The Legitimacy of Solomon Some structural aspects of Old Testament history
- 1 May 1966
- journal article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in European Journal of Sociology
- Vol. 7 (1) , 58-101
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s000397560000134x
Abstract
I must start with a personal disavowal. This essay employs an explicitly Lévi-Straussian procedure but it is not intended as a guide to wider aspects of Lévi-Strauss thought. Although I feel reasonably safe with Lévi-Strauss's concept of structure, I am quite out of my depth when it comes to the related but subtler notion of esprit. Lévi-Strauss's esprit appears in sundry guises. In 1952, originally in English, he/it was a personalized “human mind”, an uninvited guest who took his place around the conference table among a group of American linguists and anthropologists (1); in the earlier chapters of La pensée sauvage he is perhaps the bricoleur—handiman—who is busy contriving culture from the junk of history and anything else that comes to hand (2); at the conclusion of Le cru et le cuit (3), in more abstract and more serious vein, esprit seems to be a kind of limiting characteristic of the human brain mechanism and appears as part of an extremely involved interchange relationship in which it (esprit) is the causal force producing myths of which its own structure is a precipitate. Elsewhere again (4) esprit seems to correspond to that very mysterious something which is a mediator between “praxis et pratiques” and which is described as « le schème conceptuel par l'opération duquel une matière et une forme, dépourvues l'une et l'autre d'existence indépendante, s'accomplissent comme structures, c'est-à-dire comme êtres à la fois empiriques et intelligibles ».Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Myth, Memory, and HistoryHistory and Theory, 1965
- Scottish Spitsbergen Expedition, 1962Polar Record, 1963
- DIVISION OF ANTHROPOLOGY: LÉVI‐STRAUSS IN THE GARDEN OF EDEN: AN EXAMINATION OF SOME RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE ANALYSIS OF MYTH*Transactions of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1961
- The Proliferation of Segments in the Lineage of the Bedouin of Cyrenaica. Curl Bequest Prize Essay, 1959The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, 1960