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A constructive mediation of the debate between Vladimir Propp and Claude Levi-Strauss over binary opposition in myth is presented. Levi-Strauss contended that the purpose of myth is to provide a logical model capable of overcoming a contradiction.
In 1928, Russian folklorist Vladimir Propp published his pathbreaking Morphology of the Folktale in a limited printing of only 1600 copies (Bravo 1972:45). In his Morphology, Propp delineated a syntagmatic sequence of thirty-one functions which he claimed defined the Russian fairy tale (Aarne-Thompson tale types 300-749). Unfortunately, few Western scholars read Russian and Propp's important monograph had little impact upon the direction of folk narrative study. Only famed linguist Roman Jakobson in his 1945 folkloristic commentary for the Pantheon edition of Afanas'ev's Russian Fairy Tales referred to Propp's research in a brief summary of his findings (1945:640-641) . It was not until Professor Thomas A. Sebeok of Indiana University arranged for an English translation of Propp's Morphology in 1958 that Propp's remarkable analysis became accessible to Western folklorists (cf. Breymayer 1972; Bremond and Verrier 1982; and Cardigos 1996:33-36, but see Chistov 1986:9).
Three years earlier, French anthropologist Claude Levi-Strauss had responded favorably to an invitation issued by the same Professor Sebeok who was then the editor of the Journal of American Folklore to participate in a symposium on myth. (Among others in that symposium were David Bidney, Richard M. Dorson, Reidar Th. Christiansen, Lord Raglan, and Stith Thompson.) Levi-Strauss's paper, entitled "The Structural Study of Myth" which initiated a veritable flood of 'structural' enterprises, was written without any knowledge of Propp's Morphology. The 1955 JAF issue was published as a separate book under the title Myth: A Symposium in 1958, the same year Propp's Morphology appeared in English.
In his essay, Levi-Strauss contended "that mythical thought always works from the awareness of oppositions towards their progressive mediation" and further that "the purpose of myth is to provide a logical model capable of overcoming a contradiction" (1955:440, 443). LeviStrauss has persisted in his "definition" of myth or mythical thought. In The Naked Man, the final volume of the four-volume Mythologiques, in a chapter entitled "Binary Operators," he has this to say of "mythemes," his neologism intended to refer to basic units of myth: "Of course, all mythemes of whatever kind, must, generally speaking, lend themselves to binary operations, since such operations are an inherent feature of the means invented by nature to make possible the functioning of language and thought" (1981:559). To be sure, Levi-Strauss is well aware that he has been "accused" of "overusing" "the notion of binary opposition" (1995:185) .
Like Propp, Levi-Strauss had proposed a formula for the structure of narrative, but unlike Propp, his formula was totally algebraic involving "functions" and "terms" (1955:442; for a discussion of the formula, see Mosko 1991). Whereas Propp had extrapolated his thirty-one function sequence from the linear order of events recounted in his 100 fairy tale corpus, Levi-Strauss sought to discover what he felt was the underlying paradigm (of oppositions). Levi-Strauss did recognize the "order" of events as presented in narrative as told, but he elected to ignore that "order." In his terms, "The myth will be treated as would be an orchestra score perversely presented as a unilinear series and where our task is to re-establish the correct disposition" (1955:432, my emphasis). The use of the descriptive label "perversely" seemed to suggest that the linear sequential order (utilized by Propp) was an obstacle to be overcome by Levi-Strauss in his efforts to arrive at the supposed underlying paradigm. As Champagne puts it, "Levi-Strauss regards such linear, sequential forms as obvious and superficial" (1995:42).
