Writing vs. Time History and Anthropology in The Works of Lafitau
Writing vs. Time History and Anthropology in The Works of Lafitau
Writing vs. Time History and Anthropology in The Works of Lafitau
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Michel de Certeau
'Moeurs des Sauvages . . . , 2 vols. in-8' (Paris: Saugrain l'ain6 et Charles Etienne
Hochereau, 1724). I will quote this edition (volume in roman numerals; page in arabic
numerals). Another edition in 4 vols. in-8' appeared simultaneously at the same
publisher.
2A.R. Radcliffe-Brown, quoted in W.N. Fenton and E.L. Moore, "Introduction"
(cf. note 3), p. XXIX.
3W.N. Fenton & E.L. Moore, in J.F. Lafiteau, Customs of the American Indians
Compared with the Customs of Primitive Times (Toronto: The Champlain Society,
1974), p. XXIX. This translation of the first volume has one hundred pages of historical
and critical introduction (pp. XIX-CXIX), and is the best existing study of Lafitau. Cf.
also Michele Duchet, "Discours ethnologique et discours historique: le texte de
Lafitau," Studies on Voltaire and the 18th Century, CLI-CLV (1976), 607-623, also,
Edna Lemay, "Histoire de l'antiquit6 et decouverte du nouveau monde chez deux
auteurs du XVIIIe siecle" (i.e., Lafitau and Gaguet), ibid, pp. 1313-1328.
4Lafitau, op. cit., I, 4.
5Quoted in A.R. Radcliffe-Brown, Method in Social Anthropology, ed. M.N.
Srinivas (Chicago: Univ. of Chicago, 1958), pp. 128 and 157.
37
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Michel de Certeau
6Cf. the frontispiece reproduced here, and the "Explication of the Plates and
Figures," in Lafitau, op. cit., I, non-paginated.
39
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Yale French Studies
not see what he is pointing to. Mediators exiled from their actions, the
two are there to permit the vision to become a text. The "mysterioUs
vision"7 ravishes the ecstatic genitrix who writes it unawaredly, and
she escapes time, who is its index. Hence the composition pivots
toward the upper part, a painting within the painting. This regulates
a movement which goes from seeing to writing. It is an Annunciation,
but one which concerns the "system" ("my system," says Lafitau),
painted in the clouds.
The importance which we must attach to this "representation" of
scientific discourse is attested by forty-one other "plates," filled with
various "figures. " Although carefully selected ("the plates which I had
engraved," he repeats), loaded with meticulous bibliographical
references, with erudite commentary at the beginning of each volume,
they were, however, insufficient according to Lafitau, who would have
liked more8 or better ones9; these plates form an iconic discourse
which traverses, from one section to another, the mass of the written
discourse. They punctuate it with "monuments," whose essential
value is in their belonging to the order of the visible. They permit a
reseeing. Or they allow the belief that one can see the beginnings once
again. This basis is essential to the production of the text. A visual
counterpoint sustains and foments the writing. The entire work obeys
the structure posited by the frontispiece as a relationship between the
"seeing" and the book.
In his "Explication des planches," Lafitau himself becomes ecstatic
before the "figures" he collected and which he alternately refers to as
"mysterious," "very singular," "among the most magnificent of their
kind," etc. '0 He conforms here to a very old ethnological tradition.
From Lery or Thevet to De Bry, things seen and seeable mark off the
writing, engendered by distance. White pebbles in the dark forest of
the text. Signs of a presence to these distant nations, and therefore of
40
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Michel de Certeau
" Cf. Bernadette Bucher, La Sauvage aux seins pendants (Herman, 1977); Frank
Lestringant, "Les representations du sauvage dans l'iconographie relative aux ouvrages
du cosmographe Andre Thevet," Bibliotheque d'Humanisme et Renaissance, XL
(1978), 583-595; or, earlier, the observations of Gilbert Chinard, L'exotisme amiricain
dans la littirature francaise au XVIe siece (Paris: 1911), p. 102.
41
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Yale French Studies
42
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Michel de Certeau
But if the document has the force of presence (it is visible), it is only a
fragment (a "vestige"). In constituting the privileged quotation (as
before, the biblical verse or the article of the Code in the glosses), it
fosters a text, it calls, by what is missing there, for a discourse where all
of these primitive bursts of light are to be ordered in a "system." What
the eye sees is only the scatterings of what the book must produce.
