Method in the Study of Totemism
By Andrew Lang
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Andrew Lang
Andrew Lang (March, 31, 1844 – July 20, 1912) was a Scottish writer and literary critic who is best known as a collector of folk and fairy tales. Lang’s academic interests extended beyond the literary and he was a noted contributor to the fields of anthropology, folklore, psychical research, history, and classic scholarship, as well as the inspiration for the University of St. Andrew’s Andrew Lang Lectures. A prolific author, Lang published more than 100 works during his career, including twelve fairy books, in which he compiled folk and fairy tales from around the world. Lang’s Lilac Fairy and Red Fairy books are credited with influencing J. R. R. Tolkien, who commented on the importance of fairy stories in the modern world in his 1939 Andrew Lang Lecture “On Fairy-Stories.”
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Method in the Study of Totemism - Andrew Lang
Andrew Lang
Method in the Study of Totemism
Sharp Ink Publishing
2022
Contact: info@sharpinkbooks.com
ISBN 978-80-282-3773-8
Table of Contents
Cover
Titlepage
Text
GLASGOW
Printed at the University Press by
ROBERT MACLEHOSE & CO. LTD.
1911
METHOD IN THE STUDY OF TOTEMISM
Table of Contents
Is there any human institution which can be safely called Totemism
? Is there any possibility of defining, or even describing Totemism? Is it legitimate—is it even possible, with due regard for methodology
and logic—to seek for the normal
form of Totemism, and to trace it through many Protean changes, produced by various causes, social and speculative? I think it possible to discern the main type of Totemism, and to account for divergences.
Quite the opposite opinion appears to be held by Mr. H. H. Goldenweizer in his Totemism, an Analytic Study.
[1] This treatise is acutely critical and very welcome, as it enables British inquirers about totemism to see themselves as they appear in larger other eyes than ours.
Our common error, we learn, is this: A feature salient in the totemic life of some community is seized upon only to be projected into the life of the remote past, and to be made the starting-point of the totemic process. The intermediary stages and secondary features are supplied from local evidence, by analogy with other communities, or 'in accordance with recognised principles of evolution' [what are they?] and of logic. The origin and development, thus arrived at, are then used as principles of interpretation of the present conditions. Not one step in the above method of attacking the problem of totemism is logically justifiable.
[2]
As I am the unjustifiable sinner quoted in this extract,[3] I may observe that my words are cited from a harmless statement to the effect that a self-consistent hypothesis,
or set of guesses,
which colligates all the known facts in a problem, is better than a self-contradictory hypothesis which does not colligate the facts.
Now the feature salient in the totemic life of some communities,
which I project into the life of the remote past,
and make the starting-point of the totemic process
is the totemic name, animal, vegetable, or what not, of the totem-kin.
In an attempt to construct a theory of the origin of totemism, the choice of the totemic name as a starting-point is logically justifiable, because the possession of a totemic name is, universally, the mark of a totem-kin; or, as most writers prefer to say, clan.
How can you know that a clan is totemic, if it is not called by a totemic name? The second salient feature in the totemic life of some communities which I select as even prior to the totemic name, is the exogamy of the clans
now bearing totemic names.
To these remarks Mr. Goldenweizer would reply (I put his ideas briefly) there are (1) exogamous clans without totemic names; and there are (2) clans with totemic names, but without exogamy.
To this I answer (1) that if his exogamous clan has not a totemic name, I do not quite see why it should be discussed in connection with totemism; but that many exogamous sets, bearing not totemic names, but local names or nicknames, can be proved to have at one time borne totemic names. Such exogamous sets, therefore, no longer bearing totemic names, are often demonstrably variations from the totemic type; and are not proofs that there is no such thing as a totemic type.
Secondly, I answer, in the almost unique case of clans
bearing totemic names without being exogamous, that these clans
have previously been exogamous, and have, under ascertained conditions, shuffled off exogamy. They are deviations from the prevalent type of clans with totemic names plus exogamy. They are exceptions to the rule, and, as such, they prove the rule. They are divergences from the type, and, as such, they prove the existence of the type from which they have diverged.
So far I can defend my own method: it starts from features that are universal, or demonstrably have been universal in totemism. There is an organic unity of the features of totemism,
—of these two features, the essential features.
Lastly, Mr. Goldenweizer accuses