Levi-Strauss is certainly cognizant of the difference between syntagmatic and paradigmatic structure (1988:205). Moreover, throughout his four volume Mythologiques series, Levi-Strauss repeatedly denigrates the sequential syntagmatic while at the same time praising the virtues of the paradigmatic. In The Raw and the Cooked, the first of the Mythologiques volumes, LeviStrauss claims that a detail of one myth which is "absurd on the syntagmatic level" becomes "coherent from the paradigmatic point of view" (1969:253) . Again and again, the syntagmatic context is summarily dismissed. In speaking of another myth, Levi-Strauss argues, "If we consider only the syntagmatic sequence-that is, the unfolding of the story-it appears incoherent and very arbitrary in construction" (1969:306), and he proceeds to generalize, "Considered purely in itself, every syntagmatic sequence must be looked upon as being without meaning," and the only solution involves "replacing a syntagmatic sequence by a paradigmatic sequence" (1969:307). Interestingly enough, although Levi-Strauss's methodology wears the trappings of structuralism, his actual method is a form, an idiosyncratic form to be sure, of the comparative method. It is through comparison with one or more other myths (not always cognates!) that the elusive meaning of a myth text can be "revealed." Levi-Strauss is explicit on this point: "Finally, one detail in the Bororo myth that remained incomprehensible when viewed from the angle of syntagmatical relations, becomes clear when compared to a corresponding detail in the Kayapo myth" (1969:210, my emphasis). In this case, it is a Kayapo text which purportedly illuminates a Bororo text, but the comparison can go either way: "The KayapoKubenkranken version (M8) contains a detail that in itself is unintelligible and that can only be elucidated by means of the Bororo myth, M55" (1969:131). So although Levi-Strauss is essentially known as a structuralist, the empirical fact is that he is much more of a comparativist than a structuralist.
Levi-Strauss's methodology is consistent and explicit: "By dividing the myth into sequences not always clearly indicated by the plot, and by relating each sequence to paradigmatic sets capable of giving them a meaning, we eventually found ourselves in a position to define the fundamental characteristics of a myth..." (1979:199). Sometimes the comparative paradigm could come from within the same culture as the original myth; sometimes from without. "While the episode of Moon appears to be nonmotivated in the syntagmatic chain of the Thompson myth considered alone, it finds its place again in a paradigmatic ensemble as a permutation when related to other myths of these same Indians" (1955:140n) but alternatively the range of Levi-Strauss's comparative method can be large, so large that he is willing to compare a South American Indian myth with possible cognates in North America to find meaning. Speaking of an episode in his "Tucuna reference myth," LeviStrauss has this to say: "This episode which cannot be interpreted according to the syntagmatic sequence, and on which South American mythology as a whole fails to shed any light, can only be elucidated by reference to a paradigmatic system drawn from North American mythology" (1979:17).
In 1959, Levi-Strauss was appointed to the prestigious chair of Social Anthropology at the College de France and for his inaugural lecture, he chose a Tsimshian narrative reported by Franz Boas to analyze. His analysis of "La Geste d'Asdiwal" was a brilliant tour de force revealing four distinct levels of binary oppositions: geographic (e.g.., east vs. west), cosmological (e.g.., upper world vs. lower world), economic (land-hunting vs. sea-hunting), and sociological (e.g., patrilocal residence vs. matrilocal residence). Again, there is no reference to Propp in his Asdiwal essay which was published in the Annuaire, 1958-1959, Ecole pratique des hautes etudes, Section des sciences religieuses.
By 1960, Levi-Strauss had definitely read Propp's Morphology. We know this because in that year, he published an extensive review of it. Appearing initially in the Cahiers de l institut des Sciences Economiques Appliquees as "La structure et la forme. Reflexions sur un ouvrage de Vladimir Propp," it was also printed as "L'analyse morphologique des contes russes" in volume III of the International Journal of Slavic Linguistics and Poetics. In his review, LeviStrauss duly praised Propp for being an innovator ahead of his time, but he also criticized Propp's analysis. A sample of the praise reads: "The most striking aspect of Propp's work is the power with which it anticipated further developments. Those among us who first approached the structural analysis of oral literature around 1950, without direct knowledge of Propp's attempts a quarter of a century earlier, recognize there, to their amazement, formulae-sometimes even whole sentences-that they know well enough they have not borrowed from him... [There] are so many intuitions, whose perspicacity and prophetic character arouse our admiration. They earn for Propp the devotion of all those who, unknown to themselves, were his followers" (Levi-Strauss in Propp 1984:175). However, it is with one of the primary criticisms of Propp by Levi-Strauss that we are presently concerned.
Levi-Strauss faults Propp for analyzing wondertales. For, according to Levi-Strauss, "Tales are constructed on weaker oppositions than those found in myths" (Propp 1984:176; cf. Cardigos 1996:34). In this context, Levi-Strauss claims that "the tale lends itself imperfectly to structural analysis...Should he [Propp] not rather have used myths" instead (1984:177)? Levi-Strauss then goes on to give his guess as to why Propp did not use myths. "As he is not an ethnologist, one can suppose that he had no access to or control over mythological material collected by him and among peoples known to him" (1984:177).
