Indigeneity and historical consciousness: comparing Greek imagination with others



Indigeneity and historical consciousness: comparing Greek imagination with others


Dimitrios Theodossopoulos, University of Bristol

Abstract:
Many in Greece invest with deep persuasion to their connection with ancient Greek history and culture. This is broadly conceived in essentialist terms and supported by competing claims to an authentic and original culture. While in everyday conversation the causality of historical events is enthusiastically debated — sometimes admittedly by means of original arguments — most local actors in Greece will hesitate to challenge the main threads that sustain the master-narrative of Greek ethnohistory, such as for example, the connection of Greek identity with ancient Greece and Europe. Greek origin myths, like those of other powerful or powerless ethnic groups, forge a relationship with a primordial time, and on this basis they legitimise entitlements to territory and culture. The ‘I came here first’ principle rules here, prioritising one previously migratory ethnic group over another.
Stripped from its credentials of European excellence, the national Greek historical consciousness looks very much like any other, but many in modern Greece, proud of their paradigmatic European-ness, remain unaware of their shared similarities with other peoples. At a more abstract level, this attitude permeates the disciplinary compartmentalisation of anthropology, and has discouraged direct analytical comparison beyond prescribed regions, such as, for example the wider European or Mediterranean neighbourhoods. I see the lack of direct communication between the Anthropology of Europe and the Anthropology of the Developing World as representing a double (crypto-evolutionist) standard of analysis. It is based on the idea that European history belongs to a higher order of complexity, not directly comparable with the transient histories of ‘smaller’, ‘tribal’, ‘marginalised’ groups. Following this widely established way of thinking, a great majority of the anthropologists concerned with indigenous identities have excluded from their discussions European histories and cultural traditions. In a similar manner they appear reluctant to re-examine and put in perspective their own cultural indigeneity, thus reserving ‘indigeneity’ as an analytical construct only suitable for discussing the identity of others. I believe that this implicitly ethnocentric tendency deprives anthropological analysis of new possibilities.
In this paper, drawing upon my work in Greece and Panama I will attempt to problematise some widely unchallenged notions of cultural authenticity that form an integral part of Greek national consciousness.

Introduction
I have always found history documentaries or televised portraits of Greek culture made for and presented to international audiences more inspiring than similar Greek productions in Greek. But I have only lately discovered why. It is not that the international ones are more expensive (or presumably, of a higher standard). On the contrary, there are many sophisticated programmes of this type in Greek, which are very well produced, demonstrate a better awareness of context, and in all respects are stronger in detail. In ethnographic terms they represent a ‘thicker’, more nuanced description. But there is often one serious disadvantage to programmes prepared in Greek for a Greek audience. In most cases, and to different degrees, they take the classificatory category of ‘us’ for granted; and along with it a narrow, selective, but so enormous in terms of the detailed information it entails, imagined conception of Greek-ness.
The same, taken for granted, view of Greek history — one that presupposes a certain amount of shared, and in most cases unquestionable knowledge — is assumed in everyday conversation among modern Greeks; to be more precise, those among them who identify with the dominant Greek ethnic identification. They remain persuaded by the factual validity of a particular version of history that is developed early in life under the guiding, but prescriptive, influence of national education (cf. Frangoudaki & Dragona 1997; Karakasidou 1997; Bryant 2004; Hamilakis 2003).[1] In later life, the same convictions are maintained by the media and the rhetoric of political parties, which further reinforce a belief in a history accepted by all in the self-inclusive category of ‘us’. This is indeed the type of certainty that nurtures national imagination, as has been persuasively established by the scholars of this phenomenon—more representatively, Benedict Anderson (1983).
