10
Unilinear Evolutionism Anthropological Theory IB Anthropology UWC Costa Rica

Unilinear Evolutionism

  • Upload
    bentogo

  • View
    677

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Unilinear Evolutionism

Unilinear Evolutionism

Anthropological TheoryIB AnthropologyUWC Costa Rica

Page 2: Unilinear Evolutionism

Key TheoristsSir Edward Burnett Tyler (1832-1917)

Lewis Henry Morgan (1818-1881)

Page 3: Unilinear Evolutionism

‘Ancient Society’ – Morgan (1877)• Example of 19th century evolutionism

applied to society

• Assumes human society evolved through a series of stages – savagery, barbarism and civilization

• Divided savagery and barbarism into three distinct sub-stages

Page 4: Unilinear Evolutionism

Savagery• Lower savagery: humans exist through

subsistence based on fruit and nuts

• Middle savagery: people start fishing and gain control over fire

• Upper savagery: invention of bow and arrow

Page 5: Unilinear Evolutionism

Barbarism• Lower barbarism: humans start making

pottery

• Middle barbarism: domestication of plants and animals (Old World) and irrigated agriculture (Americas)

• Upper barbarism: iron smelting and use of iron tools

Page 6: Unilinear Evolutionism

Civilization• Invention of writing

Page 7: Unilinear Evolutionism

Unilinear Evolutionism• Assumes one line along which all societies evolved

• E.g. any society in upper barbarism had to include in its history, in order, periods of lower, middle and upper savagery, and then lower and middle barbarism

• Morgan: societies of the time time could be placed into various stages. Some had not advanced beyond upper savagery. Some were at middle barbarism and others had reached civilization

Page 8: Unilinear Evolutionism

Criticisms of Morgan’s Unilinear Evolutionism

• Used loaded terms such as ‘savagery’ and ‘barbarism’

• Many writers dispute the criteria used for each stage of evolution

• Morgan is incorrect to assume societies can only follow one evolutionary path. In practice, societies follow multiple developmental paths

Page 9: Unilinear Evolutionism

‘Primitive Culture – Tylor (1871)• Takes evolutionary approach to

anthropology of religion

• Proposed unilinear path – from animism, through polytheism and monotheism to science

• Tylor – religion would retreat when science provided better answers

Page 10: Unilinear Evolutionism

Survivals• Both Tylor and Morgan interested in survivals

– practices that survive in contemporary societies from earlier evolutionary stages

• E.g. belief in ghosts today represents survival from stage of animism

• Survivals taken as evidence that society had passed through earlier evolutionary stages