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‘Humanity in the chrysalis stage’: indigenous Australians in the anthropological imagination, 1899–1926

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 November 2006

HENRIKA Kuklick
Affiliation:
History and Sociology of Science, University of Pennsylvania, 303 Logan Hall, 249 South 36th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104–6304, USA. Email: hkuklick@sas.upenn.edu.

Abstract

Baldwin Spencer and F. J. Gillen's Native Tribes of Central Australia (1899) is now remembered as an approximation of the anthropological method that would soon be conventional: a comprehensive study of a delimited area, based on sustained fieldwork, portraying a population's distinctive character. In 1913, however, Bronislaw Malinowski said of Spencer and Gillen's studies that ‘half the total production in anthropological theory ha[d] been based upon their work, and nine-tenths affected or modified by it’. Native Tribes inspired an intense international debate, orchestrated by J. G. Frazer, broker of the book's publication, predicated on the assumption that indigenous Australians were the most primitive of living peoples, whose totemism was somehow at the base of civilization's highest achievements – monogamous marriage and truly spiritual religion. But the debate proved irresolvable in Frazer's terms. Pondering conflicting interpretations of totemism, anthropologists rejected unilinear models of social evolution like Frazer's. Nationally differentiated populations of professional anthropologists emerged in the early twentieth century, developing distinctive theoretical schemes. Nevertheless, some issues central to the debate remained vital. For example, how were magical, scientific and religious modes of thought and action to be distinguished? And in Australia, analyses of indigenes were distinctively construed. White settlers, concerned to legitimate colonial rule, asked specific questions: did Aborigines have established ties to specific lands? Were Aborigines capable of civilization? Biogeographical theory underpinned Spencer's relatively liberal conclusions, which had precursors and successors in Australian anthropology: Aborigines had defined criteria of land ownership, their habits were suitable adaptations to their circumstances, and observed cultural diversity among Aborigines denoted their ‘nascent possibilities of development along many varied lines’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2004 British Society for the History of Science

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Footnotes

For financial support, without which I could not have done a good deal of the research for this paper, I thank the Centre for Cross-Cultural Research, Australian National University, Canberra; the Herbert and Valmae Freilich Foundation, Canberra; and the Ian Potter Foundation, Melbourne. For their advice, assistance and encouragement I thank Robert Ackerman, Rita Barnard, Joshua Berson, Robert Alun Jones, Emily Pawley, Howard Morphy, Ivan Strenski and Matthew Tontonoz. This article is connected to the author's current project on biogeographical reasoning in anthropology.