Meyer Fortes: outstanding scientific ethnographer and Cambridge mentor
A homage to Professor Meyer Fortes in two parts.
Part one, ‘Structural dynamics: forms. networks, numbers (Meyer Fortes in the 1940s)’. I am grateful to Christine Laurière, co-editor of the pathbreaking Bérose International Encyclopedia of the Histories of Anthropology (in French and English), for encouraging me to publish this piece there. Part Two is the last section of ‘An anthropologist’s journey’ Part 1 following this post.
Part One
Bérose URL: article1200.html
Introduction
This essay seeks to place Meyer Fortes' approach to the development cycle in domestic groups (Goody 1958) in the context of his work during the 1940s when he produced the two Tallensi monographs (1945a, 1949a) and a major article on Ashanti , 'Time and social structure' (1949b). The main stimulus for this piece is a comment Meyer made to me when I asked him where the idea of the development cycle approach came from. His reply was, “From D'arcy Wentworth Thompson's On Growth and Form (1917, second edition 1942, 1116 pages).
I have since found this book to be a stimulating companion to Fortes' ethnographic works of the 1940s and after. Thompson was not impressed with the claims made for Darwinian evolution. He was a classicist, mathematician and zoologist (or morphologist) whose book has been called the best-written work of science in English. He sought to explain how the physical forces organisms were subject to shaped their forms and growth patterns. He was particularly keen to identify mathematical regularities in these processes—science being only science for Thompson (and Kant) when numbers are involved. He used the term 'dynamics' to describe the numbers on which empirical analysis is built; and, as a non-Darwinian, his focus on form was 'structural'.
Meyer Fortes received his PhD in psychology from the London School of Economics in 1930 and carried out research on culture-free cross-racial intelligence tests with East End adolescents. He was already going cool on this project when he switched to social anthropology in 1932. He was associated at this time with Karl Pearson who set up the world's first statistics department at University College London, and specialized in biometric studies of a Darwinian kind. Fortes later carried these interests into his own special brand of structural-functionalism, insisting on rigorous empirical analysis of concrete social forms, quantified if possible, while seeking to identify the principles shaping them as manifested in observable data. The choice of the word Dynamics for his first book on the Tallensi was not casual. For Thompson, dynamics referred to the relationship between general forms and the changing numerical patterns through which they can be observed.
Fortes' engagement with West Africa in the 1940s was not just as a scientist. There was a war on, and he was employed as an intelligence officer in the British armed forces. We are fortunate to have access to a detailed and systematic report that he published in International Affairs (Fortes 1945b). The style of this piece is far from that of his ethnography, being largely an exercise in political economy; but it serves as a counterpoint to it, revealing a side to his repertoire that his students in the 1960s, like me, certainly didn't see.
Why do I bother excavating this story? Because the Meyer Fortes who is best known today, the author of Kinship and the Social Order (1969), for example, took structuralism in an idealist direction. The legacy of the monographs and the Development Cycle collection is now largely forgotten, possibly because of their monumental empiricism. Stephen Toulmin (1990) defines a “radical conservative” as someone who is disgusted with the world he lives in and would reform it in the name of a past value. I would reform our discipline according to the value of Meyer Fortes' work at its peak. It is not just the published work, but the man too; and that is why we should know about his wartime experiences and what he thought about its consequences. Incidentally, Lévi-Strauss was a fan of D'Arcy Thompson too, especially for his insight into the geometric shapes produced by nature. But in the beginning, Fortes was a scientist and that is the legacy I want to explore here.
In what follows, I will first sketch Meyer Fortes' reflections on the war in West Africa; then some of the salient characteristics of D'arcy Thompson on growth and form. Next I will consider briefly The Dynamics of Clanship among the Tallensi , paying particular attention to Fortes' sense of their society's fragility and fragmentation. The Web of Kinship among the Tallensi is a pioneering example of network analysis. “Time and social structure” is in many ways the culmination of this phase, both as a statistical analysis and as a theoretical reflection. I end with the embryonic development cycle approach, drawing on all three ethnographic works. The basic question unites them: how can social forms endure when their raw material is the chaos of human life—the seemingly random events that mark birth, copulation, sickness, injury and death ?
