Pierre Clastres, (1934-1977), was a French anthropologist and ethnographer. He is best known for his fieldwork among the Guayaki in Paraguay and his theory on stateless societies. This has led him to be included in the vast anarchist family, although his views were strictly scientific.
In his most famous work, Society Against the State (1974), Clastres indeed criticizes both the evolutionist notion that the state would be the ultimate destiny of all societies, and the Rousseauian notion of man's natural state of innocence (the myth of the noble savage). Knowledge of power is innate in any society, thus the natural state for humans wanting to preserve autonomy is a society structured by a complex set of customs which actively avert the rise of despotic power. The state is seen as but a specific constellation of hierarchical power peculiar only to societies who have failed to maintain these mechanisms which prevent separation from happening. Thus, in the Guayaki tribes, the leader has only a representational role, being his people's spokesperson towards other tribes ("international relations"). If he abuse of his authority, he may be violently removed by his people, and the instutition of "spokesperson" is never allowed to transformed itself into a separate institution of authority. Pierre Clastres' theory thus was an explicit criticism of vulgar Marxism theories of economic determinism, in that he considered an autonomous sphere of politics, which existed in stateless societies as the active conjuration of authority, and that he considered the state a result of a conjonctural, political, event, instead of being the effect of an economic processus.
1934 births | 1977 deaths | Anthropologists | French anthropologists
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