JOBNAME: Wydra PAGE: 1 SESS: 3 OUTPUT: Fri Aug 31 11:00:41 2018 12. Anthropology and political ideology Sune Haugbolle We may wait as long for the “end of ideology” as the positivists have waited for the end of religion. – Clifford Geertz, Ideology as a Cultural System THE RENAISSANCE OF IDEOLOGY This chapter makes the bold claim that ideology should be a central concept in political anthropology. Despite some interest from linguistic (Gal 2005) and semiotic (Keane 2007) anthropologists, the renaissance that ideology is experiencing in other disciplines has yet to translate into a proper anthropological re-engagement. That is a loss, since much current anthropology effectively concerns ideology, by which I understand the way in which political subjectivities are formed in systemic ways. This question is inherently political, and therefore should be a key occupation for political anthro- pologists. In order to make that re-engagement, I argue that we must assess the relation between culture and ideology, and between habitus, affect, and political ideas. I stress that the “webs of significance” in which man is suspended (qua Weber and Geertz) are related to political thought. In other words, from an anthropological point of view, how societies think politically or, how people think politically together, cannot be addressed without understanding the cultural interpretation of thought. Yet the deep understanding of cultural patterns that the discipline proffers has not been sufficiently utilized to shed light on the formation of the logics, the ways of being a political subject in the world, underpinning political action. If ideologies are cognitive structures with legitimizing functions (Stråth 2006: 23), it is also true that there is no clear demarcation from other knowledge structures, including those normally related to “culture,” the main subject of anthropology. That gives anthropologists a distinct edge in the current push in ideology theory towards better understanding the “anatomy of thinking politically” (Freeden 2015), the complex ways in which political thought is shaped between subjective interpretation and social interaction. Ideology has a long conceptual history, which has been dealt with exhaustively elsewhere (Thompson 1990, Žižek 1994, Freeden 2015). The purpose of this chapter is not to repeat this familiar history from Destutt de Tracy and Marx to Mannheim, Gramsci, Althusser, Žižek, and Freeden, although I will draw on their work. Rather, I want to make a focused claim for why and how anthropology should contribute to the renaissance of ideology, and how a revived political anthropology of ideology can help us make sense of revolutions and uprisings today. I call it a renaissance because writings on ideology in the last decade represent a rediscovery of a rich tradition, after a hiatus – of which there have been several over the last two centuries (see Summers 2011) – when ideology was considered dead or irrelevant as a social force and as an 191 Columns Design XML Ltd / Job: Wydra-Handbook_of_political_anthropology / Division: 12-WydraChapter12_forreviewcopy_ts /Pg. Position: 1 / Date: 23/8