Anthropology of technology

The anthropology of technology (AoT) is a unique, diverse, and growing field of study that bears much in common with kindred developments in the sociology and history of technology: first, a growing refusal to view the role of technology in human societies as the irreversible and predetermined consequence of a given technology's putative "inner logic"; and second, a focus on the social and cultural factors that shape a given technology's development and impact in a society. However, AoT defines technology far more broadly than the sociologists and historians of technology.

Blacksmith at work, Nuremberg c. 1606

AoT encompasses not only the study of the processes and products of modern science and engineering, but also the techniques of small-scale societies (such as basket-weaving[1] and bow and arrow fabrication[2]), and the technologies of the past recoverable only by archaeology. Methodologically, AoT shares much in common with Science and Technology Studies (STS), typically employing intensive fieldwork methodologies in order to grasp the social and cultural shaping of technological artifacts and systems. These may include a phenomenological approach: how people feel, see, sense, smell, and apprehend through the body as technology is practiced and the products used.[3] AoT also emphasizes bodily skill and know-how; that technology cannot be practiced without the muscle memory that exists beyond the mental learning.[4] Unique to anthropology is the growing influence of AoT theory in archaeology, a development that is raising critical questions regarding long-held theories of cultural evolution. Additionally, AoT scholars often draw inspiration from anthropological concepts and theories that are not well known to STS scholars; an example is Bryan Pfaffenberger's use of Victor Turner's social dramas theory in framing his technological dramas theory.[5] But the overall trend is convergence rather than differentiation, as STS scholars, anthropologists, and historians of technology increasingly traverse disciplinary lines in building a larger and richer perspective on human technological activities.

Although most AoT scholars continue to employ the term “technology,” the modern use of the term often connotes the technological products of the modern industrial era. Thus the term is seen by some anthropologists to be inimical to understanding technology's social and cultural dimensions in non-industrial societies.[6] One modern "technomyth" or dominant narrative about information technology is ‘technological determinism’, the belief that the most efficient technique (efficient in terms of the least time, energy, and cost required) will inevitably vanquish its competitors.[7][8] This has led to calls for the decolonisation of such technomyths, in particular those derived from the Western world, the universalism of which "suggest that a heterogeneous set of global cultural practices have been homogenized."[9]

Anthropologists of technology, as they study traditional activities such as pottery manufacture and use, prefer to speak of techniques or skills.[10] Still, as historians and sociologists of modern technologies have conclusively demonstrated, these myths of technological determinism are equally inapplicable to modern science and engineering practices. Many modern technological practices are governed by social preferences rather than pure efficiency; for example, the eclipse of the efficient and practical electric automobile in favor of the gas-powered auto in the early decades of the 20th century.[11]

History of the Anthropology of Technology

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Nineteenth century anthropologists focused on technology as a mechanism for classifying and ranking human societies. A common assumption was that inventions and discoveries served to elevate societies from primitive, simple, and “savage” conditions to complex civilizations, as exemplified by the work of Lewis Henry Morgan. Debate focused on whether a specific technical practice was acquired through invention, diffusion, or migration.[12] Ethnology museums acquired artifacts to demonstrate the stages of cultural evolution. Early twentieth century anthropologists disputed this view, noting the complexity of non-state societies in northwest Canada and the Trobriand Islands. Bronislaw Malinowski decried the “technological enthusiasms” of ethnologists, insisting that technologies in such societies should be studied holistically, as part of a complex, interdependent formation, in order to put anthropology on a more scientific footing.[12] Nevertheless, the decades to follow in English-speaking countries saw the relegation of material culture studies to museums of ethnology, as anthropologists preferred to study cultures as mental creation. Technology was seen as a sphere largely divorced from the cultural.[13]

