Functional Ism
Functional Ism
Two versions of functionalism developed between 1910 and 1930: biocultural (or
psychological) functionalism, the approach advocated by Malinowski, and
structural- functionalism, the approach advanced by Radcliffe-Brown.
Malinowski suggested that individuals have physiological needs and that social
institutions develop to meet these needs. There are also culturally derived needs
and four basic "instrumental needs" (economics, social control, education, and
political organization), that require institutional devices. Each institution has
personnel, a charter, a set of norms or rules, activities, material apparatus
(technology), and a function. Malinowski believed that uniform psychological
responses are correlates of physiological needs. He argued that satisfaction of
these needs transformed the cultural instrumental activity into an acquired drive
through psychological reinforcement (Goldschmidt 1996:510; Voget 1996:573).
Points of Reaction
Functionalism, as any new paradigm, was presented as a reaction against what
was believed to be outdated ideologies. That is, functionalism was an attempt to
move away from the evolutionism and diffusionism that dominated American and
British anthropology at the turn of the century (Lesser 1935, Langness 1987).
There was a shift in focus from the speculatively historical or diachronic study of
customs and cultural traits as "survivals" to the ahistorical, synchronic study of
social "institutions" within bounded, functioning societies (Young 1991:445).
In the primitive societies that are studied by social anthropology there are no
historical records. We have no knowledge of the development of social
institutions among the Australian aborigines for example. Anthropologists,
thinking of their study as a kind of historical study, fall back on conjecture and
imagination, and invent "pseudo-historical" or "pseudo-casual" explanations. We
have had, for example, innumerable and sometimes conflicting pseudo-historical
accounts of the origin and development of the totemic institutions of the
Australian aborigines...The view taken here is that such speculations are not
merely useless but are worse than useless. This does not in any way imply the
rejection of historical explanation but quite the contrary (Radcliffe-Brown 1952:3).
Meyer Fortes (1906-1983) was originally trained in psychology and was working in
London as a clinical psychologist when he met Seligman and Malinowski at the
London School of Economics in 1933. They persuaded him to undertake
psychological and anthropological fieldwork in West Africa. His writing is heavy
with theoretical assertions as he believed that empirical observation and analysis
must be linked if social anthropology was to call itself a science (Barnes 1991).
Key Works
Firth, Raymond. 1951. Elements of Social Organization. London. Notable for the
distinction between social structure and social organization
Firth, Raymond. 1957. Man and Culture, An Evaluation of the Work of Bronislaw
Malinowski. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. Provides biographical
information, a chronological presentation, and interpretation of Malinowski's
works
Goldschmidt, Walter. 1966. Comparative Functionalism, An Essay in
Anthropological Theory. Berkeley: University of California Press. An excellent
evaluation of the functionalism paradigm after it had fallen out of favor
Malinowski, Bronislaw. 1935. A Study of the Coral Gardens and their Magic. 2
vols. London: Allen.
Malinowski, Bronislaw. 1945. The Dynamics of Culture Change. New Haven, CT:
Yale University Press.
Malinowski, Bronislaw. 1948. Magic, Science and Religion and Other Essays.
Glencoe, Ill. Provides his conception of religion and magic as means for making
the world acceptable, manageable and right
As stated in his text, The Scientific Theory of Culture and Other Essays,
D. Such activities, attitudes and objects are organized around important and vital
tasks into institutions such as family, the clan, the local community, the tribe, and
the organized teams of economic cooperation, political, legal, and educational
activity.
E. From the dynamic point of view, that is, as regards the type of activity, culture
can be analyzed into a number of aspects such as education, social control,
economics, systems of knowledge, belief, and morality, and also modes of
creative and artistic expression" (1944:150).
"It is clear, I think, that any theory of culture has to start from the organic needs
of man, and if it succeeds in relating (to them) the more complex, indirect, but
perhaps fully imperative needs of the type which we call spiritual or economic or
social, it will supply us with a set of general laws such as we need in sound
scientific theory" (Malinowski 1944:72-73).
A B C D E F
Methodologies
Accomplishments
This school of thought has contributed to the concept of culture the notion that
traditional usages, whatever their origin, have been shaped by the requirement
that human beings must live together in harmony, and the demands of
interpersonal relationships are therefore a causative force in culture
(Goldschmidt 1967:17-18).
Criticisms
Logical problems of functional explanations also have been pointed out, namely
that they are teleological and tautological. It has been argued that the presence of
an institution can not precede the institution's existence. Otherwise, such a
teleological argument would suggest that the institution's development
anticipated its function. This criticism can be countered by recognizing an
evolutionary or a historical process at work; however, functionalism specifically
rejected such ideas. Functional analysis has also been criticized for being
circular: needs are postulated on the basis of existing institutions, that are, in
turn, used to explain their existence. This criticism can be countered by
establishing a set of universal requisite needs, or functional prerequisites. It has
been argued, however, that to account for phenomena by showing what social
needs they satisfy does not explain how it originated or why it is what it is
(Kucklick 1996:250).
Comments
Malinowski
Selected Bibliography of Bronislaw Malinowski
Radcliffe-Brown
Raymond Firth
Meyer Fortes
The Durkheim Pages
Sociological Theorists: Dead and Alive