Nature Wars: Essays Around a Contested Concept
By Roy Ellen
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About this ebook
Organized around issues, debates and discussions concerning the various ways in which the concept of nature has been used, this book looks at how the term has been endlessly deconstructed and reclaimed, as reflected in anthropological, scientific, and similar writing over the last several decades. Made up of ten of Roy Ellen’s finest articles, this book looks back at his ideas about nature and includes a new introduction that contextualizes the arguments and takes them forward. Many of the chapters focus on research the author has conducted amongst the Nuaulu people of eastern Indonesia.
Roy Ellen
Roy Ellen is Professor Emeritus of Anthropology and Human Ecology at the University of Kent, where he initiated the programmes in environmental anthropology and ethnobotany, and founded the Centre for Biocultural Diversity. His recent books include On the Edge of the Banda Zone (2003), Nuaulu Religious Practices (2012), and Kinship, Population and Social Reproduction in the 'New Indonesia' (2018).
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Nature Wars - Roy Ellen
Nature Wars
Studies in Environmental Anthropology and Ethnobiology
General Editor: Roy Ellen, FBA
Emeritus Professor of Anthropology and Human Ecology, University of Kent at Canterbury
Interest in environmental anthropology has grown steadily in recent years, reflecting national and international concern about the environment and developing research priorities. This major international series, which continues a series first published by Harwood and Routledge, is a vehicle for publishing up-to-date monographs and edited works on particular issues, themes, places or peoples which focus on the interrelationship between society, culture and environment. Relevant areas include human ecology, the perception and representation of the environment, ethno-ecological knowledge, the human dimension of biodiversity conservation and the ethnography of environmental problems. While the underlying ethos of the series will be anthropological, the approach is interdisciplinary.
Recent volumes:
Volume 27
Nature Wars
Essays around a Contested Concept
Roy Ellen
Volume 26
Ecological Nostalgias
Memory, Affect and Creativity in Times of Ecological Upheavals
Edited by Olivia Angé and David Berliner
Volume 25
Birds of Passage
Hunting and Conservation in Malta
Mark-Anthony Falzon
Volume 24
At Home on the Waves
Human Habitation of the Sea from the Mesolithic to Today
Edited by Tanya J. King and Gary Robinson
Volume 23
Edges, Fringes, Frontiers
Integral Ecology, Indigenous Knowledge and Sustainability in Guyana
Thomas B. Henfrey
Volume 22
Indigeneity and the Sacred
Indigenous Revival and the Conservation of Sacred Natural Sites in the Americas
Edited by Fausto Sarmiento and Sarah Hitchner
Volume 21
Trees, Knots, and Outriggers
Environmental Knowledge in the Northeast Kula Ring
Frederick H. Damon
Volume 20
Beyond the Lens of Conservation
Malagasy and Swiss Imaginations of One Another
Eva Keller
Volume 19
Sustainable Development
An Appraisal from the Gulf Region
Edited by Paul Sillitoe
Volume 18
Things Fall Apart?
The Political Ecology of Forest Governance in Southern Nigeria
Pauline von Hellermann
For a full volume listing, please see the series page on our website:
http://berghahnbooks.com/series/environmental-anthropology-and-ethnobiology
Nature Wars
Essays around a Contested Concept
Roy Ellen
First published in 2021 by
Berghahn Books
www.berghahnbooks.com
© 2021 Roy Ellen
All rights reserved. Except for the quotation of short passages for the purposes of criticism and review, no part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system now known or to be invented, without written permission of the publisher.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Ellen, R. F., 1947– author.
Title: Nature wars : essays around a contested concept / Roy Ellen.
Description: New York : Berghahn Books, 2021. | Series: Studies in environmental anthropology and ethnobiology; volume 27 | Includes bibliographical references and index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020017772 (print) | LCCN 2020017773 (ebook) | ISBN 9781789208979 (hardcover) | ISBN 9781789208986 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Nature—Effect of human beings on. | Ethnoscience. | Ethnoscience—Indonesia. | Philosophical anthropology. | Ethnoecology.