The idea that a professional folklorist, a professor of folklore, did not know enough about myths to analyze them is, of course, preposterous, and it should come as no surprise to learn that Propp upon reading LeviStrauss's review was insulted by the insinuation that he knew nothing about myth. Stung by Levi-Strauss's criticism, Propp wrote a strong rebuttal which appeared first in the 1966 Italian translation of his Morphology immediately following the Levi-Strauss review. (Propp's Morphology has had an enormous impact in Italy [cf. de Meijer 1982].) Levi-Strauss, however, was given the last word in the form of a brief postscript in which he expressed or perhaps feigned surprise at Propp's anger. He had meant, he averred, only to offer "a homage" to a pioneering effort-although it is noteworthy that Levi-Strauss has continued to avoid making any mention of Propp in any of his many writings on myth and structure. Levi-Strauss's original review, Propp's rebuttal, and Levi-Strauss's postscript are available in English translation in Propp's Theory and History of Folklore, a selection of Propp's essays published by the University of Minnesota Press in 1984. (It is a pity that Propp's footnotes to his rebuttal did not appear in the Minnesota Press translation, especially the one that referred to The Morphology of North American Indian Folktales!)
In his rebuttal, "The Structural and Historical Study of the Wondertale," Propp first thanks the Italian publisher Einaudi for inviting him to write a rejoinder to Levi-Strauss's review. He then observed that Levi-Strauss has an important advantage inasmuch as he is a philosopher whereas Propp is merely an empiricist (1984:68). Propp replies that he will not dwell on the logic of such an argument as "since the author does not know myths, he studies wondertales," but it is clear that he does not think much of it. "No scholar can be forbidden to do one thing and urged to do another," he comments. The interested reader should consult the full texts of the debate for all the nuances and facets of the arguments on both sides. Here one may note that Propp in turn critiqued Levi-Strauss's "re-write" of Propp's thirty-one function scheme by saying, "My model corresponds to what was modeled and is based on a study of data, whereas the model LeviStrauss proposes does not correspond to reality and is based on logical operations not imposed by the data...Levi-Strauss carries out his logical operations in total disregard of the material (he is not in the least interested in the wondertale, nor does he attempt to learn more about it) and removes the functions from their temporal sequence" (1984:76). As we have already noted in some detail, Levi-Strauss would make no apology for "removing" functions from their temporal sequence. In part, we have the two scholars talking past one another: Propp is concerned with empirically observable sequential structure whereas Levi-Strauss is interested in underlying paradigms, typically binary in nature. (My own view is that Levi-Strauss is not so much describing the structure of myth as he is the structure of the world described in myth. That is a significant distinction.)
There is other evidence of Levi-Strauss's rather Olympian posture with respect to his version of "structure" in myth. In the first volume of his magnum opus, The Raw and the Cooked, he doubts that the natives of central Brazil would have any understanding of "the systems of interrelations" he finds in their myths. Moreover, he adopts a truly superorganic position when he says, "I therefore claim to show not how men think in myths, but how myths operate in men's minds without their being aware of the fact" (1969:12), a statement strangely reminiscent of Jung's equally mystical claim in his "The Psychology of the Child Archetype" essay, "...the primitive cannot assert that he thinks; it is rather that something thinks in him!..." (1963:72). Levi-Strauss appears to reject the Jungian universalistic "archetypal" approach to myth (1969:56; 1995:188), and most writers comparing Levi-Strauss and Jung tend to see more differences than similarities (cf. Chang 1984 and Messer 1986). However, the reader can judge the possible parallelism between the two statements cited above for himself
In any event, Levi-Strauss never repudiated his superorganic statement. Indeed, he is well aware of the Anglo-American attitude towards it. In his 1977 Canadian CBC series of talks, published as Myth and Meaning, Levi-Strauss begins by referring to this very statement: "You may remember that I have written that myths get thought in man unbeknownst to him. This has been much discussed and even criticized by my English-speaking colleagues, because their feeling is that, from an empirical point of view, it is an utterly meaningless sentence. But for me it describes a lived experience, because it says exactly how I perceive my own relationship to my work. That is, my work gets thought in me unbeknown to me" (1979:3). Were one to object that Levi-Strauss's own thought should not be compared to myth, one would be obliged to recall Levi-Strauss's unabashed comment about The Raw and the Cooked that ".. . this book on myths is itself a kind of myth" (1969:6) which upon reflection is entirely consistent with Levi-Strauss's contention that the Freudian reading or interpretation of Oedipus "should be included among the recorded versions of the Oedipus myth on a par with earlier or seemingly more "authentic" versions" (1955:435).