The consequences of war
Meyer Fortes spent almost two years in Nigeria and the Gold Coast between October 1941 and August 1943. In the 1945 International Affairs article, he tried to assess the impact of the war on British West Africa. He starts from the situation of the late 1930s, when laissez faire government policies led to a stand-off between indigenous cocoa producers and the foreign trading firms, known as the “cocoa hold up”. Left to its own devices, this situation would have got worse, but Fortes believed that war conditions improved matters. The collapse of Britain's empire in the Far East meant first that a West African army had to be sent out there and West Africans were expected to make good, through their own production for export, the shortfall of raw materials caused by the loss of territory to the Japanese. West Africa became a staging post for transport to the Near and Far East. From having been an isolated backwater before the war, West Africa had joined the world more actively because of it. Construction, especially of airports, were another stimulus to the internal economy. All of this added up to a net economic gain for the region, even though losses of manpower in the Far East were significant.
Fortes paid most attention to the towns, since these were where modern politics was mainly located. The educated townsmen would be strategic in any post-war settlement, he claimed. He examined the changing class structure of urban life, noting that labor unions had expanded in size and influence during the war. The position of African producers had undoubtedly been strengthened and wartime black markets had undermined price controls. He makes much, with good reason, of W. Hancock's (1940) Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs, 1918-1939. Hancock describes a region driven entirely by the mechanics of commerce, referring to the “traders' frontier” of fluctuating prices typical of the interwar period.
This situation was abolished by the war, he says, by the export and construction booms, but above all by the adoption of interventionist policies by the colonial government which already was assuming a size and control that anticipated the developmental states of the post-war period and marked the ruin of laissez faire , something that the author heartily endorsed. The traders' frontier had been replaced by the technological frontier that marked West Africa's more complete assimilation in western civilization. Summarized brutally in this way, one could dismiss the article as a species of high end journalism. But I find it truly impressive, especially since its topic and style are so different from Fortes' anthropological production at this time and indeed from the professor that I knew as a student.
On Growth and Form
The central theme of D'arcy Thompson's book is that biologists overemphasized evolution as the fundamental determinant of the form and structure of living organisms. He preferred to focus on the role of physical laws and mechanics as determining forces in natural history. He has been accused by the Darwinians of retaining some elements of vitalism in his own approach—the idea that living organisms are distinguished by some non-physical element—but Thompson advocated structuralism in shaping the forms of species, with natural selection only a secondary factor. He drew on a mass of examples, both organic and inorganic, to show that biological forms and mechanical phenomena were similar, for example the shape of a jellyfish resembles drops of liquid falling into a viscous fluid. In 'The Comparison of Related Forms,' he showed, following the work of Albrecht Dürer, that differences in the forms of related animals could be described by mathematical transformations. The book is largely descriptive: “(it) has little need of preface, for indeed it is 'all preface' from beginning to end.”
Thompson rejected the contemporary habit of explaining biological forms by an evolutionary teleology of final cause. Moreover, zoology then made little use of mathematics. He focused on the starting conditions of an organism's formation which he sought to explain with ordinary physical laws. Thus it shows that an organism's surface area and volume increase respectively with the square and cube of its length. In a few short equations he shows that the speed of a fish or ship rises with the square root of its length and there is a limit to the size of the tallest tree. He points out that all changes of form are phenomena of growth. He analyzes growth curves for our species, noting rapid growth before birth and again in the teens, while adding curves for other animals. There are many spirals in nature ; the mathematics is similar, but the biology differs. He compares the strength of bone and wood to materials such as steel and cast iron, likening the femur to the head of a building crane. He similarly compares the cantilevered backbone of a dinosaur to the girder structure of the Forth railway bridge.
