The origins of French archaeology.
Olivier, Laurent
In contemporary scientific research, the most marked result of the
last 30 years has been the development of a specifically American
science and its emancipation from the old European intellectual heritage
of the 19th century and the interwar period. This movement, marked in
archaeology by the birth of the New Archaeology in the 1960s and 1970s,
followed by the anti-processual reaction of the 1980s and 1990s, has
been accompanied by a process of globalization of the archaeological
discipline, leading to the unification of methods and theory. The birth
of a world market dominated by the United States, characterized by mass
consumption and the hegemony of the economic over the political, has
imposed new practices of archaeology, which post-processual scholars
have been quick to exploit.
Europe seeks its role in this new international order. For many in
continental Europe, the post-processualism of Britain (as at TAG) is
seen as an intellectualized European version of American globalization
imbued with political correctness. Many English-speaking researchers
question the enigma of the lack of French archaeological theory in
comparison with the flowering of post-modern sociology and philosophy.
Several reasons explain the retreat of French archaeology. Above all,
archaeology is little debated in France, since it does not have strong
presence in university teaching outside Paris. French archaeology
remains essentially a state enterprise, run by bureaucrats and not by
researchers. Finally, archaeological practice has undergone an
extraordinary upheaval in the last 20 years, with considerable expansion
of rescue excavation, and this has not been fully assimilated.
Current French archaeology is a set of archaeologies. However, I
would here like to examine and explain the origins of French
archaeology, specifically from the Enlightenment and the French
Revolution, prolonging a movement which started a century earlier in
England. Against all appearance, the roots of British and French
archaeology are the same, drawing on an old common European heritage,
part of a larger development following the discovery of the New World.
Notions of collective identity, our modern points of reference, were
fundamentally redefined. People aspired to a new type of society and
social relations, founded on equality and respect for cultural
differences. This new archaeology, born in the 18th century sought to
understand the past and opened new questions which are current today:
What society do we wish for ourselves? What is our relation to past
societies?
In the history of the representation of European culture, two major
events have played a fundamental defining role for collective relations
and the individual: the discovery of 'Sauvages de
l'Amerique' and pre-Roman antiquities, respectively a
different contemporary humanity and a different ancient humanity. These
two events, although not simultaneous, combined to change concepts of
the identity and origins of man, in terms of both space and time. In the
wake of the expansion of geographical understanding, new fields of
knowledge - ethnography and anthropology - were developed to make sense
of human cultural diversity. In the temporal dimension, the renewed
history and the new archaeology were now exploited to explore the
unknown past. In the light of these changes in the 18th and 19th
centuries, I intend to present an 'archaeology of systems of
thought', drawing on the work of Foucault dealing with the origins
of contemporary concepts of power and social order (Foucault 1966;
1997).
The impact of space: from the 'Sauvages de
l'Amerique' to 'primitive societies'
The effect of the discovery of the New World: savages and the Other
The 16th- and 17th-century discovery of the New World was not only
the conquest of new territories, the exploitation of new riches and the
assimilation of new populations. This event had much deeper
repercussions on the problem of the identity of European societies,
overturning definitions of European civilization. The most marked change
was spatial: the birth of maps and new modes of spatial representation.
The innovations were recast from the old Medieval geographical models.
Sixteenth-century cartography continued to follow a broadly Ptolomean
Europocentric scheme - the world was ordered in concentric circles,
moving from civilization to the barbarian periphery, from the known to
the unknown, from normality to abnormality. The discovery of New World
humanity was on the limits of the world, on the frontier of humanity and
savagery, the natural and spiritual world.
American savages and Gallic antiquities: an ethnographic approach
to the traces of aboriginal societies
From the end of the 16th century, several authors have linked the
existence of New World Savage societies to the interpretation of unusual
stone objects, often found by farmers all over Europe. Michele Mercati
(1541-1593), director of the botanical garden of Pope Plus V and
organizer of the Vatican Museum, particularly compared Amerindian stone
tools to ceraunies, strange geometric flints, preserved in most cabinets
de curiosites. Mercati was one of the first (with Montaigne) to put
together a collection of Amerindian objects. In his Metallotheca
Vaticana (1719), Mercati established that Italian flint arrowheads were
of pre-Iron Age human production.
