one nearby in the early 1980s and began raising sheep for their wool.[9] Since 2011, the pastures on the farm have been grazed by two Highland cattle, named Fife and Dundee.

Scott's first books were based on archival research. He is an influential scholar of ethnographic fieldwork.[10] He is unusual for conducting his primary ethnographic fieldwork only after receiving tenure. To research his third book, Weapons of the Weak, Scott spent fourteen months in a village in Kedah, Malaysia between 1978 and 1980.[11] When he had finished a draft, he returned for two months to solicit villagers' impressions of his depiction, and significantly revised the book based on their criticisms and insight.[9][11]

In 2011, Scott, along with other Burmese and Western scholars, convened at Yale University with the goal of re-establishing the Journal of the Burma Research Society for scholars.[12][13] The journal's successor, named the Independent Journal of Burmese Scholarship (IJBS), published its first issue in August 2016.[12][13]

Major works Edit

James Scott's work focuses on the ways that subaltern people resist domination.

The Moral Economy of the Peasant Edit

During the Vietnam War, Scott took an interest in Vietnam and wrote The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia (1976) about the ways peasants resisted authority. His main argument is that peasants prefer the patron-client relations of the "moral economy", in which wealthier peasants protect weaker ones. When these traditional forms of solidarity break down due to the introduction of market forces, rebellion (or revolution) is likely. Samuel Popkin, in his book The Rational Peasant (1979), tried to refute this argument, showing that peasants are also rational actors who prefer free markets to exploitation by local elites. Scott and Popkin thus represent two radically different positions in the formalist–substantivist debate in political anthropology.[14]

Weapons of the Weak Edit

In Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance (1985) Scott expanded his theories to peasants in other parts of the world. Scott's theories are often contrasted with Gramscian ideas about hegemony. Against Gramsci, Scott argues that the everyday resistance of subalterns shows that they have not consented to dominance.[11]

Domination and the Arts of Resistance Edit

In Domination and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts (1990) argues that subordinate groups employ strategies of resistance that go unnoticed. He terms this "infrapolitics." Scott describes the public interactions between dominators and oppressed as a "public transcript" and the critique of power that goes on offstage as a "hidden transcript." Groups under domination—from bonded labor to sexual violence—thus cannot be understood merely by their outward appearances. In order to study the systems of domination, careful attention is paid to what lies beneath the surface of evident, public behavior. In public, those that are oppressed accept their domination, but they always question their domination offstage. On the event of a publicization of this "hidden transcript", oppressed classes openly assume their speech, and become conscious of its common status.[15]

Seeing Like a State Edit

Scott's book Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed (1998) saw his first major foray into political science. In it, he showed how central governments attempt to force legibility on their subjects, and fail to see complex, valuable forms of local social order and knowledge. Scott argues that in order for schemes to improve the human condition to succeed, they must take into account local conditions, and that the high-modernist ideologies of the 20th century have prevented this. He highlights collective farms in the Soviet Union, the building of Brasilia, and Prussian forestry techniques as examples of failed schemes.[16]

The Art of Not Being Governed Edit

In The Art of Not Being Governed, Scott addresses the question of how certain groups in the mountainous jungles of Southeast Asia managed to avoid a package of exploitation centered around the state, taxation, and grain cultivation. Certain aspects of their society seen by outsiders as backward (e.g., limited literacy and use of written language) were in fact part of the "Arts" referenced in the title: limiting literacy meant lower visibility to the state. Scott's main argument is that these people are "barbaric by design": their social organization, geographical location, subsistence practices and culture have been carved to discourage states to annex them to their territories. Addressing identity in the Introduction, he wrote:

... All identities, without exception, have been socially constructed: the Han, the Burman, the American, the Danish, all of them ... To the degree that the identity is stigmatized by the larger state or society, it is likely to become for many a resistant and defiant identity. Here invented identities combine with self-making of a heroic kind, in which such identifications become a badge of honor ...

— (pp. xii-iii.)