Inspired by Dürer and mapping many fish on Cartesian coordinates, Thompson finds some striking and unexpected examples in a great variety of transformations (or deformations). He concludes with the hope that he has persuaded zoologists that mathematics may help them in their studies of form. 'For the harmony of the world is made manifest in Form and Number, and the heart and soul and all the poetry of Natural Philosophy are embodied in the concept of mathematical beauty'.
The Tallensi monographs
The Dynamics of Clanship and The Web of Kinship constitute a complementary pair, the first dealing with the political building blocks provided by the lineage system and the second with interpersonal relations between kin on the ground. Fortes (1945a: vii-viii) tells us that he intended to publish the two parts together, but war-time conditions prevented this. The Tallensi were then materially homogeneous in their extreme poverty and socially fragmented. Violence lay permanently closed to the surface. Their society was at once stable and precarious. They were perennial victims of slave-raiding armies before colonial rule and quickly took to arms against each other.
The introduction to Dynamics insists that the conventional image of a simple stateless society bound together by lineage solidarity obscures the “large number of strands and elements whose interrelations make up a very elaborate pattern” (Fortes 1949a: vii). If D'arcy Thompson had any influence over Fortes' scientific approach at this stage, it was for his huge range of qualitative examples of forms, meticulously documented, not as a mathematician. “Failing statistical devices, there is no alternative for an anthropologist who wishes to support his general statements with the evidence of observed fact, but adequate descriptive detail” (Ibid: viii). As a result, Dynamics is almost unreadable. His narrative is full of names – of places, clans, lineages, families and persons – and the names are not easy to keep track of. But the author's refusal to simplify by aggregation lends the book an air of tremendous authenticity. This particularism made the book a goldmine for indigenous readers who emerged after the war. Indeed, when he returned in the early 1960s, one local reader challenged Fortes on the description he gave of his father. Meyer told me: “I could no more have imagined this situation when I wrote the book, Keith, than you could imagine a Tallensi colony on the moon!”
“Nothing could be further from the way of life of the Tallensi than a rigid regimentation of social behavior…the segmentary principle operates right through the social system as a dynamic factor” (Ibid: x-xi). “Beneath the overt stability and integration of the social order binds continuous tensions. Indeed the stability of Tale society can only be understood as a product of these tensions, created and maintained by the social processes that resolve them” (Ibid: 9). This is the clearest possible statement of the position developed later by his Oxford colleague, Max Gluckman (1955).
The Web of Kinship is far more fully realized as a monograph. In addition to being a remarkably comprehensive fieldwork-based study, its final chapter offers a succinct summary of what became Fortes' mature approach to kinship. Any author deserves more than sound bites as an illustration of his thinking and prose ; so I will quote extensively from the text:
“The truism that facts only acquire meaning for science in the light of an adequate theory is especially relevant to the study of kinship…My chief teachers [Malinowski and Radcliffe-Brown] approached it with working hypotheses founded on the realities of field observation…I am concerned only with kinship in relation to the social structure…with the fundamental principles of Tale kinship relations as they enter into the organization of collective life…[In a homogeneous society like theirs] the common denominators of thought, feeling and action stand out very clearly” (Fortes 1949a: vii-viii).
“All kinship institutions have only two major facets or functions. They serve as a mechanism of organizing social activities and coordinating social relations…and they constitute the primary mold of the individual's psycho-social development…Much futile controversy has turned on a confusion of these two aspects of social relations” (Ibid: 339).