However, these important advances were isolated. The theory of
Mercati was only discussed in the 18th century: Antoine de Jussieu in
his 1724 lecture to the Academie des Sciences drew the parallel between
Caribbean and Canadian stone tools and those discovered in Europe
(Jussieu 1875). Lafitau (1724) made similar observations about parallels
between Amerindian and early European societies.
Jussieu, Lafitau, Caylus (1752-1757) and Mahudel (1875) shared a
new premise: similar forms of tools made of the same materials must have
entailed the same use. In each case, technology was linked to
evolutionary stages of society towards civilization. Thus, in the first
half of the 18th century, one sees the start of a proper system of
analysis of past societies where technology and the mind are
inextricably linked. Caylus, and to a smaller extent Jussieu or Lafitau,
outline a history of human culture founded on technological development.
After the French Revolution, this approach became the framework of 19th-
and 20th-century French prehistory.
The upheaval of Time: from medieval origin myths to the modern
concept of the nation
A similar upheaval took place in the concept of Time which inverted
ideas of society and community. The movement began in 18th-century
England, a time of criticism of royal power, then was taken up in the
study of social function in 18th-century France, part of the
philosophical ideas of the Enlightenment.
From Trojan origin myths to the criticism of royal power
Traditionally, the medieval history of origins was one of dynastic
history, founded on classical mythology. Until the Renaissance, versions
of the Trojan myth dominated. According to this tradition, the Trojans
succeeded in fleeing from the burning palace of Priam. Francus, and his
family, passed by the Danube, and then through Germany, before arriving
in what was later France, where he established the first Frankish royal
family. Another version (with a British focus) was related by Geoffrey
of Monmouth.
These concepts of history changed profoundly during the 18th
century, both in England and France, where the Graeco-Roman origin myth
was replaced by a social or national model. The history of nations was
now sustained by a dialectical dynamic. The dominant conquerors (Franks
in France, Normans in Great Britain) were opposed by the indigenous
vanquished (Gauls and Saxons). In origin, this new interpretation of
history was introduced into 17th-century England as a critique of royal
power. It sought to recall that the nobility, heirs to the original
conquerors, had won a right over society, but that this power had been
confiscated by the monarchy, destroying aristocratic freedom.
The French Revolution and the invention of the Nation
The critique of royal power begun in England in the 17th century,
developed in France towards a global social critique in the 18th century
which implied a new idea of Nation. For the monarchy, there were only
subjects, arranged in classes or corporations. To criticize the
relations of king to subjects was to debate the whole functioning of
society, to assert that society was a global partner in power.
The revolution as the final elimination of national tensions: the
invention of Gauls as ancestors of the French
The French revolution tried to find a response to these problems,
by imposing the idea that the Nation equated with society. In this sense
the eradication of the Monarchy was an attempt to reconcile internal
social tensions. The Revolution must halt social conflict, which,
according to 18th-century thought, had dominated all previous history,
but which had led to the revolutionary take-over. In a paradox common to
all revolutions, the French Revolution needed to eliminate the very
causes of its own appearance. It had to change the vision of society and
history which initially justified it. In this movement, the Third
Estate, or the Bourgeoisie, found themselves entirely equated with the
Nation, removing the Frankish component of traditional national history.
This transformation of the notion of Nation requires several
comments. Firstly, this new Republican concept of Nation rests on a
conjuring away of the Franks, that is of the nobles. An ethnic notion of
the Nation was imposed; the Gauls were equated with the Third Estate,
and became the direct ancestors of the French. The elimination of the
Franks by Nationhood moved tensions from the racial (the opposition of
peoples) to the social (the opposition of classes). The State became the
expression of this new Nation, the instrument of the historical
development of the Nation and the lineal descendant, in some way, of the
aboriginal Gaul. The Republican myth of 'nos ancetres les
Gaulois' legitimated the State. The fusion of State and Nation
induced the birth of State racism which developed in the second half of
the 19th century: the Revolution and the Republic introduced a
fundamental ambiguity at the heart of the notion of the Nation, both
political (all are citizens who defend the values of the Republic) and
ethnic (all are French who live within national frontiers).
