Basic Principles of Sociocultural Materialism

By Dr. Frank Elwell

A Note Before Starting:

This presentation is closely based on the first chapter of Industrializing America. It is posted in an attempt to give students an alternative means of understanding this critical theory.

Sociocultural Systems

A collection of people who make use of various means of adapting to their physical environment, who engage in patterned forms of social conduct, and who create shared beliefs and values designed to make sense of their collective actions.

Sociocultural Materialism

This course will examine society through the prism of Sociocultural Materialism.

Sociocultural materialism is a theory of sociocultural systems.

Sociocultural Materialism

A social theory is simply a world view-- a framework for understanding your world and organizing observations. Points at what to look for.

Sociocultural Materialism

Marvin Harris, a cultural anthropologist, is responsible for the most systematic statement of S.M. principles.

Sociocultural Materialism

Sociocultural materialism attempts to account for:

Assumptions

The various parts of society are interrelated. When one part of society changes, other parts must also change.

Assumptions

An institution, such as the family cannot be looked at in isolation from the economic, political, or religious institutions of a society. When one part changes it has an effect on other parts of the system.

Assumptions

Viewing society as a system of interrelated parts is at the core of most sociological theory.

Difference in most theories is in terms of organizing principles.

Assumptions

According to S.M., the way a society is organized to meet the needs of its population determines the rest of the system.

Assumptions

So, two key assumptions:

Biopsychological Needs

Mankind is relatively free from biological drives and pre-dispositions.

We are born with some reflexes such as grasping and suckling.

But rather than relying on instincts, the vast repertoire of human behavior is learned.

Biopsychological Needs

To say most behavior is learned and not instinctual does not mean that it is not deeply rooted.

Food taboos are an easy example. They are clearly learned. But the violation of many food taboos can cause physiological reactions. (Say, eating slugs.)

Biopsychological Needs

Mankind has five basic bio-psychological needs:

Need to Eat

People need to eat and will generally opt for diets that offer more rather than fewer calories and proteins and other nutrients.

Need to Conserve Energy

People cannot be totally inactive, but when confronted with a given task, they prefer to carry it out by expending less rather than more human energy.

Need for Sex

People are highly sexed and generally find reinforcing pleasure from sexual intercourse.

Need for Love

People need love and affection in order to feel secure and happy, and other things being equal, they will act to increase the love and affection others give them.

Need for Meaning

People need meaning in their lives. This need arises out of our capacity for self awareness.

Biopsychological Needs

While the needs are universal, the ways in which societies meet these needs as well as the extent to which these needs are met are highly variable.

Biopsychological Needs (minor points):

Some societies approve of eating worms, homosexuality, wife sharing, gods, etc.

There are clearly other needs, but parsimony takes precedence.

All needs are shared with other primates (save meaning).

Biopsychological Needs (minor points):

American's have carried eating rich foods to a high art. Now we diet--but it is a discipline.

American's have carried the conservation of energy to a high art as well. Now, we actively look for ways to expend energy, but exercise is a discipline.

Biopsychological Needs (minor points):

It is also apparent that people learn proper (and improper) objects of sex.

Without love, human infants fail to thrive and can die. With minimal love we warp.

Biopsychological Needs (minor points):

Sometimes the need for meaning is fulfilled through religion, sometimes philosophy, sometimes entire cultures try to give meaning to lives.

Biopsychological Needs

The entire sociocultural system rests on the way society exploits its environment to meet the biopsychological needs of its population.

Universal Structure of Societies

The following slide depicts an outline of the sociocultural system as envisioned by sociocultural materialism.

All human social systems can be analyzed in terms of this universal structure.

Familiarize yourself with the whole, we will then proceed to discuss the parts.

Environment

The physical, biological, and chemical constraints to which human action is subject.

Environment

Like all living organisms, Humans must draw energy from their environment.

The environment is limited in terms of the amount of energy and matter it contains, and the amount of pollution it can tolerate.

Environment

The need to draw energy out of the environment in order to satisfy the biopsychological needs of its people is the first and central task of any society.

Environment

Therefore, each society must ultimately exist within the constraints imposed by its environment.

Environmental Constraints

Chief among these constraints is the availability of natural resources. A further constraining factor is the amount of pollution created by society.

While mankind can modify these constraints, they cannot be escaped.

Infrastructure

The material infrastructure consists of the technology and social practices by which a society manipulates its environment by modifying the amount and type of resources it needs

Infrastructure

It is through the infrastructure that society manipulates its environment by modifying the amount and type of resources needed.

Infrastructural Components:

Infrastructure

The modes of production and reproduction are attempts to strike a balance between population and the consumption of energy from a finite environment.

Mode of Production

Consists of behaviors aimed at satisfying requirements for subsistence.

Modes of Production through History

Criteria for Classifying Societies

Mode of Reproduction

Consisting of behaviors aimed at controlling destructive increases or decreases in population size.

MODE OF REPRODUCTION

Infrastructure

It is upon this environmental infrastructural foundation that the remaining parts of the social system are based.

Intensification

A curious phenomenon: over the course of social evolution both population and productivity tend to grow.

Increases in production cause population to grow, which then further stimulated productivity.

