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On Striving as Readers: A Response to Greer

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 February 2024

Christopher Witmore*
Affiliation:
Classical & Modern Languages & Literatures Texas Tech University CMLL Building 2906 18th St Lubbock, TX 79409 USA Email: christopher.witmore@ttu.edu
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The capacity of northern European gentlemen scholars educated in the love of wisdom, human dignity, friendship and rationality to treat their fellow human beings with irreconcilable prejudice and hold to ghastly beliefs of racial superiority, which legitimated violence, exploitation and extermination elsewhere, is one of the great tragedies of humanism. That the images of the human cultivated in texts were at variance with the lived experience of those who were treated as other than human was rarely noted in the books they read. I appreciate Matthew Greer's efforts to bring these concerns to the fore. I am grateful for the opportunity to read Sylvia Wynter, among others, and to think about their work in counter-humanism. I stand with Greer who reminds us that, as archaeologists, we must do more than critique ideologies, fight for inclusion, and engage in dialogue as demanded by a radical pluralism (Shanks & Tilley 1992, 246). Equity, social justice, openness, and decolonization demand the sustained effort of us all, both in our capacity as archaeologists and as readers of texts.

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Research Article
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Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research

The capacity of northern European gentlemen scholars educated in the love of wisdom, human dignity, friendship and rationality to treat their fellow human beings with irreconcilable prejudice and hold to ghastly beliefs of racial superiority, which legitimated violence, exploitation and extermination elsewhere, is one of the great tragedies of humanism. That the images of the human cultivated in texts were at variance with the lived experience of those who were treated as other than human was rarely noted in the books they read. I appreciate Matthew Greer's efforts to bring these concerns to the fore. I am grateful for the opportunity to read Sylvia Wynter, among others, and to think about their work in counter-humanism. I stand with Greer who reminds us that, as archaeologists, we must do more than critique ideologies, fight for inclusion, and engage in dialogue as demanded by a radical pluralism (Shanks & Tilley Reference Shanks and Tilley1992, 246). Equity, social justice, openness, and decolonization demand the sustained effort of us all, both in our capacity as archaeologists and as readers of texts.

By rendering humans as rational animals, modernist humanism, as argued by Bruno Latour (Reference Latour and Brigg1993), did not do sufficient justice to the human, because the cogito, the thinking subject, was defined in opposition to the extensa, non-human objects. The point, of course, was that this word ‘human’ was not a self-evident category, it just happened to be, in the words of Bayo Akomolafe (Reference Akomolafe2020), ‘simmering with tensions, elisions, disputations and troubling departures’ other than its exclusion of non-human things. Defining what it was to be human, ‘Man1’—eventually naturalized into ‘Man2’—relied taxonomically on the invention, and omission, of those considered to be other than human, that is, Black and Indigenous peoples taken by prejudicial humanists to lack wisdom, dignity, rationality, etc. (Wynter Reference Wynter, Gordon and Gordon2006, 125; Wynter & McKittrick Reference Wynter, McKittrick and McKittrick2015). This modern humanism, as Greer argues, was ‘created specifically so white, economically privileged, cis-gendered, heterosexual men could colonize, enslave and extract wealth without being affected by the Homo sapiens, animals, plants and things they colonized, enslaved and extracted wealth from.’

Greer does us a major service in drawing our attention to the linkages between posthumanism and counter-humanism. By failing to notice humanism's emergence ‘in and through colonialism and slavery’, and not questioning the default ‘monohumanist conception of the human’ (Wynter & McKittrick Reference Wynter, McKittrick and McKittrick2015), posthumanism, according to Greer, ‘unintentionally reproduces harmful elements of humanism’. Here, Greer's critique, that symmetric approaches have failed to recognize that ‘by adhering to a rather idealized European, masculine image, [humanism] did not “render sufficient justice” to the human’ (Witmore Reference Witmore2021, 484 n.4), is overstated. Indeed, for Latour the ‘human’ was impossible to define and when taken on its own, neither possessed a stable homogenous form ‘nor existed as a constitutional pole to be opposed to the nonhuman’ (Latour Reference Latour and Porter1993, 136–7). The ‘Human’, as Latour declared in meiotic fashion, ‘suffered from being a little ethnocentric, if not a trifle imperialist, or even merely American not to say Yankee’ (2002, 9). Not unjustly did Wynter recognize importance of Latour to Frantz Fanon's challenge of setting ‘the human free’ (Wynter & McKittrick Reference Wynter, McKittrick and McKittrick2015, 63).

