Review: The Realness of Things Past, Ancient Greece and Ontological History

In this post, I shall review Greg Anderson’s ambitious 2018 book ‘The Realness of Things Past: Ancient Greece and Ontological History‘.

Anderson, in the reviewed book, ‘proposes a fundamental change in the rules of historical engagement, a paradigm shift that would be roughly equivalent to the quantum revolution in modern physics.’ He argues that we should view each past way of life on its own ontological terms and abandon the categories we apply to them. The Ancient Athenians had no knowledge of ‘religion’, ‘state’ or ‘economy’, these are purely inventions of our own peculiar modern way of being. Meanwhile, we should view the Greek gods as having agency- yes, according to Anderson, they existed because the Athenian world had different rules to ours. Furthermore, the region of Attica was a living organism composed of different components that functioned together, it was not a ‘state’. To argue for this radical acceptance of ontological alterity, Anderson covers a wide range of subjects and disciplines including quantum mechanics, anthropology, postcolonialism and posthumanism.

He begins his account by outlining the traditional view of Classical Athens. Concepts like ‘democracy’ are criticised. Anderson exposes a number of contradictions, if we were to see Athens as such a thing. Firstly, how do we explain Athens imperialistic domination of 170 Greek poleis around the Aegean basin? Secondly, modern accounts are confused by how ‘democratic’ Athenians could hold superstitious beliefs. To many today, it would seem odd that they could be democratic and still hold such beliefs. However, Anderson is keen to point out that such a contradiction only emerges when we place our own expectations on Athens.

Anderson, however, in presenting his account of the fallacies of our way of historical thinking, portrays modernity in a homogenous fashion. For example, many believe in God and democracy, there is no contradiction there. Furthermore, there are many non-democratic countries in the modern world. It would be wrong to presume that everyone would apply the same categories to Classical Athens.

Nevertheless, Anderson’s point that there are alternate ways of being historically is well evidenced throughout the book. For example, the pre-colonial Hawai’ians were not individuals, instead they all participated in the being of the king. Furthermore, the description of Late Medieval society as a ‘body’ again shows there are different ways of existing than the modern Western individual.

A methodological issue that Anderson should have addressed is pertinent here. He takes a literal approach to the sources- in other words he accepts what they say without question. If the Athenians thought there were Gods then they must exist, if Attica is described as a body then it must have been a living organism. Critics could suggest that an ontological approach simply mistakes literary topoi for reality. Just because a writer said something, does not mean he intended it to be took literally. On the other hand, Anderson certainly provides a robust account of the ontological grounds for accepting the alterity of past ‘worlds.’ Quantum mechanics, for example, displaces the idea of an observation independent reality. Meanwhile, posthumanism questions the divide between nature and culture, genetics and nurture, environment and self. There are therefore grounds for believing there could have been alternate ‘worlds’ unlike our own. Of course, on a related note, perhaps due to quantum mechanics and posthumanism, Anderson could have reduced the emphasis on the domination of his notion of Western/Cartesian thinking. His idea of modernity does not stand scrutiny, when considered alongside the theories he mentions.

The final section of the book is focused on portraying what the alternative Athens would have looked life. One suggestion is that individuals were oikoi– family or household units. Athenian oikoi were part of the larger organism that they all comprised of. Individuals, in a sense, were dividuals, they were all components of a wider lifeform. There were also Gods and so rituals formed the main means through which this organism was sustained. Potentially, rituals were even more important than any economic, social or legal actions when it came to maintenance. Households also formed wider groups of being, which in themselves formed Demos, the unitary body. Overall, then Anderson’s portrayal of Classical Athens is quite unlike our ‘democratic’ and ‘individualistic’ conception of it.

Anderson’s book is radical and is somewhat attractive due to the way it appreciates past experiences and does not convert them into modern renditions. However, as highlighted, there are some issues that are addressed if ontological history is to gain wider acceptance. Nevertheless, Anderson remains thought-provoking throughout.

Isidore Mini-Project #1: What is the Ontological Turn?

This post starts a series where I will be exploring if the Ontological Turn, originating from anthropology, can aid our understanding of the Late Antique past. I will do this by examining some of Isidore of Seville’s texts to see if we can recover his ‘world’ or ontology. However, before this, I will introduce the Ontological Turn in this post and discuss its implications for the historical discipline.

