...he would
have had a lot of material to critique, as do I.
As an Anthropology major, I had not been into the bottom
realms of the beautiful new Business School until a talk entitled “Sweatshops:
Improving Lives and Economic Growth” caught my eye and brought me to the
auditorium packed with business-minded students and faculty. The Adam Smith
Society had invited Dr. Benjamin Powell, an economist, to debate the criticism of
sweatshops taken up by activists all over the world. The main point of his
argument, based on his latest book, examined sweatshops across the globe and
regarded them as a necessary step in the development of nations. Dr. Powell compared
wages and conditions for sweatshop workers to the average people in the
countries in which sweatshops are prominent, stating that oftentimes, sweatshops
actually pay better wages and are better situations than most of the
alternatives available. He criticized the activist organizations who fight to
raise wages, eliminate child labor, and work to end sweatshops by saying that
based on other historical situations (in the US and England), sweatshops are
actually part of the development plan to a better economic situation and better
lives for the people.
Sitting there, as a person with little background
knowledge in economic theory but with a strong tendency towards activism, I was
very conflicted. Some of the economic theory went over my head, and so I did
not quite know what to think of some of his points because I did not think I
could theorize on that level. But then I remembered that I now have theories of
my own with which I can analyze arguments and view situations! And the more I
sat there and listened to Dr. Powell’s arguments, the more I could see through
them and point out places in which he would have greatly benefited from knowing
an anthropologist- namely, Franz Boas.
One of Boas’ main theories, for lack of a better word,
was that culture is holistic, an idea that most modern anthropologists
maintain. Unlike some of his predecessors, Boas considered the interdependence
of each aspect of culture to be of vital importance when studying a group of
people. He brought to light the idea that one cannot analyze one aspect of a
culture in isolation, because all aspects interact with one another in a way
that cannot be separated. Dr. Powell, in his speech on sweatshops, talked very
much about one aspect of culture- labor markets and economics- in isolation
from all other considerations. He made no references to gender or racial
disparities in the countries he addressed, no mention of the education systems,
no mention of religion or rituals or any other part of the interconnected and
complex system that is culture.
But mentioning these other pieces that make up culture as
a whole would have been difficult, since Dr. Powell was generalizing situations
in sweatshops across 20+ countries found on all different continents. There was
not even a slight emphasis on cultural relativism, or the economic equivalent,
during his discussion of the economic situations in which sweatshops exist.
Franz Boas would have been exasperated, to say the least, at the level at which
Dr. Powell grouped multiple diverse nations into one discussion.
It was not even just cultural relativism that was missing
from Dr. Powell’s argument, but even historical particularism. His main “solution”
to having sweatshops was to just wait for them to rebuild the economy over
time- using a comparison to factories in the United States during the
Industrial Revolution. So not only was his argument based on the major
assumption that what happened in the United States, a different culture, would
happen in these two dozen countries with varying cultures, but that what
happened over a hundred years ago would happen in present day. Instead of
suggesting an analysis of each culture that would provide a better idea of the
role sweatshops play in the different places, which could perhaps lead to
change in a more humane direction for all people, Dr. Powell just lumped all
the countries together. This lack of contextualization would not, in my
opinion, help anyone get anywhere.
The final reason that Franz Boas would have been critical
of Dr. Powell’s speech (at least the final one that I will discuss here…I could
go on about Boas’ belief in inter-culture contact and environment having
effects on cultures, but that would be hard to measure up to Dr. Powell’s
lecture since he did not acknowledge the existence of various cultures) relates
to Boas’ strong belief in the equality of men that drove his activism during
his lifetime. Dr. Powell, following the economic beliefs of Adam Smith, the
namesake of the society which brought Dr. Powell to Wake Forest last night,
seemed to forget about the humanity behind the work he discussed and the global
connection we all, as a common humanity, have to one another. Adam Smith was criticized
for undervaluing man in comparison with money when considering the wealth of a
nation, and Dr. Powell similarly ignored the stories of the people who work in
the sweatshops he studies so carefully from an economic perspective. Though at
the beginning of his speech he stated that he was not undermining the horrible
conditions in which people work in sweatshops, Dr. Powell did exactly that by
saying that the only way the situation can improve is if development takes its
natural course away from sweatshops, as it did in the United States (a point of comparison that could be contested, considering sweatshops do still exist in the United States).
Dr. Powell did bring up good points about activism-
namely, knowing the full consequences of your actions as an activist. But it
was hard, after gaining knowledge of Boasian theory, to ignore the flaws in the
construction of his argument. Listening to the lecture, all I could think of
was how valuable anthropological theory is to everyday life, across
disciplines, and was inspired to bring the theory of anthropology through to
other fields.
Nice job applying Boas where Marx seemed like a more obvious fit! Specifically, how do you think Boas would approach the relationship between historical and cultural context and labor?
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