New Tribal Revolution: Difference between revisions
Removed Taker Vs. Leaver and Mother Culture Sections see Discussion |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
'''New tribalists''' are adherents of [[Neo-Tribalism]]. They propose a New Tribal Revolution outlined in the ''[[Ishmael (novel)|Ishmael]]'' series by [[Daniel Quinn]]. New tribalists believe that the tribe fulfills an important role in human life, and that the dissolution of [[tribalism]] with the spread of [[civilization]] has come to threaten the very survival of the species. New tribalists seek to mimic [[indigenous peoples]] by organizing their own "tribes" based on underlying principles gleaned from [[ethnology]] and [[anthropology|anthropological]] [[fieldwork]]. |
'''New tribalists''' are adherents of [[Neo-Tribalism]]. They propose a New Tribal Revolution outlined in the ''[[Ishmael (novel)|Ishmael]]'' series by [[Daniel Quinn]]. New tribalists believe that the tribe fulfills an important role in human life, and that the dissolution of [[tribalism]] with the spread of [[civilization]] has come to threaten the very survival of the species. New tribalists seek to mimic [[indigenous peoples]] by organizing their own "tribes" based on underlying principles gleaned from [[ethnology]] and [[anthropology|anthropological]] [[fieldwork]]. |
||
Quinn argues that [[civilization]] is not working, and if we are to find a way of life that ''does'' work, we should draw our basic principles from human societies that ''are'' working. Quinn points to [[indigenous peoples]] and tribal societies as such examples, and advocates a social revolution--the New Tribal Revolution--to reform society using principles gleaned from the operation of such cultures. |
Quinn argues that this [[civilization]] is not working, and if we are to find a way of life that ''does'' work, we should draw our basic principles from human societies that ''are'' working. Quinn points to [[indigenous peoples]] and tribal societies as such examples, and advocates a social revolution--the New Tribal Revolution--to reform society using principles gleaned from the operation of such cultures. |
||
Revision as of 19:12, 19 June 2008
It has been suggested that this article be merged into Neo-Tribalism. (Discuss) Proposed since June 2007. |
This article may be confusing or unclear to readers. (June 2007) |
New tribalists are adherents of Neo-Tribalism. They propose a New Tribal Revolution outlined in the Ishmael series by Daniel Quinn. New tribalists believe that the tribe fulfills an important role in human life, and that the dissolution of tribalism with the spread of civilization has come to threaten the very survival of the species. New tribalists seek to mimic indigenous peoples by organizing their own "tribes" based on underlying principles gleaned from ethnology and anthropological fieldwork.
Quinn argues that this civilization is not working, and if we are to find a way of life that does work, we should draw our basic principles from human societies that are working. Quinn points to indigenous peoples and tribal societies as such examples, and advocates a social revolution--the New Tribal Revolution--to reform society using principles gleaned from the operation of such cultures.
Criticism
From indigenous groups
Critics of this movement, including some indigenous peoples, may regard new tribalists as interlopers or pirates of native culture, or seeking to dilute native sovereignty or threaten regard for native culture in general. Quinn condemned just such piracy in his online parable, "The Crystals of Rapanah," but the ambiguity of this relationship cannot be so easily dismissed. In one sense, the conscious syncretism of new tribalists is an outright piracy of native culture. In another sense, the new tribalist emphasis on learning not from specific cultures but from cross-cultural principles suggests that this is not the case.
Malthusianism and misanthropy
Many point to Quinn's critique of civilization as being essentially Malthusian. Critics also point to Quinn's criticism of civilization and advocacy of small populations as being misanthropic, particularly in that Quinn's solution may require a drastically smaller population than currently exists. While Quinn advocates a gradual decrease in human population rather than the massive die-off predicted by other primitivist writers, Quinn's willingness to accept wide-spread starvation to end the "Food Race" is seen as diametrically opposed to humanity's interests. Some of Quinn's supporters, however, state that large-scale starvation is already prevalent in civilization, and that Quinn's method attempts to have the best interests of humanity, as a sustainable species, in mind. According to Quinn, the way to achieve those interests is in stark opposition to the ideals and sentiments of the prevailing culture.