The anthropologist Eduardo Viveiros De Castro describes one of the distinct features of some Amerindian societies. He states that within them they see animals as humans, in terms of their souls. Whereas, their body or ‘skin’ is mere clothing. This is different to the European point of view, where humans are elevated above animals due to their ‘superior’ souls and instead the body is seen as the unifying factor between species (e.g. through DNA). This suggests that Amerindian societies often had and have a distinct way of viewing the world that is radically different to Eurocentric understandings. This raises the question about how are to study Amerindian societies when they seem so at odds with post-Enlightment European views, raising questions regarding the tools and categories used in anthropological studies and other disciplines. The Ontological Turn engages with this problem and proposes a new way to study radical difference.

It does this by suggesting we should take the worlds of other societies seriously. Reality, according to the Ontological Turn, is not composed of a single world, instead it is composed of multiple worlds. It therefore opposes the idea of culture being imposed on a single reality and denies the existence of a common human nature. Another key aspect of the Ontological Turn is its focus on nonhuman actors. It goes beyond Actor-Network Theory (ANT) and Object-oriented Ontology (OOO), by focusing on animals, spirits and other non-human actors, alongside objects. To use an example that might this series’ medieval focus, if one world says God or dead saints have a role in society and agency, then one has to take that claim seriously. They really exist and exert an influence on a reality. This may seem at odds with the views of modernity, but to fully understand different worlds we need an openess to non-Eurocentric and pre-Englightment realities.

One advantage of the Ontological Turn is therefore its acceptance of alterity. However, another aspect that needs consideration is that it offers a return to empirical and positvist inclinations. It takes statements at face value, rather than analysing cultural discourses that overlay the ‘real’ world . In it one describes the world as they find it, rather than seeking to apply one’s assumptions to it. However, there are also potential criticisms of the Ontological Turn. One raised by Vigh and Sausdal regards translation. if one denies the existence of a united human nature then how does one establish a ‘common ground’ to understand and interpret other worlds? Methodologically speaking, you might reach a dead end. A futher criticism raised by Vigh and Sausdal is that radical alterity and exotification are some of the primary ways anthropology has been misused outside the academy. Painting other worlds as inherently different might easily result in abuse in a political context.

While the Ontological Turn emerged from from anthropology, talk of other worlds can also be found in other disciplines. Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions claims that scientists working in other paradigms might be said to live in different worlds. Whereas, Swenson has engaged with the Ontological Turn in her work on Peruvian archaeology, despite the fact that she refutes it. In the historical discipline, Greg Anderson has been the most vocal proponent of the Ontological Turn, in particular by analysing ancient Athens. He claims there are three key aspects of the Athenian ‘world’ that separate it from ours. Firstly, that the Gods were living and that they were ‘real independent subjects and agents in the world of time and space’. Secondly, that Attica (Athens’ land) was a living organism, it was not just a generic territorial tract. Finally, that individuals in Athens formed part of a corporate body constitued of households, they saw themsleves as united together. Anderson argues, that only the Ontological Turn can prevent us from colonising the past and imposing the trappings of modernity on it. We must avoid applying our own historical categories and see the past as it was. This ends a summary of the Ontological Turn.

This post has addressed the question; what is the Ontological Turn? In the next post in this series, I will examine Isidore of Seville’s Etymologies in order to retrieve his ‘world’. The Etymologies are a good source when applying the Ontological Turn to the Late Antique past due to their encylopedic nature. During the next post, I will also consider the critical issues that might arise when trying to understand a past world through historical sources. Nevertheless, after this post, it should now be clear what the Ontological Turn is.

Bibliography:

Anderson, Greg. ‘Retrieving the Lost Worlds of the Past: The Case for an Ontological Turn.’ The American Historical Review 120, 3 (2015), 787-810.

Castro, Eduardo Viveiros de. ‘Cosmological Deixis and Amerindian Perspectivism.’ The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 4, 3 (1998), 469-488.

Pickering, Andrew.’The Ontological Turn: Taking Different Worlds Seriosuly.’ Social Analysis 61, 2 (2017), 134-150.

Sausdal, David and Henrik Vigh. ‘From Essence Back to Existence: Anthropology Beyond the Ontological Turn.’ Anthropological Theory 14, 1 (2014), 49-73.

Swenson, Edward. ‘The Materialities of Place Making in the Ancient Andes: a Critical Appraisal of the Ontological Turn in Archaeological Interpretation.’ Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 22 (2015), 677-712.