Over the past four weeks I have looked at various theoretical perspectives (neo-evolutionism, cultural ecology, cultural evolutionism, and cultural materialism) that lie within a larger materialist framework; in reading the principal works of White, Steward, Service, Fried, Rappaport and Harris, I have been exposed to a variety of ways in which the materialist paradigm has been operationalized within the realms of American anthropological theory and practice. A common thread in these works is an overarching attempt to understand the dynamic interplay between the infrastructure, structure, and superstructure that keeps people alive, holds society together, and gives life meaning. Continuing in this same vein, Europe and the People without History demonstrates a Marxist materialist theoretical perspective; Wolf takes a dialectical and historical approach to political economy by examining how capitalism developed and how this development effected various populations throughout the world.
In Europe and the People without History, Wolf looks at how protracted historical sequences, originating out of 15th Century European economic expansion, have resulted in the world sharing a single and highly interconnected system of political economy. In the first section of his book, Wolf puts forth three modes of production: kin mode, tributary mode, and capitalist mode; he uses these abstractions as a means to analyze and make comparisons about vast expanses of time and space, which he reviews in later sections of his book. Differentiating himself from other materialist anthropologists, Wolf uses these modes, not as “types into which human societies may be sorted nor stages in cultural evolution,” but merely as constructs that allow for a deeper understanding of the strategic connection of wealth and power. (Wolf 2010: 100)
Part two of Wolf’s book is aptly entitled “In Search of Wealth;” over the course of four chapters he analyzes the mercantile era by presenting the impacts of Iberians in America, the fur trade, the slave trade, and trade and conquest in the Orient. Wolf’s chapter on the fur trade is highly impactful; he is able to show that the Iroquoian kinship state, the emergence of Plains horse-pastoralism, and transfigurations in the potlatch are all linked to the recreation of cultural patterns of alliance and conflict caused by growth and territorial expansion of the fur trade.
In section three Wolf examines the primary motive behind European expansion (capitalism) by providing an in-depth analysis of the industrial era. Drawing from Ernest Mandel, Wolf explains the capitalist system to be “an articulated system of capitalist, semi-capitalism and pre-capitalist relations of production, linked to each other by capitalist relations of exchange and dominated by the capitalist world markets.” (Wolf 2010: 297) Over the course of four chapters Wolf discusses aspects of the Industrial Revolution (mechanization, factories, brokers, Indian removal, railroad construction and shipping), crisis in capitalism (transition from home-based crafts to mechanization), differentiation in capitalism (formation of the state), commercial agriculture (plantations and cash cropping), new commodity production (wheat, rice, meat, bananas, rubber, tea, coffee, cotton, sugar, opium, gold and diamonds), and labor migration (international migrations of masses of people).
In the introduction of his book Wolf put forth the central assertion that “the world of humankind constitutes a manifold, a totality of interconnected processes, and inquiries that disassemble this totality into bits and then fail to reassemble it falsify reality” (Wolf 2010: 3) Wolf references this assertion by stating, in the brief Afterward, that in order for anthropology to work a revised concept of culture needs to be put forth; Wolf explains that anthropologists need to see humans as determinate actors, controlled by determinative circumstances, and that the actions of these actors is to forever assemble, disassemble, and reassemble cultural sets. This highly deterministic view is one of the major criticisms I have with Wolf’s work. This determinism is pervasive throughout his entire book, but stands out particularly in the last chapter, in which Wolf discusses the migration of people, such as the Chinese to mining operations in California, British Columbia and Australia. Wolf’s treatment of the movement of people comes across as if he views them as another type of commodity; little thought is given to the agency of individuals as determiners of their own movements around the globe.
I found Wolf’s choice to use modes of production as a heuristic device truly insightful; it enabled him to formulate a single narrative in which he could discuss the dynamic nature of political and economic structures throughout the world. Overall, I am truly impressed with the vast expanse of time and space that Wolf packs into this work. I can absolutely see operationalizing this dialectical and historical meld of Marxist thought within the field of historical archaeology; this approach allows archaeologists to move past the oppositional frameworks of science and humanism and determinism and relativism, and on to dialectical approaches, which allow for a more dynamic analysis of culture change.