The French Revolution led to a changed discourse on the Origins of
the Nation, principally by substituting Gauls for Franks. This had a
profound effect on the developing discipline of archaeology, making it
an instrument for research into the origins of the Nation, and no longer
an activity of aristocratic antiquaries. Archaeology became a
revolutionary programme as well as a tool for the legitimation of the
State. Citizen Pierre Legrand d'Aussy presented at the National
Institute a report entitled 'Memoire sur les anciennes sepultures
nationales' (Legrand d'Aussy 1799). This text proposed a
universal archaeological chronology, based on early burial practices,
and developed by a programme of the study and protection of these
remains at a national scale and under state control.
The anthropological and archaeological implications of the idea of
Nation
The Nation as realization of the progress of humanity
The Nation, in the sense given by the French Revolution, had both a
common origin and a social model which basically constituted its
identity. Sieyes defined this most successfully at the end of the 18th
century: a nation is founded on the sharing of laws in common. The
Nation can only exist in as much that the community of individuals who
live together in the same area are capable of setting up mutually
acceptable rules. From the political point of view, this clause is
central, for it implies that society has no need of Nobles or of the
King. From the cultural point of view, it is equally important, for the
Nation is at a stage of Civilization in which Reason and consciousness
of the collective interest prevail over the beliefs and dominant
relations of inegalitarian societies which are in future rejected from
primitiveness and dark ages. Sieyes states that for a Nation to
perpetuate itself in history, it needs to produce works, that is,
agriculture, artisanship, industry, commerce and liberal arts. According
to Sieyes, it is vital for a Nation to be endowed with functions, that
is, regulatory institutions such as the army, justice, the Church or
administration. A Nation can only exist only in so far as it can produce
and organize itself. This new approach of human organizations implies
that technology, as mode of production, and self-determination, as mode
of social and political function, are formative for the Nation.
These concepts nurtured the first observations of prehistory,
notably by Boucher de Perthes and Gabriel de Mortillet from the 1850s.
Jacques Boucher de Perthes discovered the first flint tools in the
quaternary deposits of Abbeville in 1850-1860. In line with 18th-century
thought, Boucher de Perthes approached these traces of the past, which
he attributed to celtic populations before the biblical flood,
indirectly from technology.
Technology and social progress
Thirty years later, Gabriel de Mortillet, who claimed intellectual
inheritance from the Revolution, extended this approach inherited from
18th-century thought. De Mortillet notably showed that that the
development of techniques and artistic expressions followed a continuous
evolution from the first stone tools to the invention of iron
metallurgy. This tenet is the central theme of the prehistoric
collections of the Musee des Antiquites Nationales where he worked. De
Mortillet's approach rested on three principal points linked to
general laws of human behaviour, comparable to the physical laws of the
natural world (Mortillet 1869; 1883; 1897):
1 According to de Mortillet, technological and artistic production
reveals the existence of continuous progress, which is unique to the
human species. Man is perfectible. There is a Loi du progres de
l'humanite.
2 De Mortillet states that if all societies develop historically
through analogous technological stages, it is because, faced by the same
needs, they find similar solutions. For de Mortillet, this demonstrated
the existence of a 'Loi du developpement similaire', common to
all human societies.
3 According to de Mortillet, archaeological evidence showed from
the beginning the existence of industry, art and social organization.
These were in embryonic form in ancient societies, but could be seen to
develop in later historical societies. The study of archaeological
evidence consisted then, according to de Mortillet, in the study of the
evolution of a civilization whose development was founded on a 'Loi
d'unite psychologique de l'humanite'.