Classification: LCC GF75 .E48 2021 (print) | LCC GF75 (ebook) | DDC 304.2—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020017772
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020017773
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-78920-897-9 hardback
ISBN 978-1-78920-898-6 ebook
Contents
List of Illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgements
Note on Orthography
Introduction. Nature Beyond the ‘Ontological Turn’
Chapter 1. What Black Elk Left Unsaid
Chapter 2. Comparative Natures in Melanesia
Chapter 3. Political Contingency, Historical Ecology and the Renegotiation of Nature
Appendix: The Consequences of Deforestation – A Nuaulu Text from Rouhua Seram 1994
Chapter 4. Indigenous Environmental Knowledge and Its Transformations
Chapter 5. From Ethno-science to Science
Chapter 6. Local and Scientific Understandings of Forest Diversity
Chapter 7. Why Aren’t the Nuaulu Like the Matsigenka?
Chapter 8. Roots, Shoots and Leaves: The Art of Weeding
Chapter 9. Tools, Agency and the Category of ‘Living Things’
Chapter 10. Is There a Role for Ontologies in Understanding Plant Knowledge Systems?
References
Index
Illustrations
Figures
1.1. A banner publicising the Green Collective, which ‘seeks to facilitate the growth of a green movement through nonviolence, creative action and networking’.
3.1. Three frames from a videotape recorded on 8 March 1990 and discussed in this chapter. Komisi Soumori (ia onate Soumori and ‘kepala kampung’) addresses the world.
5.1. Mezzotint of Linnaeus in Lapp costume; Dunkerton, from a painting by M. Hoffman.
5.2. Print of Linnaeus outside his tent, the Frontispiece to the Flora Lapponica, published in 1737.
5.3. Spermatozoa as depicted in different seventeenth-century images: a, b and c are from Antony van Leeuwenhoek’s drawings of dog spermatozoa (1679), d is Hartsoeker’s homunculus in a human spermatazoan (1694), and e, f and g are human spermatozoa from Francois Plantades (Delenpatius), respectively showing intact cell, and broken to show the homunculi.
5.4. Early illustrations of the crustacean Squilla mantis and the nymphs of Irona renardi, including (6) and (9) taken from Valentijn (2002–2003 [1726]), following Rumphius.
5.5. Illustration from R.J. Thornton, Temple of Flora, Volume II, 1807, showing Aesculapius, Flora, Ceres and Cupid paying homage to a bust of Linnaeus.
6.1. Species numbers in relation to plot size for various forest composition studies in the Moluccas.
6.2. Looking eastwards along the Nua valley towards Mount Binaiya from Notone Hatae on the trans-Seram highway; midway between the south coast and Sawai on the north coast, but on the southern watershed.
6.3. Plot 8. Riparian forest at Sokonana, north of the Ruatan river.
6.4. Upland forest with Agathis dammara, near plot 9 (Rohnesi), west of trans-Seram highway near Wae Sune Maraputi.
6.5. Canarium hirsutum below the old village site of Amatene (plot 11).
7.1. Plot 11. Amatene: old village site, northwest of Upa estuary.
7.2. Plot 7. Part of sin wesie Peinisa (protected forest) at Mon Sanae.
8.1. Power grip (a) and precision grip (b).
8.2. The default weeding action (in a Kentish country garden).
8.3. The institutional context of learning how to garden in the contemporary UK.
9.1. Series of asunaete: cuscus (Phalanger) skewers planted as an offering to ancestral spirits.
9.2. Aha, Nuaulu sago-processing apparatus.
9.3. Treadle-operated coconut grater, Rouhua village, Seram.
9.4. Tobelo taxonomy of ‘biotic forms’ based on semantic componential analysis.
9.5. Edmund Leach’s (1964) version of the English classification of nature.
9.6. American English tool taxonomy.
10.1. One of a set of 77 medical paintings copied in the time of the Thirteenth Dalai Lama in the 1920s for the training of physicians in Buryiatia.
Maps
3.1. South Seram, showing former and current Nuaulu settlements and plot locations mentioned in Chapters 3, 6 and 7, as of 1996.
6.1. Seram in the context of the eastern Indonesian archipelago, showing places mentioned in the text. Line A represents Wallace’s Line of faunal balance, Line B is Weber’s Line, and Line C is the western boundary of the Australo-Pacific region.