Against the Grain Edit

Published in August 2017, Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States is an account of new evidence for the beginnings of the earliest civilizations that contradict the standard narrative. Scott explores why we avoided sedentism and plow agriculture; the advantages of mobile subsistence; the unforeseeable epidemics arising from crowding plants, animals, and grain; and why all early states are based on millets, cereal grains and unfree labor. He also discusses the “barbarians” who long evaded state control, as a way of understanding continuing tension between states and non subject peoples.[17]

Other works Edit

In Two Cheers for Anarchism: Six Easy Pieces on Autonomy, Dignity, and Meaningful Work and Play from 2012 Scott says that "Lacking a comprehensive anarchist worldview and philosophy, and in any case wary of nomothetic ways of seeing, I am making a case for a sort of anarchist squint. What I aim to show is that if you put on anarchist glasses and look at the history of popular movements, revolutions, ordinary politics, and the state from that angle, certain insights will appear that are obscured from almost any other angle. It will also become apparent that anarchist principles are active in the aspirations and political action of people who have never heard of anarchism or anarchist philosophy."[18]

Awards and fellowships Edit

Scott is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been awarded resident fellowships at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, the Institute for Advanced Study, and the Science, Technology and Society Program at M.I.T.[19] He has also received research grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Guggenheim Foundation, and was president of the Association for Asian Studies in 1997. In 2020 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society.[20]

Selected bibliography Edit

(Note: excludes edited volumes.)

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Munck, Gerardo L.; Snyder, Richard (2007). "Peasants, Power, and the Art of Resistance". Passion, Craft, and Method in Comparative Politics. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-8464-1.
  2. ^ "James C. SCOTT". Secretariat of the Fukuoka Prize Committee. Retrieved August 10, 2017.
  3. ^ a b Schuessler, Jennifer (December 5, 2012). "James C. Scott: Farmer and Scholar of Anarchism". New York Times. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
  4. ^ Schuessler, Jennifer (December 4, 2012). "James C. Scott, Farmer and Scholar of Anarchism". The New York Times. Retrieved August 20, 2018.
  5. ^ "Academic Prize 2010, Award Citation". Fukuoka Prize. 2010. Retrieved February 24, 2015.
  6. ^ a b c Scott, James C. (March 26, 2009). "James Scott interviewed by Alan Macfarlane" (Interview: video). Vol. 1. Interviewed by Alan Macfarlane. Cambridge, England. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
  7. ^ a b Munck, Gerardo L.; Snyder, Richard (2007). Passion, Craft, and Method in Comparative Politics. Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 352. ISBN 978-0-8018-8464-1.
  8. ^ Paget, Karen M. (2015). Patriotic Betrayal: The Inside Story of the CIA's Secret Campaign to Enroll American Students in the Crusade Against Communism. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. pp. 235, 395, 407–408. Retrieved April 22, 2015.
  9. ^ a b c Scott, James C. (March 26, 2009). "James Scott interviewed by Alan Macfarlane" (Interview: video). Vol. 2. Interviewed by Alan Macfarlane. Cambridge, England. Retrieved November 26, 2014.
  10. ^ Wedeen, Lisa (May 1, 2010). "Reflections on Ethnographic Work in Political Science". Annual Review of Political Science. 13 (1): 255–272. doi:10.1146/annurev.polisci.11.052706.123951. ISSN 1094-2939.
  11. ^ a b c Scott, James C. (1985). Weapons of the Weak: Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-03641-1.
  12. ^ a b "About အကြောင်း". Independent Journal of Burmese Scholarship. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  13. ^ a b "Professor's mission to launch scholarly journal in Burma now a reality". YaleNews. November 8, 2016. Retrieved March 25, 2023.
  14. ^ Scott, James C. (September 10, 1977). The Moral Economy of the Peasant: Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-18555-3.
  15. ^ Scott, James C. (1990). Domination and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-05669-3.
  16. ^ Scott, James C. (1998). Seeing Like a State: How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press.
  17. ^ "Against the Grain". yalebooks.yale.edu. Yale University Press. Retrieved September 12, 2017.
  18. ^ Scott, James C. (2012). Two Cheers for Anarchism: Six Easy Pieces on Autonomy, Dignity, and Meaningful Work and Play. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 9 November 2012. Retrieved 5 December 2012.
  20. ^ "The American Philosophical Society Welcomes New Members for 2020". American Philosophical Society. May 5, 2020.