[Why is kinship just as important] “…in the social organization of people with far more highly differentiated social systems than that of the Tallensi? The usual solution puts the emphasis on the facts of sex, procreation and the rearing of offspring… [but this is an] over-simplification. It is like trying to explain human thinking by the anatomy of the brain or modern capitalist economy by the need for food and shelter. Such explanations, which indicate the necessary preconditions of phenomena, short-circuit the real work of science, which is the elucidation of the sufficient causal or functional determinants involved in the observed data of behavior. They are particularly specious in social science…To study Tale kinship institutions apart from the religious and moral ideas of the natives would be as one-sided as to leave out the facts of sex and procreation… It is equally impossible to understand Tale religious and beliefs moral norms apart from the context of kinship…Kinship relations are essentially moral relations, binding in their own right. Every social system presupposes such basic moral axioms” (Ibid: 345-346).
The book also pioneered network analysis long before it was recognized as such. Lineage politics was defined and controlled by men, but women, especially mothers, were at the center of personal networks criss-crossing Tallensi social geography, the same fractured map that featured so strongly in Dynamics . If the men, left to their own devices, could launch a conflict at the drop of a hat, the kinship ties sustained by women in a system of exogamous marriage always ensured the existence of interests committed to alliance and conflict avoidance. The ancestor cult expresses this complementary dualism. Thus, when a man establishes a new shrine for his father, he goes to his mother's lineage to learn their recipe for making a shrine, which includes many material and immaterial elements. In future, when he sacrifices, he connects with all the male ancestors in his patriline, but at the same time to another clan through his mother. Here too, Meyer Fortes relied mainly on qualitative description, but with some indications of the quantitative analysis that he chose to foreground in a simultaneous study of Ashanti.
Time and social structure in Ashanti
Fortes (1949b) begins the version of his essay included in a Festschrift for Radcliffe-Brown by noting a distinction recently made by the latter between “structure as an actually existing concrete reality (that is, the set of actually existing relations, at a given moment in time, which link together certain human beings)” and “structural form (that is, the general or normal form of a relationship abstracted from the variations of particular instances, though taking into account of these variations)”. The distinction is associated with “the continuity of social structure through time” particularly in a “relatively stable community”. The structural form may change little, but the actual social structure is constantly being renewed and changed with the birth and death of members and their changing relationship with each other. So how is the norm established?
The distinction is wrong, Fortes suggests, because it conflates a number of theoretical issues in a single formula. For example, time is by no means a uniform factor, there being at least three separate functions: duration (sequence), continuity (or discontinuity) and genetic (or growth) processes. Similarly space may be location, ordered arrangement and controlled movement or change. A structure is a distinguishable whole with parts organized in time and space that can be studied. It is not visible in concrete reality. It is discovered by comparison, induction and analysis – langue not parole. It has constant and variable elements. There are general norms, but much is manifested as magnitude. Social anthropology may in time evolve from qualitative to quantitative analysis. The qualitative aspects of social facts are culture, whereas structure is susceptible to quantitative study. They are complementary ways of studying the same facts. He advocates the use of statistical techniques to study societies outside Europe and the United States, both stable and changing.
Ashanti domestic organization is his topic. Ashanti is not a stable or homogeneous society and there appears to be no fixed norm of domestic organization. Two townships thirty miles apart make up the case study. The sample size is 1676 persons and involved a team of assistants. Urban contacts are stronger in one than the other. Both produce cocoa. Men and women are household heads. A woman and her children are the indissoluble core. Households are a man and wife or matrilineal or a mixture of the two. Male-headed households may be patrilocal (with the father), with the mother's brother as head, or a mixture of the two; female-headed households are either matrilocal (with the mother) or matrilineal (with a corporate kin group whose members are related through women only). Fortes deploys “elementary statistical analysis” of a very rudimentary kind, perhaps in order not to scare off the anthropologists. He concludes with some remarks on form and structure.
On a continuum from patrilocal households to those with a mother’s brother as head, one town is in the middle and the other towards the patrilocal end. The time factor consists of wives and children. Domestic organization changes in ways analogous to growth. Since the rule of matrilineal descent and recognition of paternity in law are absolute, the gender of the household head is crucial. Discrete types or forms of domestic organization may be seen to be the differential effects of identical principles in varying local social contexts. Structure is an arrangement of parts brought about through the operation over time of principles of social organization with general validity in a particular society.