6.2. South Seram, showing superimposed official forestry categories.
Tables
6.1. Basic data on location and description of plots.
6.2. Summary of selected 1996 plot data: levels of identification.
6.3. Family frequencies for individual trees in 1996 plots.
6.4. Summary of plot data: floristics and forest structure.
6.5. Forest types distinguished by Pattimura University Agricultural Faculty survey team and utilised by Glatzel (1992).
7.1. Summary of selected 1996 plot data: selected and aggregated uses.
7.2. General characteristics of Nuaulu forest patch categories based on 1996 plot data.
Preface
The title of this book is both deliberately provocative and deliberately ambiguous. An obvious allusion for many will be to recent controversies in the politics of the environment, and indeed it is partly about this. However, these episodes in our recent and current history cannot be understood except in relation to parallel academic controversies of equal ferocity (though less open to public view) concerning ‘nature’ as an idea, both as apparent in public discourse and in science, between the sciences, and in philosophy and the humanities. Organised around contentious issues, debates and discussions concerning the various ways in which the concept of nature has been used, abused, endlessly deconstructed and reclaimed, as reflected in anthropological, scientific and similar writing over the last several decades, this volume comprises eleven chapters, nine of which have been previously published, plus two that have not.
All the chapters were originally conceived as self-standing presentations, essays or articles, but of those pieces previously published I have made a few alterations to the text. These include shortening titles, editing passages where contemporaneous references and allusions would now look dated, absorbing plates into a continuous series of figures, deleting (and instead cross-referencing) figures that appear in more than one original publication, and updating figures and tables where new data have become available, such as revised plant nomenclature. These and other small alterations help to bring all the chapters in line with the overarching themes, so as better to connect the subject matter. In some cases this has involved removing text that – while appropriate in the original – in the present context has become redundant. I have also taken the opportunity to make a few corrections. Most of the chapters have – I think – stood the test of time. Only Chapter 1 retains a slightly dated feel to it, published as it was as a more popular intervention in discussions about traditional peoples and Green politics at a time when events were fast moving and later to develop much more.
The chapters appear in the chronological order of their publication or first public appearance. Year of first publication helps to explain factual information (such as population figures, other numerical data that have since altered, spans of time or political events) that now might seem dated, provides further context, and in some cases indicates how the debates have changed over time; but of course in not every case is order of publication an accurate marker of when they were actually written, or when the research was undertaken. Finally, much of the Introduction, Chapters 2, 4 and 10, which were first written as contributions to collected works, afterwords or as commentaries, have a particular narrative structure, and necessarily refer to other contributions in the collections of which they are part. In republishing them here, a certain amount of judicious editing has been required, including, for example, adding full references to the other published chapters commented on, or in some cases referring the reader to oral presentations that were not published as part of the collection. The details of publication history and the circumstances of production of individual chapters are as follows.
The larger part of the Introduction was originally written for a proposed Italian collection of essays on the ‘ontological turn’, which did not materialize. It appears here for the first time, though several passages in the final two sections have previously appeared in Ellen (2016), here Chapter 10. Chapter 1 is a slightly modified version of a public lecture delivered at the University of Durham in November 1985. It was first offered to The Ecologist under its then editor Edward Goldsmith, where it was rejected as being not in keeping with the ethos of the magazine. It was subsequently published in 1986 in Anthropology Today as ‘What Black Elk Left Unsaid: On the Illusory Images of Green Primitivism’.
Chapter 2 started life as an invited commentary for a session at the 1996 American Anthropological Association conference held in San Francisco, and was published in 1998 as ‘Comparative Natures in Melanesia: An External Perspective’, in a special issue of Social Analysis edited by Sandra Bamford.
Chapter 3 was presented at a conference held at Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia in 1995, organised by Tania Li. A condensed version was published in the conference report, and the definitive version in 1999, as ‘Forest Knowledge, Forest Transformation: Political Contingency, Historical Ecology and the Renegotiation of Nature in Central Seram’, in Transforming the Indonesian Uplands: Marginality, Power and Production, edited by Tania Li.