External links Edit

  • Homepage at Yale
  • James Scott explores governance in the Southeast Asian highlands at Asia Society, November 2010 (w/ video)
  • interviewed by Alan Macfarlane 26th March 2009 followed by his Mellon Lecture given in Cambridge
  • Interview with James Scott by Theory Talks, May 2010
  • Interviewed by Benjamin Ferron and Claire Oger 20th June 2018 (The Conversation)

james, scott, other, people, named, james, scott, james, scott, disambiguation, born, december, 1936, american, political, scientist, anthropologist, specializing, comparative, politics, comparative, scholar, agrarian, state, societies, subaltern, politics, an. For other people named James Scott see James Scott disambiguation James C Scott born December 2 1936 2 is an American political scientist and anthropologist specializing in comparative politics He is a comparative scholar of agrarian and non state societies subaltern politics and anarchism His primary research has centered on peasants of Southeast Asia and their strategies of resistance to various forms of domination 3 The New York Times described his research as highly influential and idiosyncratic 4 James C ScottScott in 2016Born 1936 12 02 December 2 1936 age 86 Mount Holly New Jersey 1 U S Alma materWilliams College BA Yale University MA PhD Scientific careerFieldsPolitical science anthropologyInstitutionsUniversity of Wisconsin Yale UniversityDoctoral studentsBen KerkvlietMelissa NoblesErik RingmarEric TagliacozzoScott received his bachelor s degree from Williams College and his MA and PhD in political science from Yale He taught at the University of Wisconsin Madison until 1976 and then at Yale where he is Sterling Professor of Political Science Since 1991 he has directed Yale s Program in Agrarian Studies 5 He lives in Durham Connecticut where he once raised sheep 3 6 Contents 1 Early life and career 2 Major works 2 1 The Moral Economy of the Peasant 2 2 Weapons of the Weak 2 3 Domination and the Arts of Resistance 2 4 Seeing Like a State 2 5 The Art of Not Being Governed 2 6 Against the Grain 2 7 Other works 3 Awards and fellowships 4 Selected bibliography 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEarly life and career EditScott was born in Mount Holly New Jersey in 1936 7 He attended the Moorestown Friends School a Quaker Day School and in 1953 matriculated at Williams College in Massachusetts 6 On the advice of Indonesia scholar William Hollinger he wrote an honors thesis on the economic development of Burma 6 Scott received his bachelor s degree from Williams College in 1958 and his PhD in political science from Yale University in 1967 7 Upon graduation Scott received a Rotary International Fellowship to study in Burma where he was recruited by an American student activist who had become an anti communist organizer for the Central Intelligence Agency CIA Scott agreed to do reporting for the agency and at the end of his fellowship took a post in the Paris office of the National Student Association which accepted CIA money and direction in working against communist controlled global student movements over the next few years 8 Scott began graduate study in political science at Yale in 1961 His dissertation on political ideology in Malaysia which was supervised by Robert E Lane analysed interviews with Malaysian civil servants In 1967 he took a position as an assistant professor in political science at the University of Wisconsin Madison As a Southeast Asia specialist teaching during the Vietnam War he offered popular courses on the war and peasant revolutions 9 In 1976 having earned tenure at Madison Scott returned to Yale and settled on a farm in Durham Connecticut with his wife They started with a small farm then purchased a larger one nearby in the early 1980s and began raising sheep for their wool 9 Since 2011 the pastures on the farm have been grazed by two Highland cattle named Fife and Dundee Scott s first books were based on archival research He is an influential scholar of ethnographic fieldwork 10 He is unusual for conducting his primary ethnographic fieldwork only after receiving tenure To research his third book Weapons of the Weak Scott spent fourteen months in a village in Kedah Malaysia between 1978 and 1980 11 When he had finished a draft he returned for two months to solicit villagers impressions of his depiction and significantly revised the book based on their criticisms and insight 9 11 In 2011 Scott along with other Burmese and Western scholars convened at Yale University with the goal of re establishing the Journal of the Burma Research Society for scholars 12 13 The journal s successor named the Independent Journal of Burmese Scholarship IJBS published its first issue in August 2016 12 13 Major works EditJames Scott s work focuses on the ways that subaltern people resist domination The Moral Economy of the Peasant Edit Main article The Moral Economy of the Peasant During the Vietnam War Scott took an interest in Vietnam and wrote The Moral Economy of the Peasant Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia 1976 about the ways peasants resisted authority His main argument is that peasants prefer