Towards the development cycle in domestic groups redux
To my mind, The Development Cycle in the Domestic Groups (1958) deserves resurrection as an anthropological paradigm. It is much more than an approach to kinship ; or rather the vision of kinship it expresses is at once both political and domestic. Following the binary logic of his two Tallensi monographs, Fortes insisted that society was built on durable institutional foundations of a collective sort. Its action on its members was political, epitomized by the idea of citizenship in modern nations. But, in a reversal of Dynamics and Web , the chaos is located not at the political level, but in the stuff of human life, in an endless series of accidents surrounding birth, copulation, sickness, injury and death. He wanted to know how anything with a pretension to stability could cope with this interminable flux.
In its present form, this approach recapitulated Durkheim's (1912) question, in The Elementary Forms of Religious Life , concerning how society injects some measure of stability into everyday life. His answer there was through religion's twin mainstays of ritual and belief, with the much quoted “effervescence” of participation in ritual as the actual glue. Durkheim's source was Kant whose notion of the aesthetic was that “common sense”, as both shared ideas and physical sensations, enabled people to internalize collective feelings at a deep level. Meyer Fortes looked for something similar in the regularities of the life career and especially in rituals of transition like marriage, initiation and burial. The Web and “Time and social structure” both anticipate this move, especially the latter with its concept of social structure as the differential effects of general ideas on people's movements in time and space, to be discerned principally through statistical analysis.
In my own fieldwork long ago, I came to see society as a translocal phenomenon bridging rural and urban areas in post-independence Ghana. I realized that it was impossible for most Tallensi (Frafra) to rely exclusively on either city or countryside for their needs at different times in the life cycle – to get a wife, to school the kids, to cope with illness and unemployment, to bury a close kinsman. Hence the extraordinary attention given by migrants to marriages and funerals. I have long believed that Fortes' inspiration was hobbled by the restricted vision of modern politics he relied on ; and this means that how we think about kinship is likewise hobbled.
Heonik Kwon (2010), who organized the conference to which this paper was initially presented, has made a long-term bet as an anthropologist that the classical trinity of British social anthropology—kinship, politics and religion—could find new life through the study of Asian societies who suffered mass death during the Cold War. My own recapitulation of this idea has been more sporadic. What if we consider the collective quest for “the disappeared” in places like Argentina and Cyprus as a form of kinship in societies ravaged by civil war and state brutality? How would Fortes' paradigm have to be adjusted to meet such cases?
I needed to find out what Meyer might have garnered from D'arcy Thompson for his work in the 1940s. The results so far are equivocal. He and I shared an affinity for numbers which led in my case to a lifetime of engagement with statistics. (I entered the field aiming to develop new applications of non-parametric statistics). Thompson's rejection of evolutionary theory and preference for “structural dynamics” are promising. But at this stage I must register disappointment with the results of this line of inquiry. There were no doubt good reasons why Fortes abandoned a mathematical and scientific approach to social complexity for a more abstract structuralism. Perhaps statistics offered him only illusory gains, as they had in his PhD on intelligence testing which led him to abandon the project. There is something rather sterile and contentious about “Time and social structure” which makes its significance retrospective not prospective. Fortes' own contribution to the Development Cycle volume was an introduction where politics is modeled largely on the post-war nation-state, pointing to the generalizations he made in the 1960s that most people now identify as his intellectual legacy. Yet there was something brave, even revolutionary is his 1940s work. If only he had not hidden D'arcy Thompson's influence while building up his discipline as a self-sufficient social science after his own example as a supreme ethnographer turned wise old man.
References
Durkheim, E. 1960 (1912). The Elementary Forms of Religious Life . Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
Fortes, M. 1945a. The Dynamics of Clanship among the Tallensi . Oxford: Oxford University Press.
