- Arthur Maurice Hocart
Arthur Maurice Hocart (
26 April 1883 ,Etterbeek –9 March 1939 ,Cairo ) was ananthropologist best known for his eccentric and often far-seeing works onPolynesia ,Melanesia andSri Lanka .About the Man
Hocart's family had resided for several hundred years in
Guernsey (one of theChannel Islands between France and England) but were said to be traceable toDomrémy-la-Pucelle , birthplace ofJoan of Arc . Both his father, James and grandfather, also James, were Protestant missionaries in Switzerland, France and Belgium. Although Arthur was born in Etterbeek, nearBrussels , he maintained his British nationality, as did the rest of his family. This juxtaposition between the English and Francophone worlds captures not only Hocart's education, but his status as an outsider to British academia whose work often seemed to predict developments in Frenchanthropology such asstructuralism .From England to the South Seas
After attending school at
Elizabeth College, Guernsey , Hocart matriculated at Exeter College, Oxford in 1902. He graduated with honors in "Greats", a degree combining Latin, Greek, ancient history, and philosophy. After his graduation in 1906 he spent two years studyingpsychology and phenomenology at theUniversity of Berlin . With this broad and idiosyncratic training in hand, he was picked byW.H.R. Rivers to accompany him on the Percy Sladen Trust Expedition to theSolomon Islands in 1908. Their ethnographic work on 'Eddystone Island' (today known by its local name of Simbo) and in nearbyRoviana , stands as one of the first modern anthropological field projects, and was the inspiration behind sections ofPat Barker 's novel "The Ghost Road ". Some of the data from the expedition appeared in Rivers' "History of Melanesian Society" in 1914, but most of their work did not make it into print until 1922, when Hocart began to publish a series of articles describing the core material. Immediately after his fieldwork in the Solomon Islands, Hocart travelled further east toFiji , where he became the headmaster ofLakeba School , on the island ofLakeba in the Lau archipelago. At the same time, he maintained a research affiliation with Oxford and traveled widely through western Polynesia, conducting research in Fiji,Rotuma , Wallis Island,Samoa , andTonga . The result was roughly six years of ethnographic fieldwork that formed the basis for Hocart's reputation today as one of the most important early ethnographers ofOceania .A Military man in Ceylon
In 1914 Hocart returned to Oxford to pursue postgraduate studies in anthropology, a position that also included some teaching. However,
World War I interrupted his progress and he spent the next four years in France, in army intelligence. In 1919 he mustered out of the army having reached the rank of captain. Hocart then began what was to be a long exile from British academia to a series of posts in theBritish Empire . After a year-long study ofSanskrit , Tamil,Pāli , and Sinhalese he moved to Ceylon (nowSri Lanka ) to become the Archaeological Commissioner of Ceylon, where he oversaw the excavation and preservation of monumental architecture and other archaeological sites. With experience of the ancient Mediterranean, Polynesia and Melanesia, and South Asia now under his belt Hocart began publishing widely comparative studies on many topics, including that of Kingship. In 1925 Hocart suffered a bout of severedysentery and returned to England to recover. By the late 1920s his poor health and politics within the colonial bureaucracy made Ceylon seem a poorer and poorer choice for him. He once again attempted (and failed) to obtain a position at Cambridge before finally retiring to England in 1929 on a pension.London to Cairo
Beginning in 1931 Hocart served for three years as an Honorary Lecturer in Ethnology at
University College London which allowed him to give classes occasionally. He applied to Cambridge once more - this time for the chair in social anthropology - but was again unsuccessful. In 1934 he moved toCairo where he served as the Professor of Sociology, the only academic position he held in his life. Poor health dogged him and he died in 1939 after contracting an infection in the course of research inEgypt .A career admired
Hocart's professional career took place at a time when British anthropologists were moving from an emphasis on
diffusion and historical reconstruction to a more 'scientific' form offunctionalism . Hocart's broad training and willingness to explore a wide variety of approaches produced work that was often poorly received by colleagues who repudiated past work in order to legitimize anthropology as ahard science . Interest in his work was revived in the 1960s when authors such as Lord Raglan,Rodney Needham , and Louis Dumont returned to Hocart's work as a source of theoretical inspiration. Today he is remembered for his ethnography of the Pacific and as an author whose work presaged the advent ofstructuralism .Works
*"The cult of the dead in Eddystone of the Solomons". Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 52; 71-117, 259-305. (1922)
*"The Origin of Monotheism" Folklore, Vol. 33, No. 3 (Sep. 30, 1922), pp. 282-293
*"Memoirs of the Archaeological Survey of Ceylon (1924-36)" editor with S. Paranavitana
*"Kingship" (1927)
*"The Progress of Man: A Short Survey of His Evolution, His Customs, and His Works" (1933)
*"Kings and Councillors: An Essay in the Comparative Anatomy of Human Society" (1936)
*"Caste" (1950)
*"The Northern states of Fiji" (1952)
*"Social Origins" (1954)
*"Le Mythe Sorcier et autres essais" (1962)
*"The Life-giving Myth and Other Essays" (1973)
*"Imagination and Proof: Selected Essays of A. M. Hocart" (1987) editorRodney Needham Further reading
* Editor's Introduction to "Kings and Councillors" (University of Chicago Press 1970), by Rodney Needham.
References
* The Routledge Dictionary of Anthropologists, By Gérald Gaillard, [http://books.google.com/books?id=5aAKdONZkh8C&pg=PA47&ots=D1nNFCJnn2&dq=Arthur+Maurice+Hocart&sig=NB4w6uDQc-ox6j8i4nUsZWV-Cxg#PPA48,M1 Page 47 - 48] , Published by Routledge.
* cite book
title=Man
author=Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, JSTOR (Organization)
year=1938
publisher=Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland
isbn=
url=http://books.google.com/books?id=Q8EZAAAAMAAJ&q=Arthur+Maurice+Hocart&dq=Arthur+Maurice+Hocart&pgis=1, By Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland, Published 1901, Original from the University of Michigan, Digitized Oct 4, 2006.
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