the patron client relations of the moral economy in which wealthier peasants protect weaker ones When these traditional forms of solidarity break down due to the introduction of market forces rebellion or revolution is likely Samuel Popkin in his book The Rational Peasant 1979 tried to refute this argument showing that peasants are also rational actors who prefer free markets to exploitation by local elites Scott and Popkin thus represent two radically different positions in the formalist substantivist debate in political anthropology 14 Weapons of the Weak Edit In Weapons of the Weak Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance 1985 Scott expanded his theories to peasants in other parts of the world Scott s theories are often contrasted with Gramscian ideas about hegemony Against Gramsci Scott argues that the everyday resistance of subalterns shows that they have not consented to dominance 11 Domination and the Arts of Resistance Edit In Domination and the Arts of Resistance Hidden Transcripts 1990 argues that subordinate groups employ strategies of resistance that go unnoticed He terms this infrapolitics Scott describes the public interactions between dominators and oppressed as a public transcript and the critique of power that goes on offstage as a hidden transcript Groups under domination from bonded labor to sexual violence thus cannot be understood merely by their outward appearances In order to study the systems of domination careful attention is paid to what lies beneath the surface of evident public behavior In public those that are oppressed accept their domination but they always question their domination offstage On the event of a publicization of this hidden transcript oppressed classes openly assume their speech and become conscious of its common status 15 Seeing Like a State Edit Main article Seeing Like a State Scott s book Seeing Like a State How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed 1998 saw his first major foray into political science In it he showed how central governments attempt to force legibility on their subjects and fail to see complex valuable forms of local social order and knowledge Scott argues that in order for schemes to improve the human condition to succeed they must take into account local conditions and that the high modernist ideologies of the 20th century have prevented this He highlights collective farms in the Soviet Union the building of Brasilia and Prussian forestry techniques as examples of failed schemes 16 The Art of Not Being Governed Edit Main article The Art of Not Being Governed An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia In The Art of Not Being Governed Scott addresses the question of how certain groups in the mountainous jungles of Southeast Asia managed to avoid a package of exploitation centered around the state taxation and grain cultivation Certain aspects of their society seen by outsiders as backward e g limited literacy and use of written language were in fact part of the Arts referenced in the title limiting literacy meant lower visibility to the state Scott s main argument is that these people are barbaric by design their social organization geographical location subsistence practices and culture have been carved to discourage states to annex them to their territories Addressing identity in the Introduction he wrote All identities without exception have been socially constructed the Han the Burman the American the Danish all of them To the degree that the identity is stigmatized by the larger state or society it is likely to become for many a resistant and defiant identity Here invented identities combine with self making of a heroic kind in which such identifications become a badge of honor pp xii iii Against the Grain Edit Main article Against the Grain A Deep History of the Earliest States Published in August 2017 Against the Grain A Deep History of the Earliest States is an account of new evidence for the beginnings of the earliest civilizations that contradict the standard narrative Scott explores why we avoided sedentism and plow agriculture the advantages of mobile subsistence the unforeseeable epidemics arising from crowding plants animals and grain and why all early states are based on millets cereal grains and unfree labor He also discusses the barbarians who long evaded state control as a way of understanding continuing tension between states and non subject peoples 17 Other works Edit In Two Cheers for Anarchism Six Easy Pieces on Autonomy Dignity and Meaningful Work and Play from 2012 Scott says that Lacking a comprehensive anarchist worldview and philosophy and in any case wary of nomothetic ways of seeing I am making a case for a sort of anarchist squint What I aim to show is that if you put on anarchist glasses and look at the history of popular movements revolutions ordinary politics and the state from that angle certain insights will appear that are obscured from almost any other angle It will also become apparent that anarchist principles are active in the aspirations and political action of people who have never heard of anarchism or anarchist philosophy 18 Awards