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Adventures in the Archaic

Primitivism, Degrowth, and the French Social Sciences, 1945–1975

Adventures in the Archaic

Primitivism, Degrowth, and the French Social Sciences, 1945–1975

Examines how four intellectuals with ties to the French social sciences articulated a new primitivist sensibility between 1945 and 1975.

We tend to associate primitivism with the nostalgic idealization of origins, often aimed at parts of the world that are viewed as closer to that idealized past than modern post-industrial society. Primitivist impulses still exist in popular culture, whether in paleo diets or returns to foraging, and they can also be seen in intellectual and political circles in debates around the possibility of degrowth. In this book, historian Ryan L. Allen examines primitivism anew through four fascinating figures: Georges Bataille, Henri Lefebvre, Georges Devereux, and Mircea Eliade.
 
In the postwar period, Allen shows, the French social sciences reappraised the primitive and archaic from anthropological, sociological, psychiatric, and religious angles. These four thinkers sought past alternatives to midcentury hypermodernization and capitalist excess. They put forth trenchant critiques of contemporary society and sought in the archaic past a way to imagine a more sustainable future. Adventures in the Archaic rehabilitates these thinkers, showing how their critique of growth and consumerism was nourished by an engagement with primitive cultures as potential sources of cultural and ecological wisdom. As we confront planetary crisis, Allen suggests, there is still much we can learn from these iconoclastic approaches.

248 pages | 19 halftones | 6 x 9

The Life of Ideas

History: European History, General History, History of Ideas

Reviews

“Written with appealing informality and directness, Adventures in the Archaic interweaves intellectual biography, textual critique, and the history of the social sciences. This lively and original study makes a case for the enduring influence and value of primitivism in contemporary efforts to come to terms with the global crisis engendered by an unthinking ideology of growth.”

Daniel Sherman, The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

“As ecological crisis shatters faith in modern progress, Allen reveals how postwar primitivism offers not nostalgia but provocation—the past as a resource for reimagining the future. Beautifully written and deeply original, Adventures in the Archaic demonstrates that looking backward can sometimes be the most radical way forward.”

Kohei Saito, University of Tokyo

Table of Contents

Preface
Introduction: The Promise of a Certain Primitivism
1. Archaic Religion in a New Key: Georges Bataille at Lascaux
2. The Work of Nostalgia: Henri Lefebvre’s New Theory of Survivals
3. Georges Devereux: Mohave Shamanism and the Future of Ethnopsychiatry
4. Mircea Eliade and Neopaganism as Postcolonial Critique
Epilogue: Primitivism in Our Time
Acknowledgments
Notes
Archives Consulted
Index
 

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