Chapter 4 first made an appearance as a prospectus and summary prepared for a workshop held at the University of Kent in 1997. The version reproduced here was published in 2000 with Holly Harris as the ‘Introduction’ to Indigenous Environmental Knowledge and Its Transformations: Critical Anthropological Perspectives, edited by myself, Peter Parkes and Alan Bicker. However, a partial prequel appeared in 1997, also co-authored with Holly Harris, as ‘Concepts of Indigenous Knowledge in Scientific and Development Studies Literature: A Critical Assessment’, APFT Working Papers, No. 2, 15 pp, and in part in 1999 as ‘Embeddedness of Indigenous Environmental Knowledge’, in Cultural and Spiritual Values of Biodiversity, edited by D. Posey (United Nations Environmental Programme; London: Intermediate Technology Publications, pp. 180–84), and in 2003 as ‘Indigenous Environmental Knowledge, the History of Science and the Discourse of Development’, in Nature Knowledge: Ethnoscience, Cognition and Utility, edited by G. Sanga and G. Ortalli (Oxford: Berghahn Books, pp. 297–300).
Chapter 5 was presented at a meeting of the British Association’s Festival of Science held in Salford in 2003, in a session organised by Paul Sillitoe. It was subsequently published in 2004 as ‘From Ethno-science to Science, or What the Indigenous Knowledge Debate Tells Us About How Scientists Define Their Project
’, in a special issue of the Journal of Cognition and Culture devoted to ‘Studies in Cognitive Anthropology of Science’.
Chapters 6 and 7 are linked, as they are two iterations and elaborations of a paper delivered at the Eighth International Congress of Ethnobiology held in Addis Ababa in 2002, as ‘Local Knowledge and Categorisation of Forest Diversity Among the Nuaulu of Seram, Eastern Indonesia’. Chapter 6 was published in 2007 as ‘Plots, Typologies and Ethnoecology: Local and Scientific Understandings of Forest Diversity on Seram’, in Global vs Local Knowledge, edited by Paul Sillitoe; and Chapter 7 in 2010 as ‘Why Aren’t the Nuaulu Like the Matsigenka? Knowledge and Categorization of Forest Diversity on Seram, Eastern Indonesia’, in Landscape Ethnoecology: Concepts of Biotic and Physical Space, edited by Leslie Main Johnson and Eugene Hunn.
Chapter 8 was prepared for a conference on ‘The Anthropology of Hands’ that took place on 24–26 June 2015 to mark the fiftieth anniversary celebrations of the University of Kent. An earlier version of Chapter 9 was given at the colloquium ‘Des Étres Vivants et des Artefacts’ held in April 2014 at the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris, and published in 2016 as ‘Tools, Agency and the Category of Living Things
’, in Des Étres Vivants et des Artefacts, Paris (Les Actes de colloques en ligne du musée du quai Branly), available at http://actesbranly.revues.org/655. A revised version was published in Classification from Antiquity to Modern Times: Sources, Methods, and Theories from an Interdisciplinary Perspective, edited by Tanja Pommerening and Walter Bisang, the outcome of a German Research Training Workshop held at the University of Mainz in 2014.
Chapter 10 was presented in 2014 at a conference held in Oxford under the auspices of the Oxford Centre for Research in the Humanities, and published in 2016 as ‘Is There a Role for Ontologies in Understanding Plant Knowledge Systems?’, in a special issue of the Journal of Ethnobiology entitled ‘Botanical Ontologies’.