Greer locates the birth of humanism in and through colonial slavery of the sixteenth century. Neither the humanitas of Cicero, nor the fourteenth-century writings of Petrarch who spurred the birth of the studia humanitatis of the fifteenth century (Mann Reference Mann and Kraye1996), nor the earlier Islamic ‘humanism’ or humanist Islam of the ninth and tenth centuries are mentioned. It was out of these cults of the literate, whose solidarity was based on who could read Latin and Greek texts and write to each other about them, that humanists began seeking, with all its obscurity and risk, a ‘human essence’ (Sloterdijk Reference Sloterdijk2009). A humanism with unclear aims leaves the door ajar for questionable practices (Sloterdijk Reference Sloterdijk2009)—precisely the variety of dangerous corruptions that emerged, in Greer's words, ‘in and through the racialization of Africans, Indigenous Americans and Europeans’. If the history of humanism is ‘terribly complicated’, then, as Donna Haraway has observed, ‘the prefix “post-” is a kind of marking of an examination and an inquiry into the histories, and meanings, and possibilities, and violences, and hopefulnesses of humanism’ (Franklin Reference Franklin2017, 50). That demarcations based on race did not go uncontested (they were among the pseudodoxia or vulgar errors of Thomas Browne: Reference Browne1646, 332), adds to humanism's ‘terribly complicated’ history, which in the face of its legion injustices and ambiguous aims cannot be defended. Still, examination and inquiry demand more than archival prowess among old texts; we must learn how to talk to each other, which requires effort of us as readers who enjoy the privilege of writing to others.

Greer's aim to dismantle humanism leads him to neglect his readerly responsibilities with misrepresentation and exaggeration as its by-products. Þóra Pétursdóttir has never claimed to be a symmetrical archaeologist, and has even criticized the term (Reference Pétursdóttir2012, 56; Olsen & Witmore Reference Olsen and Witmore2021, 78), but that does not keep Greer from subsuming her to the label. By choosing to assert the presumed supremacy of the human perspective on other objects, given the urgency of the moment, Greer ignores the questions Pétursdóttir asks, which relate to how those non-human things that have gathered as and among the ruins of Eyri remember pasts in their own idiosyncratic ways. Ignoring her rejoinder not to obfuscate the otherness of things by imposing human perspectives a priori, Greer obfuscates the otherness of things by imposing his perspective a priori. It is as if moral superiority trumps all other rationales for why we do what we do (Harman Reference Harman2022). With one voice Greer argues against reducing Homo sapiens to ‘white, economically privileged men’; with another he reduces the nuanced perspective of an Icelandic woman in her home region to the generic, academic gaze of an outsider. After urging readers to thoughtfully consider the work of counter-humanist scholars, Greer fails to fairly access Pétursdóttir's work in terms of the questions she asks by cavalierly judging it in terms of what he asks. These are largely questions for which he already has the answers, for to arrive at past definitions of the human built upon othering is the destination that he expected. Whether or not spears, swords, house remains, bodies, or bogs actually hold such an expectation remains unquestioned. By investing in the kind of theory that likes to answer questions without properly asking them, Greer is less well equipped to do right by the very issues that he hopes to address; namely, understanding the ‘human’ as an emergent category. The irony is that for Greer to feel it necessary to blanket non-human objects with human perspectives in advance—thereby also neglecting authorial purpose—is itself tied to the very legacy of humanism he seeks to counter.

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