But this inquiry is not intended to be a full-fledged discussion of either Levi-Strauss's or Propp's methodologies. (For an initial entree into Levi-Strauss's voluminous writings on myths and the criticism of them, see Lapointe and Lapointe [1977]; for Propp, see Breymayer 1972, Liberman 1984, and Ziel 1995). The aim is to consider only the issue of binary opposition in myth. Let us assume for the sake of argument that Levi-Strauss is correct in his assumption that myths reveal binary oppositions more clearly than do folktales and that "Tales are constructed on weaker oppositions than those found in myths."
In his 1955 essay in JAF, what narrative does Levi-Strauss choose to demonstrate his version of "structural analysis"? He chooses the story of Oedipus. Now since Levi-Strauss is an anthropologist and not a folklorist, he is evidently not all that familiar with the standard genre definitions of myth, folktale, and legend, distinctions which have been observed for nearly two centuries ever since the times of the brothers Grimm who devoted separate major works to each of these three genres. (For definitions, see Bascom 1965 and Bodker 1965). Suffice it to say that if a myth is "a sacred narrative explaining how the world and humankind came to be in their present form," then it is perfectly obvious that the story of Oedipus is NOT a myth. As folklorists very well know, it is in fact a standard folktale, namely, Aarne-Thompson tale type 931. (The number was assigned by Aarne in his original Verzeichnis der Mirchentypen, FFC 3, published in 1910.) So it turns out that Levi-Strauss, like Propp, began his analysis of "myth" with a folktale! In the same essay, after discussing one actual myth, that of the Zuni emergence, he proceeds to talk about "the trickster of (native) American mythology" and refers to "the mythology of the Plains" citing "Star Husband" and "Lodge-Boy and Thrown-Away" (1955:440). But these latter allusions are all to folktales, not myths. At least Levi-Strauss is consistent, that is, consistently mistaken. In The Origin of Table Manners, the third volume in the Mythologiques series, he devotes no less than two chapters to the "Star Husband" myth (1979:199-272), this even though he had read Stith Thompson's classic study "The Star Husband Tale" (my emphasis). No serious folklorist would label the Star Husband story a myth, but then again Levi-Strauss is no folklorist. He refers to Stith Thompson, by the way, as "the eminent mythographer" (1979:19) (again, my emphasis). The fact is that Stith Thompson wrote very little about myth, preferring instead to concentrate on his beloved folktale! One might well argue that if Levi-Strauss insists upon calling folktales such as Star Husband "myths," he is perfectly justified in reclassifying Stith Thompson, an acknowledged specialist in the folktale, as a "mythographer" or "mythologist".
What about the subject of Levi-Strauss's inaugural lecture, the story of Asdiwal (which he cautiously labelled "geste")? This is not a myth either. If it were believed to be historically "true" by the Tsimshian, then it would be a legend. If not, it would be a folktale, a fictional narrative not believed to be any more historical than such Western folktales as Cinderella or Little Red Riding Hood. In no way is the geste of Asdiwal an account of how the world or humankind came to be in their present form. It is not a myth by folkloristic standards.
And what about the texts, the hundreds of texts, analyzed in the fourvolume Mythologiques and the two later sequels (1988, 1995)? Are they all myths? The initial narrative discussed, "The Macaws and their Nest" is a Bororo version of the "bird-nester," a narrative which Levi-Strauss (arbitrarily) labels M1 (key myth). But the narrative is not a myth at all in the technical sense of the term. It is a straightforward folktale! This is not say that Levi-Strauss does not analyze some myths in Mythologiques. The important point is that he analyzes both myths and folktales indiscriminately.
