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of the structure of an institution, appropriately elaborated, was perfectly suited tothe structure of an activity. By taking inventory of all a community’s activities thatinvolved more than one person and seeing how they were structurally interrelated(e.g., involving the same standing groups), it would be possible then to posit anychange and game out its structural effects. Retrospective analyses of changes in theavailability of traditional outrigger sailing canoes in Kiribati (the Gilbert Islands)(Goodenough 1963a, pp. 337–43; 1963b) and the introduction of outboard motorsin Kapingamarangi in Micronesia (Lieber 1994) illustrated the utility of this ap-proach. Looking at a community’s cultural organization of activities proved veryuseful also, in describing the political organization of a stateless society (Chowning& Goodenough 1966). The social organization of that community’s many activi-ties followed one or another of a very few designs. Lines of authority were clearlyrevealed in these designs.A long-standing concern of anthropologists has been the search for culturaluniversals. In thinking about what, in practice, we treated as cross-cultural cate-gories for comparative purposes, I saw that these were not, in themselves, specificto any given culture as a part of its emic makeup. In emic terms the categoriesof one culture were not exactly the same as those of any other. For comparativepurposes we map these emic categories into functional types. Thus we map partic-ular emic categories of containers into bowls, jars, etc., or particular emic criteriafor residence choices in marriage into patrilocal, matrilocal, etc. Then we say thatcontainers are cultural universals, instead of saying that in all cultures there arethings that people use as containers, recognizing that the universal is a functionalcategory rather than an emic cultural one. The common denominator of cultures isthus to be seen as composed of functional categories, such as shelter, food quest,food preparation, socialization of children, treatment of illness, disposal of thedead, religion, and so on (Goodenough 1981b). TheOutline of Cultural Materialsgives a detailed list of categories that are largely of this kind (Murdock et al. 1967).Seeing religion as a functional category struck me as having important the-oretical implications. Definitions of religion have always centered on belief insupernatural or spirit beings. Atheists were presumably without religion, yet thegreat salvation-promising movement of the twentieth century was atheistic com-munism. People were converted to it as to other visionary religions. Salvation is,of course, the achievement of an ideal state of being, whether in life or after death ,a transformation of self whether through individual endeavor or through collectiveeffort to transform society. When we stop to look at what the concerns are thatpeople are addressing through prayer, ritual, magic, etc., we find that they haveto do with the state of their selves and the selves of others who matter to them,including the state of the groups with which people identify themselves. What isaddressed is the maintenance of selves as people wish them to be, the repair ofdamage to selves (as from pollution and illness) and the enhancement of selves (aswith rites of passage and rites to earn merit). These rites may be elaborate or theymay be as simple as avoiding stepping on the cracks in the sidewalk or carryinga rabbit’s foot. Our folk wisdom recognizes this when we speak of people doingtheir morning exercises religiously or making a religion of their business. A cus-tomary practice that is readily abandoned in favor of another lacks religious valuefor people. Their selves are not threatened by it. The greater the emotional distress,exhibited by the suggestion that a custom be abandoned, the greater the religious(i.e., self-maintaining) value it has for those who are distressed. The equivalent ofchildren’s security blankets are legion. Horace Minor recognized this years agowith his much-cited article “Body Ritual Among the Nacirema” (1956).Looked at functionally in this way, the ethnographic description of a people’sreligious life requires examining all of their institutions and customary practiceswith an eye to how they function religiously, if at all, and for whom. This is nodifferent from what we must do when describing a people’s economic life or theirpolitical life. The same institution may function economically, politically, and reli-giously. I followed this approach to describing a people’s religious life in my recentbook on pre-Christian religious tradition in Chuuk (Goodenough 2002). I was ableto do this because of the availability of psychological test materials that provideda profile of the major concerns that were generated by the way people experiencedthemselves in the framework of Chuuk’s social culture (Gladwin & Sarason 1953).In recent years I have become interested in looking at how genetically pro-grammed behavioral tendencies from our animal heritage are manifested in thecomplex symbolic world stemming from language and culture in which we hu-mans exist. A surprise to me in this regard was the realization that the bristlingresponse we call moral outrage is the human equivalent of what ethologists referto as the territorial response (Lorenz 1963; Ardrey 1966, p. 3). Among humans,the rights, privileges, and immunities they have in their various social identity rela-tionships are symbolic territories. Trespass on these territories evokes the bristlingumbrage of the animal territorial response (Goodenough 1997b). In this regard, itis evident in the ethnographic record that there is no human society whose cultureof interpersonal relationships does not involve the definition of kinds of socialidentities and kinds of possible inter-identity relationships. These relationshipsare organized in terms of what are formalized in jural relationships as the com-plementary conceptual pairs, right versus duty, no right versus privilege, powerversus liability, and no power versus immunity (Hohfeld 1919), as was observedyears ago by Hoebel (1954). Of these, right and duty are fundamental, the otherconcepts being derivable from them.Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 2003.32:1-12. Downloaded from www.annualreviews.orgAccess provided by 202.67.43.39 on 07/03/15. For personal use only.9 Aug 2003 18:52 AR AR196-AN32-01.tex AR196-AN32-01.sgm LaTeX2e(2002/01/18)P1: GCE10GOODENOUGHRights and duties are affected by what among the four universal interactivemodes described by Fiske (1991) is appropriate to the context of a social inter-action. These modes are communal sharing; authority ranking or priority ranking(the cultural ordering of dominance); equality matching (everyone getting or owingexactly the same); and market pricing (negotiation and contractual arrangement).All but equality matching appear to be present in rudimentary form in chimpanzee
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