The critique of new tribalists as being essentially Malthusian is not entirely inaccurate, but requires a significant amendment to Malthus' theories. Malthus, like most demographers, held human population growth as an independent variable. Quinn proposes that humans, like all other animals, are in fact bound by their food supply; that is, that human population is a function of human food supply. Thus, new tribalists do not expect a Malthusian catastrophe in the usual sense, since in their model it is impossible for a population to grow larger than its food supply. Instead, new tribalists foresee the ever-increasing dynamic of food supply and population--Quinn's "Food Race"--leading eventually to an ecological catastrophe which may result in civilizational collapse and even human extinction. Because of this, the charge of misanthropy can only be upheld outside of the new tribalists' own mindset. If Quinn's arguments are accepted, then such wide-spread starvation is, in fact, the most humanitarian alternative. Quinn compared sending food to a starving population to throwing gas on a fire. Quinn's understanding of the relationship between food supply and human population is not accepted by all biologists or demographers. However, there still fails to be a counter Tribalism movement; as those that encounter the school of thought either become Neo-Tribalists themselves, or reject it and forget about it.
Reviving the "Noble Savage"
Other critics charge new tribalists with reviving the myth of the "Noble Savage," a concept explored by Romantics such as Rousseau and modern writers such as Aldous Huxley. Critics say that new tribalists' views of tribalism are essentially naive, and that the version of it imagined or even practiced by modern "tribalists" has much more in common with adherents' beliefs and fantasies on the subject than anything resembling "real" tribalism. A "savage," untouched by civilization, would be akin to an animal, and neither noble nor a good role model for a society. By viewing civilization as something that corrupts or taints a person's pure or natural state, new tribalists are succumbing, like Rousseau, to the romantic idea that the natural state of a human being, without the moderating effect of civilization, is somehow better. To the critics this notion is easily refutable, either by comparing human quality of life before civilization, or as humorist P.J. O'Rourke pointed out, by considering the natural state of children.
New tribalists do not deny the strong influence of Romantic thought in the movement. However, unlike the philosophy of the Noble Savage, they do not argue that civilization is inherently corrupting, but simply that many modern forms of civilization do not offer some of the most important benefits enjoyed by more tribal forms of society. They also point out some of the harms, to the individual, society, and the planet, that non-tribal civilizations seem to cause. New tribalists respond to the Noble Savage criticism by pointing out that their philosophy is, on the most practical level, driven by a cost-benefit analysis between forms of civilization grounded in anthropology and ethnography, not by romantic notions of purity, or the naive belief that all civilization is bad.
Luddism
Some criticize the degree to which new tribalists exploit modern technologies. Most new tribalists live in the First World, use modern technology to organize and communicate the movement, and benefit greatly from modern technology and civilization. This is seen as hypocritical by many critics, since without the vast, modern civilization despised by new tribalists, none of this technology would exist, and thus neither would the movement. However, that is a circle without an end, as without the modern civilization, there would be no need for a movement to get rid of it.
New tribalists often point out that their essential problem is with an unsustainable vision of constant growth that underlies our civilization, rather than technology per se, the primary target of Luddism. They have never taken a position against technology and see no hypocrisy in using technology, since the goal is a sustainable civilization, not a non-technical one or one without any kind of continuing progress in science or technology.
Among historians and anthropologists
Historians and anthropologists who study Nearctic and Neotropic peoples are divided. Almost all are very sympathetic to the situation of indigenous peoples, and admire their cultures to varying degrees. Many of these scholars, in the Rousseauian tradition of the "Noble Savage", prefer these societies to European societies of the same period. Some speculate this may be due to the idiosyncratic convictions of these same historians, which may have a basis in personal cultural doubts. New tribalists contend that this is because of a deep need for social support beyond the family, and that experts' respect for native cultures reinforces these convictions. However, Quinn is not a purveyor of the "Noble Savage" ideology; according to him tribal societies are notable for their biological viability, and any ethical or aesthetic angles taken are secondary or even irrelevant within his main theory.
Activity
An important expression of this movement is the trend towards modern eco-villages. Ecoregional Democracy and peace movement advocates are also often new tribalists as well, as the groups share common ideals.
See also
- Neo-Tribalism
- Deep ecology
- Ecosophy
- Anarcho-primitivism
- Eco-anarchism
- Green anarchism
- Evolution of societies
- Cultural diversity
- Intentional Community