Roy Ellen
Crockshard Farmhouse, Wingham
Acknowledgements
All the chapters, though to differing extents, draw upon my own fieldwork in Indonesia. Research in the Nuaulu area of Seram (1970–2015) has been sponsored by the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI: Lembaga llmu Pengetahuan Indonesia) and more recently also by Pattimura University, and the Maluku Study Centre attached to the University in Ambon. Financial support between 1969 and 1992 came from a combination of the former UK Social Science Research Council, the London-Cornell Project for East and Southeast Asian Studies, the Central Research Fund of the University of London, the Galton Foundation and the Hayter Travel Awards Scheme. Most recently, directly and substantially, it relies on the support of ESRC (Economic and Social Research Council) grant R000 236082 for work on ‘Deforestation and forest knowledge in south central Seram, eastern Indonesia’ during 1996. Additionally, for this work I need to acknowledge the support of Professor Hermien Soselisa and Dr Rosemary Bolton in Ambon, the Indonesian National Herbarium in Bogor, and in particular Dr Johannis Mogea and Professor Johan Iskandar of the Institute of Ecology, Padjadjaran University, Bandung. The fieldwork reported here was undertaken mainly in 1996, but also draws on long-term fieldwork conducted between 1969 and 1971, and for shorter periods in 1973, 1975, 1981, 1986 and 1992. As ever, I rely on the continuing and enthusiastic involvement and support of Nuaulu friends and co-researchers. In Canterbury I am grateful for the advice of Helen Newing. Christine Eagle and Lesley Farr helped with the maps, plot diagrams and the development of the ethnobotanical database, while Simon Platten and Amy Warren have assisted with data processing. Christie Allan, Emily Brennan and Margaret Florey kindly permitted me to refer to their unpublished material, while the final editing and preparation of the revised manuscript has benefitted from the assistance of Mercy Morris and receipt of a Leverhulme Trust Emeritus Fellowship (EM-2018-057\6, 2018-20).
In connection with individual chapters I would like to thank the following: Riccardo Vergnani and Andrea Zuppi (Introduction); Bob Foley and the ‘History of Man and the Environment’ group at Durham (Chapter 1); Sandra Bamford, Paul Sillitoe, Christin Kocher-Schmid and European Commission D-G 8, Avenir des Peuples des Foret Tropicales (APFT) (Chapter 2); Tania Li, Rosemary Bolton of the Summer Institute of Linguistics in Ambon, and an anonymised Nuaulu author, for permission to reproduce the text presented as an appendix, ESRC grants R000 23 3028 and R000 23 6082 (Chapter 3); Holly Harris, Peter Parkes, Alan Bicker and the Asia Committee of the European Science Foundation under the auspices of the East-West Environmental Linkages consortium (Chapter 4); Christophe Heintz (Chapter 5); ESRC grant RES-000-22-1106 and the British Academy (Chapter 6); Leslie Main Johnson, Brien Meilleur and ESRC grant (R000 23 3088) for work on ‘The Ecology and Ethnobiology of Human-Rainforest Interaction in Brunei: A Dusun Case Study’ (Chapter 7); Simon Platten, Rachel Kaleta, Nikki Goward and Leverhulme Trust grant 5/00 236/N, ‘The ethnobotany of British homegardens: diversity, knowledge and exchange’ (Chapter 8); and Walter Bisang, Tanja Pommerening, Laura Rival, Perig Pitrou, Ludovic Coupaye, Adam Miklosi, Garry Marvin, Joachim Kadereit and Jochen Althoff (Chapter 9). Finally, in connection with Chapter 10, I need to thank Cathy Cantwell, Will McClatchey, Theresa Miller and Emily Brennan; and the Royal Botanic Gardens Kew and the Indonesian National Herbarium in Bogor for palm identification.
Note on Orthography
Nuaulu terms appear here in bold italics and mostly follow the phonology and spelling adopted by Rosemary Bolton and Hunanatu Matoke in the 2005 edition of their dictionary (Kamus Sou Naune – Sou Manai, Bahasa Indonesia – Nuaulu; Badan Pemberdayaan Masyarakat Propinisi Maluku and SIL International Cabang Malaulu). All other local terms are placed in single inverted commas, while italics are used for scientific biological nomenclature.
INTRODUCTION
Nature Beyond the ‘Ontological Turn’
I’ll tell you all my ideas about Looking-glass House. First, there’s the room you can see through the glass – that’s just the same as our drawing room, only the things go the other way . . . the books are something like our books only the words go the wrong way . . . she began looking about, and noticed that what could be seen from the old room was quite common and uninteresting, but that all the rest was as different as possible.
—Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking-Glass
Beyond ‘The End of Nature’ and ‘Post-nature’
I have called this collection of essays – perhaps provocatively – ‘Nature Wars’. The phrase is also deliberately ambiguously polyvalent, the warring factions in the various disputes being sometimes eco-warriors, sometimes indigenous peoples defending their patrimony, sometimes official guardians of various vested interests and status quos, and on the other hand academic anthropologists and scientists plying their trades by disagreeing how best to portray and dissect how people perceive and engage with their material and biological worlds. ‘Nature wars’ suggests episodes and phenomena, as diverse and as historically separated as Agent Orange despoliation, industrial deforestation, atmospheric pollution, GM pharmacopeias, angst over appropriate clinical interventions to redefine gender, micro-plastic contamination of marine life, and our attempts to combat them, through the socio-economic institutions and processes that make them possible, whether neoliberal global capitalisation, the blind and remorseless central planning of the old Soviet Union or the People’s Republic of China, or remorseless consumer demand and globalisation fuelled by social media and other modern communications. The hyperbole is, I believe, justified: the issues involved are very real for many individuals and globally and collectively transformative. People fight over resources and material advances that redefine nature, but equally find that the conceptual tools at their disposal are inadequate for the purpose, sometimes illusory mirages or at best transient and precarious – if convenient – props. Alice walked through the looking glass only to look back to find that what was on the other side was no more real than it seemed when she was there. There is a tension between the necessity to operate with nature-like concepts and the recognition that at every stage of enaction, these same concepts are compromised by their embeddedness in particular social situations.
An intellectual engagement with the concept of ‘nature’ has been seemingly at the centre of debates in anthropology (and especially anthropologies of the environment) forever. This should be no surprise as explication of the concept seems to address the very essence of what it means to be human, in the sense of ‘our nature’ and what is ‘natural’, and in its problematic semantic contrast with ‘culture’ and ‘society’. Since the 1960s, however, there has been a heightened awareness of some special implications of its deployment, as the world has self-consciously addressed issues of environmental degradation and biodiversity loss. A naive definition of what nature might be – a fixed mechanistic thing, phenomenon or quality, or merely a backdrop for important events – soon led to attempts to deconstruct it and show its intrinsic socialness, including its gendered dimensions, together with cultural interpretations that varied between different populations and languages, and between contexts within the same culture, and meanings that slipped away as soon as some firm grasp was apparently attained. Those who talked about nature as if it were a real thing, unreflectively, and not in a nuanced or ironic way, were often associated with a natural science vision of the world, or a vision unduly influenced by simplistic scientific generalisations.
Part of the issue was always the scale at which the concept was employed, for what might be acceptably described as nature at one level can be shown to be nature-social entanglement of a very intricate kind when you dig deeper (e.g. Howell 2011). Ethnography, whether of scientific practices in laboratories or of anthropological field sites in specific locations, is subversive precisely because it puts back all the social and cultural connective tissue into the process through which scientists and others actually test hypotheses and gather data that had earlier been stripped out in the simplifying knowledge-making process that produces the scripts that others consume, such as scientific papers and communications. Indeed, in its most recent iteration in the context of the so-called ‘ontological turn’ (about which more later), nature disappears altogether. Nature is problematic not only because it can be viewed both from an outside looking in and from an inside looking out (Ingold 1993), but also because it is simultaneously held to be something out there that we study – something beyond our own apparatus for studying it – and yet compromised by the fact that we can never escape the influence of ideology and culture in defining it.
Many anthropologists have followed Bill McKibben (1989) in announcing ‘the end of nature’. McKibben had in mind a very material nature increasingly inseparable from human controls or the consequences of human cultural actions, and was less concerned with whether or not it was a conceptual necessity. By contrast, for Latour (2009: 2) the critique of nature : social dualism and the repeated demonstration of how nature more generally is always culturally constructed ‘destroys the nature of nature as an operating concept covering the globe’. Kirsten Hastrup (2011: 1) seems to think we are fortunately no longer saddled with the handicap of dualism and that the battle against it has been won; all that is necessary now is to routinise a new critical anthropology of ‘nature-cultures’ and celebrate the true ‘deep-seated entanglements of natural and social’ . . . ‘beyond the dualism’. Indeed, she shares Descola’s (1996: 99) optimism that the concept of nature will somehow go away once its ontological shortcomings have been asserted. I beg to differ.