I am more intrigued by a parallel manifestation of this presumptive imagination. In many conversations that include both Greeks and non-Greeks, the Greeks often assume that their foreign interlocutors possess a good deal of knowledge about Greek history. A knowledge that is likely to encourage, it is assumed, some admiration, or at least, a certain degree of appreciation towards Greek culture. As my systematic observations demonstrate, the Greek parties in these conversations feel particularly disappointed when the foreign interlocutors do not meet this expectation. Such a failure is described in Greek by the noun ‘a-historitos,’ reserved to describe a person ignorant of basic historical facts (similar to the English adjective ‘a-historical’).
My reflection on that type of interaction between Greeks and non-Greeks have inspired me to tackle the topic I examine in this paper. This is the privileged treatment of Greek history and its relationship to non-Greek histories of minoritised ethnic groups, such as those described by Eric Wolf (1982) as ‘people without history’. I will argue that the widely held, but largely implicit expectation that Greek history deserves privileged treatment—inspired by western European scholarship and cultivated by Greek nationalism—discourages direct comparison with non-European histories and identities. This attitude, I maintain, is crypto-evolutionist in perspective: Greek-ness and European-ness are treated with a special reverence, as representative of a higher order of civilisation, which is beyond comparison with other, more ‘tribal’ or exotic versions of indigenous identity.
As a remedy to this problem, I have argued in a recent paper (Theodossopoulos n.d.) for a more inclusive treatment of the notion of indigeneity, one that acknowledges all cultures as indigenous to a certain socio-political context. My position developed as a response to a previous debate about the concept ‘indigenous’, as this unravelled itself in the pages of Current Anthropology, Anthropology Today and Social Anthropology. Adam Kuper (2003), initiated the debate with his article, ‘The Return of the Native’, in which he presented the term ‘indigenous’ a remnant of 19th century evolutionism, a more politically correct equivalent of the terms ‘primitive’ and ‘native’. He proposed that the term should be abandoned, provoking passionate protest from many other anthropologists, who often employ indigeneity to advocate the rights of several dispossessed groups (see in particular, Kenrick & Lewis 2004).
I set apart my position from both sides of the debate. Any traces of evolutionism that might be identified in the term indigenous, I argued in response to Kuper, are the result of the anthropology’s unexamined tendency to search for indigenous people in far away lands, and the denial of many anthropologists themselves to put in perspective their own indigeneity. Instead of abandoning the term, I propose to treat it reflexively, with a sense of humility that examines all cultures within the same analytical order, and without separating ourselves — as researchers, or as the subjects of our study — from others. For this reason, I also tried to differentiate my argument from the critiques of Kuper, who treat indigeneity — in their defence of the rights of minoritised groups — as the exclusive attribute of these groups. Their perspective, I maintain, despite its noble intentions, contributes in the ‘tribalisation’ of the people they study and try so hard to defend.
The stereotyping attributes of the term indigenous — its potential to Otherise, orientalise, tribalise — are to be found, like all other kinds of categorisation, in its capacity to exclude. I would like to stress that social exclusion can simultaneously realize two goals: first, to discriminate Others, and second, to implicitly underline the superiority of oneself (and one’s ethnic category). This observation brings me at once closer to the topic of this paper, the indigeneity of the Greeks, and their privileged European credentials. Drawing connections with their famous ancestors, many in modern Greece employ their indigeneity to validate claims of cultural distinction. Like anthropologists who study far away lands, they appear unwilling to compare themselves as equals with other peoples that do not lay claim to such a distinguished history.
It is worth noting that this ethnocentric disposition is not representative merely of the Greeks, but is a more widespread Western attitude. It has been apparent in Western academia, even within anthropology, the discipline that has paradigmatically defined itself in an attempt — not always successful — to defy social evolutionism (see, Argyrou 2002). To encourage some reflection on this issue, I will attempt to compare Greek indigeneity with that held by of the Embera, a kind of people that represent an unlikely point of comparison in standard everyday conversation among Greeks, but also among students of Greek culture. This comparison, I hope, will help us see the privileged position of Greek history in the European imagination, from an unusual, but stimulating perspective.