Social Structure

Social structure refers to human groups and organizations.

Social Structure

This component of sociocultural systems consists of the organized patterns of social life carried out among the members of a society.

Social Structure

Primary Groups

Primary groups consist of small groups like the family that regulate reproduction, exchange and consumption within domestic settings. Normally small, intimate, multiple roles.

Primary Groups

Secondary Groups

Impersonal organizations such as government and industry which regulate productions, exchange and consumption within and between groups and sociocultural systems.

Secondary Groups

Social Structure

The primary and secondary group dichotomy encompasses all human organizations responsible for the allocation and distribution of all bio-psychological need satisfaction.

Elite

All societies have elite that have dominant positions in social groups and organizations. But the power of elites varies across societies and through time.

Elite

The bio-psychological satisfaction of those on top of the hierarchies weighs more heavily than those below.

Elite

Hierarchies based on class, sex, race, caste, age, ethnic, and other statuses exist throughout the structure of society.

Bureaucratization

Superstructure

Cultural Superstructure

The cultural superstructure includes recreations activities, art, sports, empirical knowledge, folklore, and other aesthetic products.

Cultural Superstructure

Mental Superstructure

The mental superstructure involves the patterned ways in which the members of a society think, conceptualize, and evaluate.

Mental Superstructure

Max Weber said there were four basic motivators of human behavior, four "reasons" why we behave the way we do.

Mental Superstructure

Values

Rational action in relation to a value.

Tradition

Action dictated by custom or habit.

Emotional Action

Action determined by affective or emotional states.

Zweckrational

Rational action in relation to a goal.

Rationalization

Weber noticed a curious phenomenon: Over the course of social evolution more and more of our behavior is guided by zweckrational.

Principle of Infrastructural Determinism:

The mode of production and reproduction (infrastructure) determines primary and secondary structure, which in turn determines the cultural and mental superstructure.

Principle of Infrastructural Determinism

This principle claims a lot. It is strongly stated, though materialists do recognize the concept of probability.

We also recognize the concept of feedback.

Feedback

While the infrastructure is considered to be of primary importance, the structure and superstructure are not mere reflections of infrastructural processes, but are in interaction with the infrastructure.

System Dynamics

Societies are very stable systems. The most likely outcome of any change in the system is resistance in other sectors of society.

System Dynamics

System maintaining negative feedback is capable of deflecting, dampening, or extinguishing most system change.

System Dynamics

The result is either the extinction of the innovation or slight compensatory changes that preserve the fundamental character of the whole system.

System Dynamics

But there are times when change is rapid and fundamental--revolutionary in character.

System Dynamics

In general, sociocultural change that releases more energy from the environment is likely to be swiftly adapted.

System Dynamics

Infrastructural and environmental relationships are central in explaining sociocultural change.

We also recognize the importance of structures and superstructures in determining the speed, and character of change.

System Dynamics

It is not the simple calculation of the greatest good for the greatest number of people that accounts for sociocultural change.

System Dynamics

Many changes are more satisfying to some members of society than to others.

System Dynamics

Infrastructural change that enhance the position of elite are likely to be amplified and propagated throughout the system.

System Dynamics

Sociocultural materialism is in agreement with Marx when he states: "The ideas of the ruling class in each epoch are the ruling ideas."

System Dynamics

The elite are able to impose direct economic and political sanctions to get their way. Also encourage ideas and ideologies favorable to their position.

System Dynamics

But recall, the amount of power and control exercised by elite varies across societies and through time.

Infrastructural Determinism

The rationale behind giving the infrastructure such priority rests upon the fact that it is through infrastructural practices that society adapts to its environment.

Infrastructural Determinism

It is through the infrastructure that society survives. It modifies the amount and type of resources required for life.

Infrastructural Determinism

Since these infrastructural practices are essential for life itself, all widespread structural and superstructural patterns must be compatible with them.

The Materialist Approach:

A society’s infrastructure is the primary cause of its structure, and the structure, in turn, is the primary cause of its superstructure.

Materialist Approach

Provides a logical set of research priorities for the study of sociocultural life.

Why the Infrastructure?

Relationship to Social Problems

World population and industrial infrastructures are growing at an exponential rate.

Relationship to Social Problems

You can't do one thing. This tremendous growth (or intensification) has impact on other parts of the system.

Relationship to Social Problems

The intensification of the infrastructure causes the growth of secondary organizations at the expense of primary groups.

Relationship to Social Problems

The intensification of the infrastructure and the bureaucratization of the structure, cause the superstructure to "rationalize."

Relationship to Social Problems

Rationalization is the increasing dominance of goal oriented rational behavior at the expense of behavior guided by values, traditions and emotions

Relationship to Social Problems

In the US, the power of the elite has waxed and waned. The elite were probably more powerful in the last half of the 19th century than they are today.

Some claim that the elite are in the process of reasserting their power today.

Relationship to Social Problems

One of the first tasks of a sociocultural materialist analysis is to attempt to identify the elite, gauge the amount of power that they wield, and uncover their biases and assumptions when analyzing sociocultural systems.

Conclusion

The analyses of social problems in this course are based on the principles of sociocultural materialism.