While nature is often discussed as an abstract analytic category in works such as this, it impinges on our ordinary experiential lives in more specific contexts, such as through biogeographic categories that are thought to typify it (such as forest or ‘jungle’, themselves no less culturally compromised). But in debating the dualistic reinforcement of the concept, it is important not to conflate or elide ‘nature : society’ contrasts with ‘nature : culture’, ‘nature : nurture’, ‘human : environment’ or ‘nature : human’ contrasts. These are not always implying similar contrasts. We can agree with Anna Tsing (2011: 27) that the concept of sociality does not distinguish humans from non-humans, and that, of course, species other than humans display sociality, both between members of the same species and between species. Indeed, students of animal behaviour have long written sympathetically about animal social relations – long before the advent of evolutionary psychology or sociobiology – and therefore society and nature are not always or necessarily opposed in these senses. But while it is tempting and legitimate to contest and undermine dichotomies of many kinds, there are good intellectual and practical reasons why we find ourselves reinventing and relying on them (Kopnina 2016).
The concept of nature is much more complex and interesting than simply another socially constructed idea, everywhere integral to social life, and everywhere malleable and ductile. It is interesting partly because as a concept it is so resilient despite the critique. It is such a useful concept that it does not seem to go away. In responding to the ‘end of nature’ consensus, there are four powerful arguments. The first is a revisionist argument – that those seeking its demise have over-simplified and caricatured past scholarship and science; the second is the argument that received notions of the concept of ‘nature’ were key to the rise of global science and for this reason necessary; the third is the argument deriving from the rhetorical power of the concept in everyday and ideological discourse; and the fourth is the cognitivist argument claiming, despite the ambiguities and the social framing and cultural variation, that there do indeed exist underlying cognitive predispositions which encourage ‘nature-like’ concepts.
The first argument in defence of the concept of nature is that for rhetorical effect, and paradoxically to emphasise a dualism between their own monism and previous conceptions of nature, those arguing against nature : human dualisms have tended to draw the difference between their own position and those of their predecessors far too starkly, downplaying or ignoring previous attempts to recognise and get round the problems posed by dualist conceptions. Thus, when it comes to the ‘co-constitution’ of species, we should note that biologists have long worked with the concept of co-evolution as an underlying system dynamic, and developed sophisticated models of ecological dynamics which emphasise intricate interdependencies reflected in Darwin’s description of ‘an entangled bank’. The ecological anthropology model as it developed in the 1960s and 1970s, with the centrality it accorded to the concept of adaptation, did not – as some have suggested (e.g. Hastrup 2011) – somehow foster a simplistic binary concept of nature-culture. This is a very shallow reading of a complex history. Such a criticism might have been more accurately directed at the older Stewardian model that the smart young systems-oriented ecological anthropologists such as Roy Rappaport and Pete Vayda overtly rejected (Vayda and Rappaport 1968). The new systems approach was certainly borrowed from biology, but broke down the binary division between nature and culture by emphasising the connection and co-constitution of elements within both, and accepted that nature had been much modified by culture. Moreover, the kind of feedback relationships identified by Rappaport (1968) in his work in turn fostered the highly productive historical ecology paradigm that developed through the efforts of such researchers as Bill Balée (e.g. Balée 1989) and Carole Crumley (1994), the ideas of whom served to entrench this critique. Likewise, we find here the precursors of a raft of bio-cultural approaches within the environmental humanities and anthropology, which in turn have undermined further more conventional ideas of where ‘nature’ might lie.
The second argument in defence of nature derives from the observation that since the emergence of science as an idea in European natural philosophy from the sixteenth century onwards, nature has been constructed as the object of scrutiny, necessary at every turn in framing an issue to be investigated, but always contingent and temporary, falling away to reveal a new nature once the superficiality and inadequacy of the first has been revealed. The very fact that we argue about the concept of nature is testament to the fact that while in all systems of folk knowledge nature-like concepts are a flexible ill-defined idea, in Western philosophy there have been repeated attempts to control and define it to serve the purposes of the emergent sciences (Pálsson 2018). Fair enough, but in the formal histories of ‘nature’ and in the emerging critique, perhaps too much emphasis has been placed on etymology, which can be dangerous, and ultimately pointless. Concepts of nature have always adjusted to current and specific realities, whether scientific or social.