and fellowships EditScott is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and has been awarded resident fellowships at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences the Institute for Advanced Study and the Science Technology and Society Program at M I T 19 He has also received research grants from the National Science Foundation the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Guggenheim Foundation and was president of the Association for Asian Studies in 1997 In 2020 he was elected to the American Philosophical Society 20 Selected bibliography Edit Note excludes edited volumes Against the Grain A Deep History of the Earliest States 2017 Decoding subaltern politics Ideology disguise and resistance in agrarian politics Routledge 2012 Critical Asian scholarship 8 ISBN 978 0 415 53975 3 Two Cheers for Anarchism Six Easy Pieces on Autonomy Dignity and Meaningful Work and Play Princeton University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 691 15529 6 The Art of Not Being Governed An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia Yale University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 300 15228 9 Seeing Like a State How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed Yale University Press 1998 ISBN 978 0 300 07016 3 Domination and the Arts of Resistance Hidden Transcripts Yale University Press 1990 ISBN 978 0 300 04705 9 Weapons of the Weak Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance Yale University Press 1985 ISBN 978 0 300 03336 6 The Moral Economy of the Peasant Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia Yale University Press 1979 ISBN 978 0 300 01862 2 Comparative Political Corruption Prentice Hall 1972 ISBN 978 0 13 179036 0See also EditSocietal collapse ZomiaReferences Edit Munck Gerardo L Snyder Richard 2007 Peasants Power and the Art of Resistance Passion Craft and Method in Comparative Politics Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 978 0 8018 8464 1 James C SCOTT Secretariat of the Fukuoka Prize Committee Retrieved August 10 2017 a b Schuessler Jennifer December 5 2012 James C Scott Farmer and Scholar of Anarchism New York Times Retrieved February 24 2015 Schuessler Jennifer December 4 2012 James C Scott Farmer and Scholar of Anarchism The New York Times Retrieved August 20 2018 Academic Prize 2010 Award Citation Fukuoka Prize 2010 Retrieved February 24 2015 a b c Scott James C March 26 2009 James Scott interviewed by Alan Macfarlane Interview video Vol 1 Interviewed by Alan Macfarlane Cambridge England Retrieved November 26 2014 a b Munck Gerardo L Snyder Richard 2007 Passion Craft and Method in Comparative Politics Johns Hopkins University Press p 352 ISBN 978 0 8018 8464 1 Paget Karen M 2015 Patriotic Betrayal The Inside Story of the CIA s Secret Campaign to Enroll American Students in the Crusade Against Communism New Haven CT Yale University Press pp 235 395 407 408 Retrieved April 22 2015 a b c Scott James C March 26 2009 James Scott interviewed by Alan Macfarlane Interview video Vol 2 Interviewed by Alan Macfarlane Cambridge England Retrieved November 26 2014 Wedeen Lisa May 1 2010 Reflections on Ethnographic Work in Political Science Annual Review of Political Science 13 1 255 272 doi 10 1146 annurev polisci 11 052706 123951 ISSN 1094 2939 a b c Scott James C 1985 Weapons of the Weak Everyday Forms of Peasant Resistance New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 03641 1 a b About အက င Independent Journal of Burmese Scholarship Retrieved March 25 2023 a b Professor s mission to launch scholarly journal in Burma now a reality YaleNews November 8 2016 Retrieved March 25 2023 Scott James C September 10 1977 The Moral Economy of the Peasant Rebellion and Subsistence in Southeast Asia Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 18555 3 Scott James C 1990 Domination and the Arts of Resistance Hidden Transcripts Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 05669 3 Scott James C 1998 Seeing Like a State How Certain Schemes to Improve the Human Condition Have Failed New Haven CT Yale University Press Against the Grain yalebooks yale edu Yale University Press Retrieved September 12 2017 Scott James C 2012 Two Cheers for Anarchism Six Easy Pieces on Autonomy Dignity and Meaningful Work and Play Princeton NJ Princeton University Press James Scott Department of Political Science Archived from the original on 9 November 2012 Retrieved 5 December 2012 The American Philosophical Society Welcomes New Members for 2020 American Philosophical Society May 5 2020 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to James C Scott Homepage at Yale James Scott explores governance in the Southeast Asian highlands at Asia Society November 2010 w video interviewed by Alan Macfarlane 26th March 2009 followed by his Mellon Lecture given in Cambridge Interview with James Scott by Theory Talks May 2010 Interviewed by Benjamin Ferron and Claire Oger 20th June 2018 The Conversation Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title James C Scott amp oldid 1180085164, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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