The French Influence

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The first steps toward today's Anthropology of Technology were undertaken by francophone anthropologists, and reflected a twentieth-century movement away from decontextualized artifacts to technical processes. Beginning in the mid-1930s, Marcel Mauss and his student Leroi-Gourhan noted that object-making techniques involving socially-learned gestures of the body are potent generators of meaning, rivaling religious ritual.[12] From this tradition evolved a methodology, initially characteristic of the French anthropology of techniques, focusing on the chaîne opératoire, the sequence of technical actions and gestures involved in the production of an artifact.[14] Beginning in the 1970s, French anthropologist Pierre Lemonnier, influenced in part by pioneering work in the history and sociology of technology, noted that the components of a chaîne opératoire include some “arbitrary” components not strictly required in order to ensure a successful outcome. Lemonnier and other workers in the French Techniques et culture school attributed such components to technical choices reflecting broader social and cultural factors.[15] Yet his pioneering work, much of it written in French, remained largely inaccessible to Anglo-American anthropologists. The latter nevertheless made significant contributions to understanding the social implications of various productive processes such as irrigation, fishing, mining, and industry. Still, most English-speaking anthropologists studied the results of such processes, showing little interest in examining the technologies themselves from an anthropological point of view. At the same time, some anglophone anthropologists, exemplified by Marvin Harris and his “cultural materialism,” voiced the technological determinist view that the adoption of a given technological process inevitably produces a given social and cultural outcome.[16]

Recent Developments

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The 1980s and 1990s saw significant development in Anthropology of Technology, thanks in part to pioneering developments in the history and sociology of technology. In 1988, Bryan Pfaffenberger placed emphasis on the meanings of technologies in familiarizing anthropologists with the work of sociologists and historians of technology such as Trevor Pinch, Wiebe Bijker, and Thomas Hughes,[17] all of whom argued that the cultural meanings deeply shape the formation of technological artifacts and systems: If a technology is essentially a set of meanings and social behaviors — a point made conclusively by these scholars — then the impact of a technology is the result of one set of social behaviors on another. Technology is culture, a seamless web of activities, materials, and beliefs.[18] In 1992, Pierre Lemonnier published Elements for an Anthropology of Technology,[19] a work that not only introduced anglophone workers to the Techniques et culture school but also argued that the cultural shaping of technological activities occurs across the entire scope of human technological activity, spanning the fabrication of stone axes to the design of twentieth century fighter jets.

Some of the most interesting work in the Anthropology of Technology has been conducted in sub-Saharan African iron metallurgy, where local iron smelting/smithing was practiced in many areas within the memory of informants. Many of these studies illustrate the blurred line between ‘utilitarian’ and ‘expressive’ artifacts, the complex nature of the adoption of new techniques, the role of gender and ritual, and the role of new technologies in the rise of political centralization (for a wide range of examples, see Schmidt 1996).[20] Other scholars have focused on ‘communities of practice’, the social organization of craftworkers, how knowledge is transmitted to the next generation, and the multiple social networks of craft that may cross-cut other social relations.[21] Others focus on the differing social contexts of the adoption of a new technology; for example, Kim (2001) examined how the differing elite strategies in bronze period Denmark and southern Korea affected the adoption of iron production.[22]

Archaeological Applications of the Anthropology of Technology

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Most historians and sociologists of technology have worked in industrial societies, where ample information about the thoughts and motivations of adopters and users of new technologies exist, and where the social effects of new technologies can be assessed. But how can this be done for the archaeological past, where all anthropologists have are the physical remains of artifacts? Some approaches allow at least some approximations of participant observations. These approaches rest on the concept of technical choices, the idea that any technological product can be fabricated and used in a variety of ways. Technical choices can be made among decisions about raw material, tools used to shape the raw material, the energy sources, the techniques used to manipulate the material, and the chaîne opératoire that produced the artifact.[23] For example, one article by Ottaway sets forth all the variety of technical choices possible in copper-base metal production, and relates these choices to general cultural processes of innovation and specialization.[24] The hope is that once the chaîne opératoire and knowledge of choices is established, then cognitive processes and cultural norms can tentatively be inferred.[25] Establishing the choices made often requires detailed laboratory analysis of the materials to establish the irreducible properties of artifacts. For example, to alloy copper with tin requires one to be able to reach the melting point of copper (1083 °C), but this temperature can be achieved with a variety of crucibles and/or furnace structures, all of which require other technologies and choices to create—crucibles require a certain degree of fire-resistance, providing an air supply requires multiple workers at the same time, with implications for labor organization, and so on. Thus this laboratory analysis can reach beyond the laboratory to garner clues to what Pfaffenberger named the ‘sociotechnical system’, where techniques and material culture are linked to the wider social coordination of labor.[26]