If the Oedipus, Asdiwal, and bird-nester narratives are all folktales rather than myths, then we might pose to Levi-Strauss the same question he addressed to Propp: if folktales are constructed on weaker oppositions than those found in myths, why did Levi-Strauss choose folktales rather than myths to demonstrate his theory of binary oppositions? It seems to me that Levi-Strauss is hoist by his own petard! The obvious answer is that binary oppositions are just as strong in folktales as they are in myth. Levi-Strauss's own insightful analysis of Asdiwal is a perfect case in point. The fact that Levi-Strauss, like the majority of anthropologists, doesn't know the difference between a myth and a folktale should not be a factor. Most anthropologists use the term "myth" when the narratives they discuss are unmistakably folktales or legends. The appalling ignorance among anthropologists and others concerning such standard folk narrative genre distinctions as myth and folktale might account for why despite a deluge of critical writing on Levi-Strauss's Mythologiques and other studies of 'myth' by anthropologists and sociologists (cf. Thomas et al. 1976; Carroll 1978, and Mandelbaum 1987), no one seems to have noticed that LeviStrauss was analyzing folktales more often than myths. Even those critics who have commented specifically on the Propp/Levi-Strauss debate (e.g., Bravo 1972, de Meijer 1970, Janovic 1975) failed to remark on this matter.
So if Levi-Strauss has analyzed folktales rather than myths, what happens to his notion that "mythical thought always works from the awareness of oppositions towards their progressive mediation," and "the purpose of myth is to provide a logical model capable of overcoming a contradiction"? Clearly, the notion needs to be amended. But there is more.
One could well argue that binary opposition is a universal. Presumably all human societies, past and present, made some kind of distinction between "Male and Female," "Life and Death," "Day and Night" (or Light and Dark), etc. Certainly we can find binary oppositions in genres of folklore other than myth and folktale. Take the proverb genre, for example. Some proverbs have both topics and comments in opposition: "United we stand; divided we fall" (united vs. divided; stand vs. fall); "Man proposes; but God disposes" (Man vs. God; proposes vs. disposes); "Last hired; first fired" (last vs. first; hired vs. fired) etc. (Dundes 1975). The same kinds of binary opposition also occur in traditional riddles (Georges and Dundes 1963). Examples of oppositional riddles include:
I am rough, I am smooth
I am wet, I am dry
My station is low, my title high
My king my lawful master is,
I'm used by all, though only his. (highway)
Large as a house
Small as a mouse,
Bitter as gall,
And sweet after all. (pecan tree and nut)
And what about the curse genre? There are traditional Jewish-American curses which are clearly based on binary oppositions:
You should have lockjaw and seasickness at the same time.
May you eat like a horse and shit like a little bird.
Could we not assert on the basis of the above examples that a proverb (riddle, curse) can serve as " a logical model capable of overcoming a contradiction"?
If binary opposition is a universal-or even if it were confined to folklore genres as diverse as myth, folktale, proverb, riddle, and curse-the question is: how can binary opposition be used to define the nature of myth? This is not to deny that binary oppositions can be found in myth. The critical point is that binary opposition is in no way peculiar to myth. If this is so, then what Levi-Strauss has isolated in his analysis of "myth" tells us precious little about the nature of myth in particular. To be fair, since LeviStrauss is actually interested in the nature of human thought (rather than myth per se), perhaps it doesn't matter that binary opposition as a distinctive feature is not confined to myth. Quite the contrary. If binary oppositional thought is a pan-human mental characteristic, that is well worth noting. But then we must not pretend that the presence of binary oppositions in a narrative necessarily identifies that narrative as a myth. Although Levi-Strauss occasionally actually cites an Aarne-Thompson tale type number (1995:181), the truth is that for the most part he totally ignores the basic "myth-folktale-legend" genre categories. From a folkloristic vantage point, it is the height of hubris to write a four-volume (plus two sequel volumes) introduction to a science of mythology without even recognizing or knowing the difference between a myth and a folktale!
Finally, we are obliged to remind the reader that the presence of binary opposition in folklore is hardly a new idea. One of Axel Olrik's epic laws proposed in the first decade of the twentieth century was Das Gesetz des Gesatzes, the Law of Contrast. "This very basic opposition is a major rule of epic composition: young and old, large and small, man and monster, good and evil." (Olrik 1965: 135; cf. 1992:50). Furthermore, the principle was beautifully illustrated by another Danish folklorist, the late Bengt Holbek in his three-dimensional paradigmatic model for Danish folktales: low vs. high, young vs. adult, and male vs. female (Holbek 1987:453), a conceptual model borrowed from Elli Kongas Maranda (Maranda and Maranda 1971:23). The wheel may have been re-invented but it also comes full circle, inasmuch as Maranda was inspired by none other than Levi-Strauss!
To the extent that the debate between Propp and Levi-Strauss itself constitutes a kind of academic binary opposition, we earnestly trust that this essay will be understood as a form of constructive mediation.
University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California
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Copyright California Folklore Society Winter 1997