– 1945b. 'The impact of the war on British West Africa', International Affairs 21.2: 206-219.
– 1949a. The Web of Kinship among the Tallensi . Oxford: Oxford University Press.
– 1949b. 'Time and social structure: an Ashanti case study' in Social Structure: Presented to AR Radcliffe-Brown edited by Meyer Fortes. Oxford: Clarendon, 54-84. Also in M. Fortes. 1970. Time and Social Structure and Other Essays . London: London School of Economics.
– 2013 (1969). Kinship and the Social Order: The legacy of Lewis Henry Morgan . London: Routledge.
Gluckman, M. 1955. Custom and Conflict in Africa . Oxford: Blackwell.
Goody, J. (ed) 1958. The Development Cycle in the Domestic Groups . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Hancock, W. 1940. Survey of British Commonwealth Affairs, 1919-1939, Volume 2 Part 1 West Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Kwon, H. 2010. The Other Cold War . New York: Columbia University Press.
Thompson, D. Wentworth. 2014 (1917). On Growth and Form . Cambridge: Canto Classics (much shortened version).
Toulmin, S. 1990. Cosmopolis: The hidden agenda of modernity . Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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Part Two
Fernando: What about Meyer Fortes?
Keith: He had been made head of Cambridge social anthropology when it was mediocre, and then built it up to be the best department in the country. But, thanks to their expansion in the sixties, there was a new department of Social and Political Sciences, and Jack Goody favored taking social anthropology into it after he succeeded Meyer—Edmund Leach was now Provost of King’s College. He published articles in national magazines saying, “What is social anthropology anyway if not comparative sociology?” Meyer was deeply suspicious of my role in this game. It took him a long time to overcome his doubts about me.
He was the internal examiner for my PhD thesis and very positive; he recommended me to Cambridge University Press. He offered me a postdoc at King’s College to study the Tallensi with him. I would be the next lecturer appointed in Cambridge and could teach primitive and peasant economics like Raymond Firth. This frightened me. I was going to end up in a narrow circle of “Ghanaiologists”. Our discussions were so particular that people would use only proper names in our formal discussions—small groups, place names, individuals’ names, not concepts, facts with no analysis. Fortes once told me after I complained about the low level of departmental graduate seminars, “You are too rational, Keith. Anthropology is not a rational discipline”. That was my complaint then, now I celebrate it. There was no attempt to make analytical generalizations because everybody knew the same local facts. I did not want to be trapped in this parochialism. Instead of accepting his offer, I took a job in a development studies outfit at a new university, East Anglia in Norwich. Meyer never forgave me for that.
I learned later in the United States that he once visited the University of Chicago and was asked if anyone else had studied the Tallensi after him. He said, “There was someone, but he gave it up to advise on tourism in the West Indies”. He felt I was just doing it for the money—I was another Manchester utilitarian type only interested in making money. He once sent me a seven-page hand-written letter, opening with “I always thought you were a Benthamite with hedonistic qualities. I wouldn’t expect someone like you to understand the notion of filial piety”. It went downhill from there. He was out to kill me. I realized that there was no way I could go on writing about Tallensi. I decided to move sideways into development so as not to be in direct competition with him. He thought I wanted to get rich by joining the World Bank and stuff like that. I only wanted to learn about the world.
There’s a surprising conclusion to this story. I was teaching in Chicago for a year in the eighties when I got a postcard from Meyer Fortes. I’d published an article in Research in Economic Anthropology, “The economic basis of Tallensi social history (1900-1945)”. I took his side in an argument with Leach and Peter Worsley over the relationship between economic development and kinship institutions. It’s a good article, if I say so, the only one I ever published on the Tallensi, apart from my Accra material where they were part of a larger ethnic group. Somehow, he got hold of it and sent me a postcard in Chicago with a picture of King’s College chapel’s altar painting by Rubens, “The Adoration of the Magi”. “I was wrong about you, Keith; you are serious after all. You have made an original contribution here to the study of Northern Ghana’s economic history.” All is forgiven… By the time I got this card he was dead. He had written it from hospital and when I tried to contact him, they said, “Oh, Meyer Fortes died last week”. You couldn’t make it up, could you?