Furthermore, from the seen to the written, the movement returns
inward. As a rule, the "mysterious vision" should cause the writing; in
fact, these are innumerable visual debris of inaccessible origin. And is
not the vision or the "system" finally but the mirror of the scholarly
writing? The sky which appears on the wall is a painting, not a day (the
light comes from the left). The woman-writer reads there, in ecstasy,
what she creates herself. Her book is projected on the laboratory
screen in a spectacle of meaning which is the narcissistic double of the
work. From seeing to writing, and from writing to seeing, there is
circularity in the interior of a closed space.
43
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44
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Michel de Certeau
45
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Yale French Studies
351, 108-455.
36Concerning the idea of "Supplement," cf. Jacques Derrida, De la grammatologie
(Paris: Ed. de Minuit, 1967), pp. 203-204: "Ce dangereux supplement."
371, 3-4. Hence the numerous observations of the sort: "It is therefore
necessary to explain Herodotus on the custom of the Lycians of taking their mothers'
names by that which the Hurons and the Iroquois observe still" (I, 74; my underlining).
46
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Michel de Certeau
47
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48
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Michel de Certeau
43A. Arnauld and P. Nicole, La logique ou I'art de penser, II, chaps. 2 and 3 (Paris:
Flammarion, 1970), pp. 151-159.
441, 460-481. Concerning the debate provoked by this analysis, cf. Fenton &
Moore, op. cit., CIII-CVII; John Ferguson McLennan, Primitive Marriage (London:
1865).
49
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50
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Michel de Certeau
underlines that which caused him "pain" or gave him "pleasure" ;46 he
specifies his intentions, his methods or his successes. These notations
make of the writer, or of his written production, an important, if not
essential, actor in the "narration." Writing means telling one's own
story. Thus, in the same period, the Canadian travel narratives (from
Champlain to Lahontan), describe at length the heroic trials of the
writer (where and when one wrote, in spite of the cold, during a brief
stop, with the sap of a tree, etc.), just as the gazettes alter the
"messenger" (just arrived from Naples or Amsterdam, contradicted
by another, etc.), into an actor by whom is added to the text the
irresistible epic of the text's construction.47 This structure is already
narcissistic. The producer shows himself in his production, but altered,
inverted into a woman and mother.
With the reintroduction of the speaker into the utterance, with the
heroization of writer-conquerors (or Amazons?), a new operation of
writing is indicated. Undoubtedly, it goes back to the sixteenth
century. The Reformers then thought to remake (reform) the
"corrupted" institutions, starting with the sacred Scriptures. The
Scriptures seemed to them a recourse from the decadence of the times.
But, from the sixteenth to the eighteenth century, erudition
continuously showed that the Scripture too was corrupted, deter-
iorated by history and rendered unreadable by distance.48 The original
project was maintained only by displacing it. Another writing,
artificially produced language, was to have the capacity to discipline
the chaos introduced by the past and to create a present order. The
impotence of Scripture against the depravity of institutions produced
by time gave way to campaigns for writing systems (scientific, utopian,
or political) to constitute a rational world. So to write is to make
history, rectify it, educate it: "bourgeois" economy of power through
46He thus mentions the authors who "caused [him] the most grief" (I, 547), or those
who brought him the most "pleasure" (II, 482).
47Cf., e.g., the research of Mme Claude Rigault (Univ. of Sherbrooke, Canada), on
the Nouveaux Voyages of Lahontan (1703). On the gazettes, cf. Pierre Retat and Jean
Sgard, eds., Presse et histoire au XVIIle siecle. L'annee 1734 (Paris: CNRS, 1978).
48Cf. Walter Moser, "Pour et contre la Bible: croire et savoir au XVIIIe siecle,"
Studies on Voltaire and the 18th Century, CLIV (1976), 1509-1528; M. de Certeau,
"L'idee de traduction de la Bible au XVIIe siecle," Recherches de science religieuse, 66
(1978), 73-92.
51
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49Cf. M. de Certeau, L'Ecriture de I'histoire, 2nd. ed. (Paris: Gallimard, 1978), and
"Des outils pour 6crire le corps," Traverses, 14-15 (1979), 3-14.
