[Obituary] Claude Levi-Strauss ¨ç

Claude Levi-Strauss, anthropologist, died on October 30th, aged 100
Obituary
120. Claude Levi-Strauss
Nov 12th 2009 From The Economist print edition

Claude Levi-Strauss, anthropologist, died on October 30th, aged 100

120-1-557
BEFORE Claude Levi-Strauss revolutionised the discipline, anthropology in France, and generally elsewhere, was a matter of ill-attended lectures in small, cold halls, and the collection of feathers and fish-hooks as evidence of the quaint divergences of the "primitive" tribes of mankind. He made it as fashionable as philosophy and poetry, both of which he wove through his ethnographical studies as perhaps only French intellectuals can. The proper study of mankind was indeed man: not in his politicking, warring or banking, but naked, painting his body, hunting bears, snaring birds. Here lay the universal truths about how the human mind worked and what man was.

Obedient to Rousseau, who always "set him aflame", Mr Levi-Strauss observed men from afar. He never got too near or stayed too long in his rare stints of field-work, mostly in Brazil in the 1930s he grasped only a few words of the languages, and avoided the "hateful" distractions of individual characters. In the bitter phrase of Jean-Paul Sartre, with whom he sparred for years, he preferred to view men like ants. He focused not on their differences but on the deep-lying patterns and systems in everything they did, until he could proclaim that all tribal myths were reducible to one formula, and that all human thought, "savage" or not, was built up from binary opposites such as hot and cold, night and day, raw and cooked, good and bad. Round these concepts whole societies, as well as stories, were organised.

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feather ±êÅÐ. fish-hook ³¬½Ã ¹Ù´Ã. evidence Áõ°Å. quaint Áø±âÇÑ.
divergence º°Á¾, ìï÷­(ÀÏÅ»). primitive ¿ø½ÃÀûÀÎ. tribe Á¾Á·, Ý»ðé(ºÎÁ·), ìéðé(ÀÏÁ·).
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intellectual Áö½ÄÀÎ. ethnographical ¹ÎÁ·ÁöÇÐÀû. cf. ethnography ÚÅðéò¼ùÊ(¹ÎÁ·ÁöÇÐ).
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field-work ÇöÀ忬±¸. grasp ÀÌÇØÇÏ´Ù, ºÙÀâ´Ù. distraction ÁÖÀÇ »ê¸¸, Á¤½Å»ê¶õ, ¿À¶ô.
individual characters °³º°Àû Ư¼º. bitter ãôÕ¸(½Å¶ö)ÇÑ, ¾²¶ó¸°, Áöµ¶ÇÑ.
phrase ¸»Åõ, åÞÏ£(¾î±¸). spar ³íÀïÇÏ´Ù, ¼­·Î ÁÖ¸ÔÁúÇÏ´Ù.
proclaim ¼±¾ðÇÏ´Ù. myth ½ÅÈ­. reducible Ãà¼ÒÇÒ ¼ö ÀÖ´Â. å³ÝÂ(¾àºÐ)ÇÒ ¼ö ÀÖ´Â.
formula °ø½Ä. savage ¾ß¸¸Á·. binary µÑÀÇ. opposite ¹Ý´ëÀÇ °Í, æ½(¿ª).
binary opposites ì£ú£Óߨ¡(ÀÌÇ״븳). raw and cooked »ý½Ä°ú Á¶¸®ÇÑ ½Äǰ.
concepts °³³ä.

120-2-558
Mr Levi-Strauss, throwing down the gauntlet in "La Pensee Sauvage" in 1962, saw nothing primitive about the tribes he studied. Totemism, for example, was a system as complex as the Linnaean classification. In tribal myths, apparently diverse and arbitrary elements-eruptions by lizards and woodpeckers, the significance of black arrows or the artemisia plant-were suddenly revealed to have a universal unity at their heart, a quest for objective knowledge and origins as acute as any in the West. The minds behind them were not savage, just "untamed". The salient difference was that his tribesmen stayed within their limits, simply putting the materials they had together in new ways, like handymen or bricoleurs. "Civilised" man, on the other hand, tried to defy his constraints and change the world with new inventions, like an engineer.
The world needed both these types, said Mr Levi-Strauss. And he embodied both. He too hopped from subject to subject like a bricoleur, discarding philosophy for its arid moralising, giving up law out of sheer boredom, vaunting socialism until it tired him, turning to anthropology as if he was still a fascinated boy in a curio shop. He abandoned theories like scorched earth in the forest. But the far-sighted engineer in him set up a "laboratory" at the College de France, where he held the brand-new chair of social anthropology from 1959 to 1982, and produced the four huge volumes of "Mythologiques" (1964-71), in which he tracked 813 myths the length of the American continent. He happily called himself both "neolithic" and a man of science.

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lizard µµ¸¶¹ì. woodpeckers µü´Ù±¸¸®. significance ÀǹÌ, Á߿伺.
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objective °´°üÀûÀÎ. origin ±â¿ø. acute ¿¹¸®ÇÑ, ä¢çó(½É¿À)ÇÑ.
savage ¾ß¸¸ÀûÀÎ. untamed ±æµé¿©ÁöÁö ¾ÊÀº, ÈÆ·Ã¹ÞÁö ¾ÊÀº, ¾ß¼ºÀÇ.
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sheer ¼øÀüÇÑ, ¿ÏÀüÇÑ. boredom Áö·çÇÔ, Ïæ÷½(±ÇÅÂ).
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track ÃßÀûÇÏ´Ù. neolithic ½Å¼®±â ½Ã´ëÀÎ.
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