Ned Spicer was invited to participate in a symposium,
organized by Thomas Weaver of the University of Arizona, entitled "Anthropology
in the 1990's: Conditions, Needs, and Prospects." The symposium was
held in conjunction with the American Association for the Advancement of
Science meetings in San Francisco in the winter of 1974. The subheading of the
symposium was, "Suppose They Began
the Twenty-First Century and Forgot to Invite Anthropology!!!"
Ned presented his paper entitled, "Anthropology in the society of the 1990s", on February
28, 1974.
Twenty years later, in 1994, the paper was republished in Human
Organization with a forward by his widow, Rosamond Spicer, under the
title, "Reassessing Edward Spicer's Views on Anthropology in the Society
of the 1990s: How and Why This Paper by Edward H. Spicer Was Written"
(Spicer, Rosamond 1994 Human Organization, Vol. 53. No. 4, pp. 388 - 395). From
her forward, we can gain an insight into Ned's thinking and approach to the
future.
Rosamond observed that
"In preparing
this paper on the future of cultural anthropology, Ned apparently gave it a
great deal of thought. As was his habit, he wrote down voluminous notes and
lists of ideas. He also made a number of starts, each different from the last.”
“At one point he
wrote, 'I react strongly against nineteenth century economic-determinism, that
technology and physical environmental conditions are the essential factors to
consider in forecasting. I rather look to the future in terms of the adaptation
of social structures and cultural orientations to one another in the context of
the influence of firm cultural products. I shall therefore take off from
consideration of the probable alternative trends which we may expect in the
form and functions of societal structures and cultural value
orientations.' “
“Such a point of view
was always the basis of his thinking and writing." (p. 388)
In describing Ned, Rosamond observed that,
"His interests,
reading, and studies ranged through drama, literature, economics, city
planning, philosophy, history, poetry, the environment, and all the fields of
anthropology. All of this vast array of information and understanding he
brought to bear in some way or another on any project he undertook, on any
subject on which he wrote.”
“Perhaps one of his
outstanding characteristics was his ability to synthesize, as was so evident in
his Cycles of Conquest. I have long
thought that the practice of that art of synthesis was connected with another,
the appreciation and writing of poetry. I mention all these aspects of Ned
because they seem to be contained in the following paper." (p.388).
It was his global
interests and ability to synthesize vast amounts of material that I remember
from my first graduate classes with Ned.
I was drawn to his Community Development Seminar where he challenged us to look at the problem at
hand from multiple points of view. He asked us, “What are the “felt needs” of
the various parties in this change situation?” He encouraged us to seek a
synthesis of these views as a way toward understanding the issues and their
complexities. As community developers, he taught us that our job was to help
the parties to synthesize their shared interests. Our job was to facilitate,
not impose, problem resolution.
Ned was a humanist who understood and taught the connection
between a people’s past, present and how these shaped their future. In his
paper on the February day in 1974, he outlined five trends in the social and
cultural environment that he felt would shape the next 20 years for
anthropology.
The five trends that Ned chose to characterize the society
he envisioned for the 1990s were the following:
(1) increasing intercommunication
among the peoples of the world;
(2) increasing occupational
specialization with accompanying organic differentiation within societies;
(3) increasing failure of
technological solutions for the resolution of human problems in acceptable
ways;
(4) increasing assertion and
self-expression of ethnic groups within nation-states; and
(5) increasing reaction against
centralization in political and administrative structures.
He stated "In
general, continuation of these trends will, I believe, result in a society more
heterogeneous than it was in the 19th or any previous century, more aware of
its heterogeneity, with stronger than ever tendencies to compartmentalization,
with increased awareness of and interest in non-technological and non-economic
factors affecting human life, and with a growing tendency to view the
nation-state in a wholly new light, especially with reference to its ethnic
components and its political and administrative units." (p. 389)
Now nearly 50 years later, it might be worth considering
just how prescient Ned’s predictions were for the 1990s and now for the 21st
Century.
What are your thoughts about Applied Anthropology, or what has been your experience since 1974? PLEASE LEAVE A COMMENT IF YOU HAVE ONE.
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