52
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Michel de Certeau
time. Lafitau takes care, furthermore, to mark his distance from his
comparatist predecessors, a fundamental distance. Just as he sets aside
Moses, from whom Pierre-Daniel Huel claimed all religions derived,
Lafitau plays down the authority of the Bible because it is too
"localized" (there were societies before Israel), too "positive"
(general principles are needed), and too close to the "fables," whether
savage or Greco-Roman, that he judged to be "absurd." 0
In the place of the Bible, there is a "system." An epistemological
break is indicated by the fact that the theoretical tableau is detached
from any historical positiveness. "Demonstration" will no longer be,
as with Huet, based upon points of chronology. It ceases to be a war of
dates, from which Moses always had to come out more ancient than his
supposed descendants. It becomes the deployment of operations that a
conceptual corpus is able to organize given certain materials. Defined
by a group of principles and hypotheses, that is, by transparent, "clear
ideas" which no longer permit the ruses of hermeneutics to play upon
the opacities of an authorized text, theory has no place in time or
space. It is a non-lieu. The origin is a form (a network of formal
relations), and not a date, a personage, or a book of history. It consists
more in what scientific research gives itself as work rules than in what it
receives as the law of a history.
In fact, the setting apart of theory is a scientific gesture
indissociable from a more global historical gesture that sets the writer
apart, that cuts him from his social ties and attachments, and
constitutes him as a proprietor of an autonomous workshop. It was
necessary that a "clear" field be circumscribed where writing might
claim the right to freely establish its rules and to control its own
production-it was necessary that there be this gesture, alternately
"Cartesian" and "bourgeois," founder of a science and of an
economy-so that, in principle, cut off from its genealogical debts, the
writer might give himself, in an ahistorical tableau, the whole of his
postulates, criteria and theoretical choices. Then his work no longer
53
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Yale French Studies
5 Cf. Homer 0. Brown, "The Displaced Self in the Novels of Daniel Defoe," ELH
(1971), 562-590; Curt Hartog, "Authority and Autonomy in Robinson Crusoe,"
Enlightenment Essays (1974), 33-43; etc.
52J, 109, 116, etc.
53Cf. Margaret Hogden, Early Anthropology in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
Centuries (Philadelphia: 1964), p. 268.
54K. Kahin, op. cit., p. 30; cf. Fenton & Moore, op. cit., pp. LXXIX-LXXX.
54
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Michel de Certeau
original couple, man and woman. This emblem indicates the strategic
role played by kinship systems in Lafitau's analysis-a role which has
as a postulate, for Lafitau as for later ethnologists, an exclusion of
genealogical dependence. It is as if kinship became an object of study
when it was excluded from the scientists, as "subject," and no longer con-
cerned Lafitau. The couple serves as a model of all sorts of "connections,"
"relationships," and "comparisons." It is given in two forms, one
celestial and the other terrestrial. These forms also give shape, in the
case of the clothed couple, to the old world and religious antiquity,
while the other, almost nude, to the new world and savage primitive-
ness. The one leads, by the monstrance, to the cipher of the Absolute;
the other, by the serpent, toward temporal degradation. The hierarchy
of places of meaning applies, therefore, to geographical places. The
difference, however, "returns to the same." The same couple
reproduces itself from a celestial cloud to the other, terrestrial cloud;
the distinction between them resides only in accidental variants which
introduce, into the model, heterogeneous spaces wherein oneness
reproduces itself. The theory thus bears within itself the explanation of
contingent diversities which are, as are diseases, structurally effected
by the historical context. With her look fixed upon the models, the
writer will know how to/will have to recognize them in their avatars.
By the rules that it gives to the analytical operation (postulating a
reproduction of the same structure and functions, yet permitting the
totalization of the variants and the reduction of differences to a unity),
the painting of the principles also posits the conditions which render
possible an anthropo-logy, that is, a discourse on Mankind in general.
The form of this discourse remains "theological" while the content
emerges as scientific. The mixture is the same; far from hiding it,
Lafitau claims full responsibility for it. He is still a missionary. As an
apologist, we find in his work the characteristic habit of furnishing a
pre-established, accepted architecture in an apparently "modem" way.
But scriptural modernity is not, for him, only an appearance. He takes
it seriously, and it metamorphoses his discourse. Also, more important
than the author's intentions, the question arises as to what status to
give to a dogma transformed into theory. The process which produces
this "laicization" is clear: to de-realize, that is, to de-historicize an
55
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Yale French Studies
55Cf. Jacques Derrida, Marges de la philosophie (Paris: Ed. de Minuit, 1972), pp.
249-273, regarding texts of Hegel and Nietzsche concerning this "wearing"
(Abnutzung).
56
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Michel de Certeau
561n Freud (Totem and Taboo), or Durkheim (Les formes 66mentaires de la vie
religieuse), this way of transforming "primitive" belief into a space in which to write
theory (psychoanalytical or sociological), can be found.
