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Threatening Anthropology: McCarthyism and the FBI's Surveillance of Activist Anthropologists
Reviewed by Lesley Gill
David Price. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press, 2004
We live in troubling times. The Bush administration uses a campaign of war without end to justify the erosion of civil liberties, to equate political opposition with support for terrorism, and to rationalize intrusive forms of government surveillance. On many college and university campuses, people are asking what academic freedom means under the USA Patriot Act. In order to understand the tactics of the U.S. government in such a frightening period, and their consequences, it is useful to revisit the last time the government persecuted scholars.
Threatening Anthropology provides us with a meticulously detailed account of how liberal and progressive anthropologists were investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and dragged before a variety of security and loyalty committees in mid-twentieth-century America. David Price does not beat around the bush: the FBI, he argues, investigated scores of anthropologists because of their activism for racial equality and economic justice—not because of their membership in the Communist Party or their Marxist beliefs—and, when confronted with the assault on its members, the American Anthropological Association (AAA) sat on its hands. His unsettling account of government censorship, professional complicity, and ruined lives, compiled from thousands of documents recently declassified through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), provides a disturbing reminder of the fragility of academic freedom.
Anthropologists were not the only academics that suffered the intrusive practices of J. Edgar Hoover's FBI, but their discipline's understanding of race and its insistence on the equality of all peoples made them targets, whether or not they belonged to the Communist Party or other progressive organizations. For the guardians of America's national security state, the view that differences between American racial groups rested on social and cultural rather than biological differences was quite radical, as it undermined prevailing beliefs about white privilege and challenged the basis of southern Jim Crow laws. The diverse anthropologists who had the misfortune of catching the attention of the FBI shared one particular quality: all used the teachings of anthropology to work for social justice causes. This was why, according to Price, the FBI investigated anthropologists as different as Margaret Mead, Oscar Lewis, Kathleen Gough, and Philleo Nash and considered them threatening to the status quo. Yet anthropologist Leslie White's Marxist-inspired theory of cultural evolution and his ties to the Socialist Labor Party did not interest the FBI, because, Price maintains, White steered clear of activist engagements, and his view of culture made no room for people to actively change the world.
As the tensions of the McCarthy era mounted, the AAA ignored anthropologists who were being fired, blacklisted, and intimidated into silence. Price argues that the AAA understood academic freedom only in terms of how non-Marxists were affected by the show trials and loyalty hearings. It offered a few scholars limited assistance that was usually too little and too late, but those proven to be "communists" were left to fend for themselves. To distance itself from the defense of real communists and those who could not escape the communist label, the association made the pathetic argument that political involvement was unbecoming to a scholarly organization. Yet the AAA was a profoundly political animal. Even as it shunned beleaguered members, the organization developed ties to the War Department, the Central Intelligence Agency, and other agencies of the national security state to ensure that it remained relevant to cold war America.
The story grows even darker, however. As anthropologists lost their jobs, withdrew from the field, and even left the country, the careers of others advanced as they secretly fingered colleagues to the FBI. Yale University professor George Peter Murdoch, for example, wrote a letter to J. Edgar Hoover in which he alleged that communists had attempted to take over the 1948 AAA business meeting and turn it into a propaganda tool, and he named twelve scholars, including Oscar Lewis, Alexander Lesser, Melville Jacobs, Richard Morgan, and Jules Henry, as instigators. Four months later, Murdoch became chair of the AAA's Committee on Scientific Freedom, charged with developing criteria for investigating violations of academic freedom.
Murdoch's outrageous behavior raises questions about how common informers were and the extent to which their secret communiqués affected the direction of anthropological research. Price acknowledges that answering these questions is difficult because of the problems that FOIA research poses for investigators. In a useful appendix to the book, he details some of the obstacles that he confronted over the many years that he spent researching the book. His problems included the gradual weakening of FOIA by congressional acts andexecutive orders, the refusal of some agencies to release anything, and the outright denial of the existence of certain records that Price knew existed.
One of Price's important conclusions is that McCarthyism weakened the power of twentieth-century anthropology by undermining radical critiques of the status quo and stifling activism on behalf of progressive causes. McCarthyism, according to Price, also left a legacy of self-censorship and silence about the past that continues to impede American anthropology's ability to acknowledge the victims, their contributions to the field, and the ties between anthropology and progressive political groups. Some persecuted individuals were members of the Communist Party, which was in fact a more fitting place for activist anthropologists than either the Democratic or Republican parties (both of which supported Jim Crow racism at the time), because its views on racial equality agreed with the findings of anthropological research, and many of its members were actively engaged in struggles to dismantle racial segregation in the United States. Yet because McCarthyism succeeded in linking American communists to Stalinism and obscuring the home-grown ways that they struggled for social justice, the connections between anthropology and communist and socialist political organizations are unclear.
Even though McCarthyism was broadly successful in stifling certain kinds of intellectual inquiry, and the rewards of silence and collaboration often outweighed those of principled, scholarly activism, fighting back made a difference. Price shows how Ralph Beals's presidency of the AAA brought more aggressive support for threatened scholars and helped one who was under suspicion at the State Department. When Bernhard Stern's colleagues in the sociology department at Columbia University organized to protest his firing, Stern kept his job, but when scholars in the anthropology department expressed only polite regret about the termination of Gene Weltfish's contract, Weltfish was fired.
As the Ashcroft justice department threatens to make the McCarthy era look like a stroll in the park, anthropologists and other social scientists should pay close attention to this book and its lessons for the present. Threatening Anthropology will undoubtedly stir debate in some quarters, but if scholars hope to avoid past mistakes, they will think carefully about what Price has to say. This timely, provocative book is long overdue.
Lesley Gill is professor of anthropology at American University.
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