Federico: In a way, it was a complicated inter-generational relationship…
Keith: Yes. I had a strong feeling that Fortes and Evans-Pritchard thought all of us, my generation, were a waste of time. There was no point in taking us seriously because we had our own agenda, we were not listening, we just wanted to turn everything upside-down. They cultivated an Old Fogey act. You would think they were simpletons from the way they talked to us, or they thought we were. Meyer stayed in this register with me for a decade. I couldn’t get a decent conversation going with him. I learnt later why—because he thought I was Jack Goody’s spy. Jack encouraged his students to study modern social phenomena: education, local government, commerce. Meyer felt that we were all modernizers; we didn’t care much about traditional social structures.
Then one day when I was visiting from Yale—I remember it vividly—he took me to lunch and we were having coffee afterwards. I don’t recall what we were talking about, but I used the word “time” and he asked me, “What do you mean by time?” In under a minute, I was floundering; we were into deep philosophical, scientific waters, and I didn’t have any answers. Meyer Fortes joined Karl Pearson after he formed the first psychological statistics lab in Britain at University College London. He knew Freud and Marx inside-out. Evans-Pritchard was a liberal politician, trained in English rationalist philosophy and history.
They decided to let us get a degree for graduate fieldwork, but didn’t expect us to understand anything important. I was upset that they wouldn’t teach us the intellectual history they had mastered, didn’t want to share this with us. A lot of what I write now is intellectual history, probably because they denied us access to it, or just because I am a classicist. I want to read the people who changed how we think. But I’ll never forget that moment when he pulled the trap door open, and I fell through the floor.
Of course, because Meyer Fortes was so rough with me, I ended up venerating him more than anyone. I respect tough treatment. He was cruel to me really. Even so, he was the greatest anthropologist I knew personally, and I would like to write a memoir about him some day. His most important work was on the development cycle of domestic groups: how can you build a social order when its material is living people with all their accidents of birth, copulation, sickness, injury, and death—it’s so chaotic. He realized that Tallensi social forms were imposed on this disorder through life-cycle rituals of initiation, marriage, and death, since they had no centralized political institutions.
He once told me that he got this idea from D’arcy Wentworth Thompson, a Scottish polymath scientist of organic morphology at St Andrews who wrote an anti-Darwinian book, On Growth and Form (1942), considered to be the best book ever written in English by a scientist, all 1100 pages of it! His argument goes, Darwinian evolution is all about micro-variation, but why do the members of a species look alike? Why does an oak tree, down to each leaf, look like all the others? Physical pressures affecting growth account for this consistency of form, even between living and mechanical things. The speed of a fish or ship rises with the square root of its length, and there is a limit to the height of the tallest tree. It’s the physics, stupid. This was where Meyer got the development cycle idea from, but he never let on, maybe privately to a few like me, because he wanted to found a public trade union. He once wrote, “Social anthropology is what social anthropologists do”. He helped form the Association of Social Anthropologists of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth (ASAUK), so that he and his peers could choose who to let in.
He would tell us “all you students want is change, but what matters is continuity. That’s the difficult thing.” If evolution is based on random variations, how does form emerge in the flux and chaos that is life? In his second Tallensi monograph, The Web of Kinship, and work on “Time and social structure in Ashanti” published in the late forties, he combined statistical and network analysis with amazingly detailed qualitative ethnography. I would like to write about that. I have seen his field notes. He understood the language so much more subtly than I did because he knew the etymology—but I had to learn three of the local variations. Many of his field notes are written in the indigenous language. His understanding of the grammar and form of words was just incredible.