These ideas that de Mortillet theorized in prehistory are the same
that the Enlightenment and the French Revolution had crystallized a
century earlier in the arena of society and politics. As Trigger (1990:
57-8), states, these notions rest on a conviction in the fundamental
unity of humanity and on faith in human progress. The intellectual
tradition of the 18th century postulates, in effect, the psychic unity
of humanity. According to this tradition, the cultural differences were
brought about by environmental factors (such as the theory of climates).
There is a desire of human groups to better their condition and control
nature better. A real law of progress underwrites the evolution of all
aspects of society, and notably social and political organization.
Progress improves the human species, gradually eliminating thanks to
education and knowledge, superstition and ignorance, sources of violence
and social inequality. Thus scientific research and accessible education
plays a crucial role in the amelioration of society. Humanity advances
on a road of technological and social progress thanks to reason. Two
centuries after 1789, we still want to believe in the validity of this
programme.
The socialization of technology: from Marcel Mauss to Andre
Leroi-Gourhan
We may see here more clearly how, in the intellectual tradition of
the Englightenment and of the French Revolution, technology and the
social and cultural development of human communities are intextricably
linked. Since the publication of L'encyclopedie of Diderot &
d'Alembert (1751-1765), the study of technology writ large occupied
a fundamental place in the intellectual tradition of France within the
Human Sciences (Olivier & Coudart 1995). The analysis of production
and the technological working of societies is none other than the study
of the human understanding and representation needed for existence and
action. This gave coherence and specificity to the French sociological
school inspired by Emile Durkheim between the end of the 19th century
and the beginning of the 20th. Social customs - including the less
material elements such as religious, ritual, magical or exchange
practices - were considered fundamentally social, in place to maintain
cohesion and permanence of human communities.
In his article on 'Les techniques du corps', which
appeared in 1934 in the Journal de Psychologie (Mauss 1997: 363-86),
Marcel Mauss gave the most complete definition of socializing
perception, applied to technology. In this work on the different ways
'in which men, society by society, know, traditionally, how to make
use of their bodies' (Mauss 1997: 365), Mauss stated that the
existence of technology is not necessarily linked to the use of tools,
but that the use of technology can express itself principally through
the body. For Mauss, technology was none other than what he calls an
'acre traditionnel efficace'; that is to say, a constructed
procedure directed towards an objective and a tradition. Mauss insisted,
in particular, on the fact that technology cannot exist without
tradition or without technological culture and without the transmission
and reproduction of this knowledge. In parallel, Mauss stated that the
sequences of technological actions 'are shown by and for social
authority' (Mauss 1997: 384), or in other words that the working of
this total technology is intrinsically tied to the reproduction of
social order. For Mauss, the study of technology is confused with the
analysis of the projection of the social onto the individual. The social
fact dominates the entirety of human actions and production.
The 'fait technique' is also crucial for the work of
Andre Leroi-Gourhan. Amongst French prehistorians, Leroi-Gourhan is the
person who perpetuated most directly, in the 1960s and 1970s, the ideas
of the Englightenment and the French Revolution, in terms of the genesis
of technology. In common with his 19th-century predecessors,
Leroi-Gourhan set the transformations of human tools in a unilinear evolution which began no longer with the first humans, but even earlier
with the appearance of human faculties, among the ancestral fossils of
the modern human species. In particular, Leroi-Gourhan saw technological
evolution as running in parallel with anatomical change; he created a
precipitous trajectory which linked the appearance of the first tools to
the industrial production of modern knives ([ILLUSTRATION FOR FIGURE 2
OMITTED]; Leroi-Gourhan 1955). Such an approach postulated the unity of
technological thought, considered as the human achievement par
excellence. In tying the evolution of technology to a unilinear
progress, it was not far from the concepts of the 19th-century
prehistorians, marked once again by the inheritance of 18th-century and
French Revolutionary social thought. As with de Mortillet before him,
Leroi-Gourhan stated that human technological production followed a
logical evolution which was metaphorically comparable to the dynamic
evolution of animal species.