Comparing Greek imagination with others
The Embera do not have their own, separate nation state, a body of literature written in their language, an academia that produces an official history representing their point of view. Dictionaries of their language and guidebooks to its grammar exist only in photocopies, while their children are educated in Spanish and gradually learn to adopt many of the ways of the wider latino society that surrounds them. Their ancestral homeland has been the lowland Choco in Colombia, while significant numbers have migrated to Southeast Panama. There are not any ancient monumental buildings on their land, and archaeologists have been, until recently, unmotivated to dig out their past. In all these respects, the Embera differ from the Greeks: they have neither marble monuments, official, national(ist) history, nor many foreign specialists theorising their past.
At first sight, one can argue that this is an ethnic group dissimilar to the Greeks. But then again, it is this striking difference that can help us think about and appreciate some of the similarities more deeply. I will highlight here those that relate to the topic of this paper more closely. The Embera I met in Panama heavily rely on their indigenous identity to promote their cultural and political representation. Their relationship with the outer world, their pride and self-respect, is based on the distinctiveness of their identity and cultural tradition. When they have an opportunity to present themselves to others, they derive inspiration from awareness of their indigenous heritage. In those cases, the Embera indigenous traditions — their dance, music, artefacts and knowledge of the rainforest — capture the imagination of Western travellers in ways comparable to the monumental architecture of the Mayans, the Incas or the Greeks.
When the Embera talk about their migratory history, they don’t express a sense of rupture from an original homeland. Some of my Embera respondents in Panama have stories to tell about a time when their grandfathers fought their neighbours, the Kuna, with spears and poison darts and took their land. This was the time when their ancestors migrated from Colombia, following a strategy of dispersion within inaccessible rainforest environments. This strategy, historians and anthropologists describe (see, Kane 2004; Williams 2005), was a response to persecution by the colonial authorities, overpopulation, internal division, or simply exhaustion of local resources. In all cases, migration in a landscape carved by rivers and thick, ever-growing vegetation has been a readily available option for the Embera.
This fairly recent link with the land does not appear to threaten the indigenous identity of the Embera. In contrast to wider, non-Indian Panamanian society, the Embera are in position to demonstrate a strong and continuous link with the Americas, a relationship with the land that is deeply embedded in their culture and history. Their American history, like the European history of the Greeks, provides access to a primordial connection with a land of myth, an identity that defies the constraints of time. In this respect, the geography of Embera indigeneity relies on an archaeology that is so old, and so vaguely defined, that it is almost timeless. There are many parallels here with the indigeneity of the Greeks.
The ancestors of the modern Greeks, like those of the Embera, inhabited a wide geographic area that does not coincide with their contemporary residence. Furthermore, in both cases, their ancestors lived for centuries in large multicultural Empires. The Ottomans, like the Spanish in Latin America, were the conquerors of many peoples indigenous to Southeast Europe and Anatolia, whom they united under their government by right of conquest. There was, many admit, some mixing of populations, and lots of economic and social exchange, which gave birth to the Ottoman culture. The informants of anthropological research in Greece have recognised this ‘mixing’, and attribute to it several of the common characteristics, the cultural traits, that unite the Greeks, the Turks and other people in the Balkans (Theodossopoulos 2007). They also discuss mixing in terms of both blood and culture, a combination that naturalises the resulting hybridity. Comparable ideas are also very prominent in Latin America. In that continent they call it mestizaje (Wade 1997).
Like the people indigenous to the Americas, the Greeks have systematically developed a historical consciousness that stresses the historical importance of being conquered by an exogenous invader. In Greece this is encapsulated by one of the most widely used metaphors in popular and official national imagination: the 400-year long Ottoman yoke. This number is a figurative expression, as different parts of what is now the Greek national territory were part of the Ottoman empire for longer or shorter periods of time (see, Just 1989: 74; Theodossopoulos 2004). Simplifications of that type, however, can be tremendously inspiring for nationalist imaginings. The modern Greeks blame those notorious 400 years for most of the shortcomings of their nation, a causal relationship that anthropologist, were quick to identify and vividly portray in their ethnographies (see for example, Herzfeld 1982, 1992). In more general terms, the Ottoman conquest is frequently used in everyday discussion in Greece to explain the Greeks’ peripheral position in the contemporary world — a causal relationship between conquest and powerlessness, which is, once more, very familiar in Latin America.
And as much as the Embera and other Amerindian groups stress their link with the Americas, the Greeks stress their connection with Europe. They point to their ancestors who set the foundations of a distinctly European culture, and demarcated its boundaries through systematic stereotyping of non-Greek people: the invention of the barbarians (Cartledge 1993), a very ancient example of what Said (1978) describes as Orientalism. This negative form of classificatory logic introduced the basic parameters for establishing the idea of Europe, a powerful concept in Western civilisation, but not necessarily a well defined one. What is important to note here, however, is that European-ness, like indigeneity, is a concept that thrives in imprecision. Its dynamic relies on its ill-defined inclusiveness and exclusiveness.
This imprecision allows modern Greeks to pose as the quintessential Europeans. They are old Europeans for that matter, the first of the kind, indigenous to Europe and bearers of the most antiquarian credentials of European indigeneity. Other European nations, such as England and Germany, have adopted the prestigious civilisation of their ancestors as their own (Knox 1993), putting classical Greece on the pedestal of a paradigmatic European-elite culture. I argue that it is this privileged quality of Classical Greek history that can stop us from seeing the simplicity of Greek indigeneity. It inspires a taken for granted admiration that hides the naturalisation of Greek claims to excellence, to difference, to primacy.
In those terms, the Greeks, the people with that heavy history, claim a position of privilege in the world; but like many underprivileged indigenous groups — the people ‘without history’ — they share the same apprehension, frustration and anger towards the processes that promote their own peripheral-isation. Among the Greeks, but also among the Embera, indigeneity is the vehicle for claiming rights, safeguarding territory, names and place-names, a sense of belonging in a competitive world. Like most other kinds of identity, indigenous identities are constantly transforming themselves, adapting to new challenges and circumstances. The ancestors of the contemporary Greeks, people who once shared different histories, were brought together under the auspices of a new nation state. Since then, they have been encouraged to imagine their history — and to expect others to understand that history — in similar terms. The ancestors of the Embera shared different histories too. They now learn how to imagine themselves, and the expectations others have from them, in mutually reinforcing ways. In both cases, indigeneity and historical consciousness inform and inspire each other in the context of an unpredictable, but analytically comparable, process of imagination.

In the remaining sections of this paper, I discuss (first) the idea of historical continuity with ancient Greece, which I see as representing the principal origin myth of Greek indigeneity, and (second) the advantages of direct comparison between European and non-European histories, adopting a critical position towards a crypto-evolutionist Western European standard of analysis that encourages the production of ‘ethnographies for “traditional” communities’ and ‘history for the “modern” world’ (Comaroff & Comaroff 1992: 6). I conclude by highlighting the privileged character of Greek indigeneity and its reliance on a European myth of cultural superiority.

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[1] And its history textbooks, which have lately become an issue of contention.

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