The third argument in defence of nature is well articulated by Rayner and Heyward (2014: 125), who object to the calls to abandon the concept of nature on the grounds that it is an ‘indispensable rhetorical tool’. Their example is the science and politics surrounding global climate change. All societies, they argue, invoke nature in moral discourse, even if they have no word for it, since as an idea it has such ‘coercive power’. Although we might be advised to refrain from deploying appeals to nature as a standard for political action, the idea is so thoroughly entrenched that dispensing with it is just unrealistic. As Latour (2008) puts it, matters of concern are generally instrumental in the constitution of fact, as we shall see later in this introduction and elsewhere in the book.
Finally, precisely because nature-like concepts have become such a powerful conceptual prop everywhere in working out how the world works and in pursuing symbolic political ends, it might be thought that this is in itself evidence for something even more fundamental in terms of how humans apprehend and make sense of their environment. I have previously (e.g. Ellen 1996a, 1996d) argued for the existence of a small number of cognitive imperatives underpinning the ways in which all peoples shape their world, and will return to these ideas below. I contend that it is possible to accept that nature is constantly being defined and redefined and yet still be something ‘real’ and not illusory. Rather than announcing the ‘end of nature’, it might be more realistic to explore how people ‘redefine’ – or even better ‘reconfigure’ nature-like semantic spaces to deal with new socio-environmental situations.
In this book I use the trope of nature to bring together a number of essays I have written since 1986, essays that explore the tensions between nature as a subject of investigation and as an analytic and symbolic concept. It attempts to engage with the different ways in which we use the word or its cognates, and illustrates some of the irresolvable and resolvable problems encountered when we use the word at the interface of different discourses: across the many discourses of science, in the specific literature of anthropology, and the non-specialist popular and folk usages across cultures and in ordinary ‘common-sense’ language.
Defining Our Terms of Reference
The larger part of this introductory essay has its origins in an invitation to write an afterword to accompany a collection of seven indicative and influential papers published over the last ten years on what is sometimes called the ‘ontological turn’, at least as this applies in anthropology. This was a daunting commission given the enormous body of existing commentary on the subject and its seemingly exponential growth, almost in equal measure by authors inspired or exasperated by it. What I offer here, therefore, is no more than a partial review of a few issues as they relate to ethnographic practice, comparative anthropology and anthropological generalisation, from an anthropologist who has taken a professional long-term interest in how one people (the Nuaulu of eastern Indonesia) apprehend and conceptualise other species and entities which comprise their world.
A ‘turn’ in the present context might be understood to be a movement in general intellectual practice, somewhat short of a paradigm shift, signalling a general change in direction, and with a rather loosely defined focus. This is a bit like the way in which the term concept metaphor has been used in circumstances where we would not wish to imply something as explicit and thought-through as a theory (Ellen 2010b). When this particular use of ‘turn’ began is unclear, but it seems to have emerged (at least in anthropology) with those currents of interpretivism that followed the decline in the influence of structuralism. By contrast, the term ‘ontology’ has good philosophical precedents, but some divergent meanings. Here are just a few definitions from anthropologists writing on the subject (see also Kohn 2015). For Descola (2005b: 8) it is ‘the main framework through which people perceive and interpret reality’. For Carrithers (in Carrithers et al. 2010: 160) it is ‘a set of propositions urging a particular viewpoint on reality’. For Scott (2013: 859) it is ‘the investigation and theorization of diverse experiences and understandings of the nature of being’. For Pina-Cabral (2014) it is no less than ‘worldview’ or perhaps ‘cosmology’. Rather differently, in computer and information science, an ontology is what formally represents knowledge as a set of concepts within a domain, using a shared vocabulary to denote the types, properties and interrelationships of those concepts. In yet other texts, a large part of its intention is covered by the phrase ‘a framework for thinking’. But if this is so, then it comes close to Clifford Geertz’s (e.g. 1973) ‘webs of significance’, which was of course his pithy definition of culture. And it might be relevant to note also that the word ‘ontology’ is not mentioned at all in a key paper by Vilaça (2002) considered widely to be central to the debate. So, the fact that there are many ways of defining it suggests one reason why ontology is causing so much trouble. For the time being, I prefer to remain agnostic as to which definition, if any, is the most persuasive.
The chronological order of original publication of the papers examined here