57I, 13: "When it is a question of Religion, I profess to be so little attached to my
ideas that I am ready to retract...."
580n the reactions of contemporaries and on the immobilisation, then disappear-
ance of the manuscript, cf. Fenton & Moore, op. cit., pp. LXXXIII-CII, and
XLI-XLII.
57
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59Cf. Louis Marin, Utopiques: jeux d'espace (Paris: Ed. de Minuit), especially
chap. 1.
58
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The "space between" wherein resides a dead and ghostly time also
indicates to us, as readers of the Moeurs des Sauvages, where we are to
situate the springboard that lets the work function as a "system." A
ruse is the condition of possibility of this science. This ruse is an art of
playing on two places. Undoubtedly, we will thus find again, though in
a different way, the comparatist technique of the "connection." The
genies who combine a calumet with a caduceus or a tortoise and a
sistrum illustrate the art of articulating reasoning (their angelic
message) by the manipulation that creates a relation between two
terms. In this regard, they are only the metonymies of the more
general process generating Lafitau's book in the space between consti-
tuted by various types of disjunction; for example, between the laboratory
and the painting, or between the civilized "Atheists" and the religious
savages. These oppositions, very different in nature, require the same
tactical operation. The position of Time, analogous to that of the
genies, but at a higher level, one which concerns the ordering not
merely of pieces of the collection, but of the science, is itself a variant
to be included in a strategy everywhere repeated. The manner of
producing the discourse remains formally identical, despite the
differences of terrain, of content, and of problems. Such is the case
with Lafitau's method, like the monogenistic principle which it puts in
functional order and which, it has been noted, remains "the same,"
however varied or altered its manifestations might be.
60
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61
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the second, "atheists" but "civilized." He plays the ones against the
others in such a way as to produce "the lesson" to be drawn from their
complementary deficiencies. This "lesson" articulates the mono-
genistic principle in "enlightened" language. By its nature, it is
addressed equally to both worlds. Necessarily solitary in this position
no longer belonging to one or the other (there is no institutional
reference in the frontispiece) and establishing himself in a cell (with all
the apparatus of eremitic insularity of olden days: angels, the phantom,
the vision, the book of meditation), the writer is already the "Lazarus"
to whom Levi-Strauss will compare the ethnologist, returned from the
dead to the living, but endowed with a knowledge that is unparalleled
and incomprehensible to his contemporaries.62 His discourse is
supposed to fill the lacunae of both halves of the world by the chiasma
of which he is the mediator.
The locus is unique and extraordinary. The theological ambition to
say everything in the name of the founding Word takes on the scientific
form of a writing that replaces the enunciating voice of a world by the
indefinite sewing together of fragments and that is no longer
authorized by a full Word but by the limits and the absences of pieces
disseminated over a geography similar to a degenerated language. The
curtain lifts to frame this feminine work with texture, necessary and
possible because of the lacunae.
Silence reigns on this stage. How could it be otherwise, where the
breaking apart of bodies (individual and social), creates the space and
the condition of writing? This wordless production makes the
difference of treatment between "customs" and "fables" understand-
able. Some are "illuminating," the others "absurd," a Homeric
adjective to designate them. Lafitau's lucid attention towards social,
political, or religious practices contrasts with his "pain," and his "pity"
and his scandalized irritation (he is "shocked"), before these "very
ridiculous and very insipid fables," "gross and criminal superstitions"
invented by the Greeks and Romans or by the Savages. 63 Altogether,
he finds the silent to be significant and the spoken to be intolerable.
62
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Michel de Certeau
64Lafitau: "This tradition passing from mouth to mouth receives in each some
alteration and degenerates into fables so absurd that one can report them only with
extreme discomfort" (I, 93). Fontenelle: "It will indeed be worse when they (the first
stories), will pass from mouth to mouth; each will take away some little bit of truth, and
replace it with a bit of falseness...." ("De l'origine des fables," 1724), in Oeuvres
compltes, ed. G.B. Depping (Geneva: Slatkine, 1968), vol. 2, p. 389. Also in
Fontenelle, moreover, "history" is a writing which is installed in the place of the oral
"story" and substitutes the production of a "verisimilitude" (a fiction of truth) for the
-absurd" derivations of genealogical transmission (cf. ibid., p. 388ff., and "Sur
l'histoire," in Oeuvres completes, op. cit., pp. 424-429).
63
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64
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