According to Leroi-Gourhan, tools, or more broadly technology,
evolved in a spontaneous manner, or more exactly according to an
internal dynamic which characterized the tendencies of the living
projected back in time. In this perspective, the 'fait
technique' would then be recoupled from specific cultural
manifestions of societies taken individually at a given moment of time.
The 'fait technique' could be studied in itself as a
reflection of the mental representations of humanity. Thus, the
flint-knappers of the Lower Palaeolithic would not only be Homo faber,
the simple manual labourer, but also conceptualizers. They know from the
first cutting tools how to anticipate form in the block of raw material
and how to develop a mental map. They were already Homo saplens, people
who know technology like ourselves. This premise of the continuity of
technological thought which 'places modern man in full solidarity
with the predecessors of Pithecanthropus himself' (Leroi-Gourhan
1962: 12), was, in essence, already the same as Boucher de Perthes who
searched in the blocks of flint and wood from the gravels of Abbeville
for the signs of the creative activity of human origins.
Conclusions
Contemporary French archaeology, like ethnology and the other human
sciences, developed as a result of a changed paradigm. In the first half
of the 18th century, this overturned the concepts that gave European
societies their place in history in relation to other cultures. The new
approach, based on the coupling of the dimensions of time and space,
found an explanation for the diversity of cultures in a global history
of all humanity.
Until then, ethnography had not transcended a discourse which
comprised the 'sauvages' from overseas and their differences
from Europeans. This situation changed when Europe began to theorize about the past and to consider the 'savages from the ends of the
earth' and the 'ancestors from the mists of time'. From
the end of the 17th century, this introduced the discovery of much
non-classical archaeological evidence. The link between Time and Space,
as well as the connection between distant 'primitive
societies' and local 'original humans', were then placed
in symmetrical opposition or tension. This was a concurrent
formalization of primitive contemporary societies and original past
societies, as part of the apportioning of knowledge within the modern
human sciences. Ethnology was the spatial study of the diversity of
humanity and archaeology the temporal study of its continuity.
More particularly in France, the birth of archaeology was bedded in
a new conception of society which found its origins in the social and
political thought of the Enlightment and the French Revolution, with the
invention of the historical Nation. French archaeology developed as a
result of this paradigm shift, in origin political, with a particularly
strong effect on prehistory, where it focused on the evolution of
technology, notably with de Mortillet in the 19th century and
Leroi-Gourhan after the war. From a French perspective, archaeology
naturally played a greater ideological and political role where it dealt
globally with the evolution of humanity and locally with the evidence of
national origins. This explains why in France the State traditionally
occupies such an important place in the conduct of archaeology. It is
wrong to consider French archaeology atheoretical. On the contrary, if
French archaeology appears so poor in its theoretical interpretations,
it is because the past was already theorized and the framework of its
interpretation was already fixed even before the birth of the
discipline. Conversely, in countries where no strong theory of Society
exists - in particular, in Americanized countries the past needs to be
imperiously theorized, and the question of its interpretation occupies a
crucial place in the working of the discipline. One sees a succession of
debates in English-speaking archaeology, from the American New
Archaeology of the 1960s and 1970s to the post-processual archaeology of
post-modernism.
The development of archaeology in France is part of a universal
project, which is not reducible to one part. It draws on the new social
project of the 18th century which reacted against the injustice of the
social misery produced by the inegalitarian societies inherited from the
Middle Ages. This social model, for long fostered by the Nation State,
is today in crisis, as commercial globalization leads to the
fragmentation of community and constrains a reduction in the action and
responsibility of the State. In the context of French archaeology, this
evolution has had profound repercussions which will lead to debate on
the traditional interpretation of the past. French archaeology needs to
be renewed, and its tenets reassessed. But are we condemned to be
dissolved into a new global archaeology? Is society destined to depend
on the economy, the citizen replaced by the consumer? In this context,
the French approach could return to its original vocation, becoming once
again a mechanism of resistance and liberation.
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