A strong example of approaches to the Anthropology of Technology using both archaeological and analytical data is found in the suite of volumes examining the ancient metallurgy of northeast Thailand, centering on the site of Ban Chiang. AOT analyses of the details of the ancient system demonstrated how a competent but decentralized metal production and manufacturing system emerged and endured over millennia, a system that served the needs of heterarchical metal age economies.

A related concept to technical choice is that of ‘technological style’, the idea that cultures have characteristic approaches to the manipulation of a wide variety of materials, approaches that can carry symbolic messages. The most famous example in the literature is Lechtman's linking of Incan techniques of gold working and textile that both share a preoccupation with ‘essence’, the design and the gold must be integral to the product: no plating or applique is allowed. Few archaeologists have established this kind of cross-material conceptual linkage, however.[27]

Another technique to reconstruct past technologies is experimental archaeology, where modern scholars attempt to reconstruct past technological practices.[28] This not only allows the establishment of physical requirements for manufacturing, but also offers hypotheses for the various possibilities of manufacture, along with the bodily requirements of production and use.

The Anthropology of Technology and Emerging Technologies

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Wikipedia edit-a-thon “1Lib1Ref” in New Delhi to improve a lack of citations on Wikipedia about women in India, featured in the entry "Creative Commons, Open Access, Free / Libre / Open Source Software" in International Journal of Anthropology.

Spurring the development of AoT in the 2000s is the stunning penetration of advanced technologies throughout the world and across social divides. Most behaviors of interest to anthropologists are increasingly mediated by technologies. At the same time, there is an urgent need to develop anthropological understandings of the cultural shaping of new and emerging technologies, such as artificial intelligence. An increasing number of female scholars across anthropology and posthumanities such as Donna Haraway, Anna Tsing, Gabriella Coleman, Kit Kat Braybrooke and Silvia Lindtner have also called for a centering of feminist, posthuman, decolonial and postcapitalist perspectives in contemporary anthropological inquiries of the sociotechnical.[29][30][31][32][33]

Anthropological studies of phenomena such as cell phone use, postgenomic sequencing, and artificial intelligence require significant methodological innovations, with anthropologists increasingly involved as consultants in design processes.[34] Anthropological studies of digital movements such as creative commons, open access, and free/libre open-source software (FLOSS) are also increasingly integral to understanding the impact of hacker, maker and developer cultures on contemporary society - "the critical dynamics of which anthropology is especially suited for examining".[35][36][37]

The maturity, diversity, and growth of AoT today in socio-cultural anthropology is attested by the 2022 publication of the Palgrave Handbook of the Anthropology of Technology, the first major effort to assess the field's status in a variety of areas. The papers grew out of a conference on assessing the anthropology of technology as it deals with new and emerging technologies, ranging from digital technology, new modes of human reproduction, and food infrastructure. As a result, ethnographies of non-industrial technologies, as is archaeology, are lacking in the Handbook.

Founding scholars

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References

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  1. ^ Bunn 2022.
  2. ^ Lemonnier 1986.
  3. ^ Bunn 2022; Tilley 2005.
  4. ^ Ingold 2001.
  5. ^ Pfaffenberger 1992b.
  6. ^ Ingold 2000.
  7. ^ Smith & Marx 1994.
  8. ^ McGregor, Gaile (1987). "The Technomyth in Transition: Reading American Popular Culture". Journal of American Studies. 21 (3): 387–409. doi:10.1017/S0021875800022891. ISSN 1469-5154. S2CID 145732487.
  9. ^ Braybrooke, Kit Kat; Jordan, Tim (2017-07-26). "Genealogy, Culture and Technomyth". Digital Culture & Society. 3 (1): 25–46. doi:10.14361/dcs-2017-0103. ISSN 2364-2122. S2CID 133964948.
  10. ^ Sigaut 1994.
  11. ^ Skibo & Schiffer 2008.
  12. ^ a b c Brunn & Wahlberg 2022.
  13. ^ Ingold 1997.
  14. ^ Schlanger 2005.
  15. ^ Lemonnier 1986; Lemonnier 1992.
  16. ^ Harris 1979.
  17. ^ Bijker, Hughes & Pinch 1989.
  18. ^ Pfaffenberger 1988; Pfaffenberger 1992a.
  19. ^ Lemonnier 1992.
  20. ^ Schmidt 1996.
  21. ^ Wenger 1998.
  22. ^ Kim 2001.
  23. ^ Sillar & Tite 2001.
  24. ^ Ottaway 2001.
  25. ^ Dobres & Hoffman 1999, p. 124.
  26. ^ Pfaffenberger 1992a.
  27. ^ Lechtman 1977; Epstein 1993.
  28. ^ Dillian 2019; Hurcombe 2005.
  29. ^ Haraway, Donna Jeanne (2016). Staying with the trouble : making kin in the Chthulucene. Durham. ISBN 978-0-8223-6214-2. OCLC 934194942.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  30. ^ Tsing, Anna Lowenhaupt (2021). The mushroom at the end of the world : On the possibility of life in capitalist ruins (First published 2015. New paperback printing, 2021 ed.). Princeton, NJ. ISBN 978-0-691-22055-0. OCLC 1258021502.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  31. ^ Coleman, E. Gabriella (2010-10-21). "Ethnographic Approaches to Digital Media". Annual Review of Anthropology. 39 (1): 487–505. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.012809.104945. ISSN 0084-6570. S2CID 146531830.
  32. ^ Braybrooke, Kit Kat (2019). Borgers, Loes (ed.). The critical makers reader: (un)learning technology. Loes Bogers, Letizia Chiappini. Amsterdam: Institute of Network Cultures. pp. 258–268. ISBN 978-94-92302-36-6. OCLC 1164660258.
  33. ^ Avle, Seyram; Lin, Cindy; Hardy, Jean; Lindtner, Silvia (2020). "Scaling Techno-Optimistic Visions". Engaging Science, Technology, and Society. 6: 237–254. doi:10.17351/ests2020.283. S2CID 219747625.
  34. ^ Garvey, Pauline; Miller, Daniel (2021). Ageing with Smartphones in Ireland: When life becomes craft. London: UCL Press.
  35. ^ Braybrooke, Kit Kat (2018-10-05). Callan, Hilary (ed.). The International Encyclopedia of Anthropology (1 ed.). Wiley. doi:10.1002/9781118924396.wbiea2486. ISBN 978-0-470-65722-5. S2CID 245391512.
  36. ^ Coleman, E. Gabriella (2014). Hacker, hoaxer, whistleblower, spy: the many faces of Anonymous. London: Verso. ISBN 978-1-78168-583-9. OCLC 890807781.
  37. ^ Braybrooke, Kit Kat; Smith, Adrian (2020), O'Neil, Mathieu; Pentzold, Christian; Toupin, Sophie (eds.), "Makerspaces and Peer Production: Spaces of Possibility, Tension, Post-Automation, or Liberation?", The Handbook of Peer Production (1 ed.), London: Wiley, pp. 347–358, doi:10.1002/9781119537151.ch26, ISBN 9781119537151, S2CID 234518288

Sources

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