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The Social Construction of What?
 
 

The Social Construction of What? (Paperback)

by Ian Hacking (Author)
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Books in Canada

Having come of age as a political activist in the 1960s, just at the moment when, among other things, homosexuals came out of the closet and declared themselves as public figures, it was something of a jolt to learn, a few years later, that there really weren't any "homosexuals"-or at least none before the mid-to-late nineteenth century. Yet the point that scholars, such as David Halperin in One Hundred Years of Homosexuality (1989), were making was clear.

We "gay liberation" homosexuals declared that there had always been homosexuals. Homosexuality went all the way back to the Homeric and Athenian Greeks, and it had persisted, uninterruptedly despite continual oppression, to the present. It was recorded in literature in everything from Plato's Symposium to Proust's In Search of Lost Time, and was embodied in homoerotic figures from Michelangelo's David to Stephen Gately, the Boyzone pop star who recently came out in the pages of a British tabloid.

But no, those Athenians were not at all "homosexuals".

First, the Greeks didn't have a word for it.

Second, although the Athenians may have spent a lot of time gossiping about and having sex with boys, these same discursive men were also married and the fathers of children. So, at best, they were "bi-sexuals", which they had neither a word for nor self-conception of; at worst, according to our contemporary witch-hunters, they were "child-abusers". And for that matter, the boys, after being pursued by and yielding their favours to the men, themselves went on to become husbands, fathers, and possibly boy-lovers.

Third, even the male-male sexual practices of Athenians, insofar as we knew about them, were strikingly different from current erotic acrobatics.

Finally, no Athenian thought of himself-whether or not there was a word for it-as a "homosexual". As far as questions of "identity" went, those Athenians we're most familiar with may have primarily conceived of themselves, insofar as they engaged in self-conception at all, as "citizens".

In short, the modern conception of a "homosexual" was not an essential or inevitable fact of nature, but a fairly recent "social construction", whose development and emergence could be historically traced. The intellectual advantage of doing so was obvious enough: one could connect the development of an "identity" to a host of other historical factors that yielded a more accurate, complex, and, hence, more satisfying understanding of both identity and reality. Those who thought otherwise were promptly dubbed and regarded as retrograde "essentialists".

Still, there was something not altogether conclusive about the social construction of homosexuals, women, and blacks, or authors, scientists, and serial killers, or eventually, even our notions of gender, nature, quarks, reality-and just about anything else we might have an idea about.

In the case of homosexuality-or at least the boy-love of which the Athenians were enamoured-it did seem to have a recognizable and long-standing historical endurance. One understands the jokes about boys in Symposium precisely because they're still the quips about boys heard in the gay bars of today. Though we've known that "existence precedes essence" ever since Sartre, some features of human experience give the appearance, anyway, of being not only socially constructed, but trans-historical as well.

Along comes Ian Hacking, at exactly the right moment, to ask exactly the right question-not about homosexuality, but about the entire issue. Hacking, a University of Toronto philosopher and historian of science, is one of those remarkable people who not only explore the jagged edges of human experience with great sensitivity, but seamlessly join them to history, social practices, and societal structures to yield explanations more compelling than any heretofore available.

In Rewriting the Soul (1995), he examined "multiple personality" and its accompanying true and false memories. In Mad Travellers (1998), he illuminated the brief late-nineteenth century epidemic of "fugueism", or compulsive travelling, linking it to the then-contemporary phenomena of hysteria, loitering, and organized mass tourism. And in a recent essay on hypnotism in The New York Review, Hacking once again looked at another of the stubbornly mysterious features of the human mind.

In The Social Construction of What?, Hacking, who has involuntarily been taken for a social constructionist himself, cleverly focuses on the social construction of social construction, as well as essentialism-the latter being a sort of political invention of social constructionists. His title question is one of those brilliant queries that allows you to see the point immediately upon utterance.

The initial point Hacking makes is that the term "social construction" has become terminally fashionable, and so sloppily used that it's worthwhile thinking about what this method of looking at the world really means. He notes that there are books whose titles range from The Social Construction of Authorship to The Social Construction of Zulu Nationalism, and almost everything in between. The focus, as the title of Hacking's book makes clear, is on the "what". Obviously, there must be a difference between claiming that "motherhood" is socially constructed, and claiming the same for "quarks".

Hacking concedes that one reason that talk of social construction has become common coin is because the idea is "wonderfully liberating. It reminds us, say, that motherhood and its meanings are not fixed and inevitable, the consequence of child-bearing and rearing. They are the product of historical events, social forces, and ideology." Therefore, mothers who understand the social construction argument "need not feel quite as guilty as they are supposed to, if they do not obey either the old rules of family or whatever is the official psycho-pediatric rule of the day." All to the good.

But social construction ideas can also "replicate out of hand", Hacking points out, leading to relativism, or at least the fear of it, which embodies the worry that we'll end up thinking that any opinion is as good as any other, and thus be left with no solid ground from which to criticize oppressive ideas. If relativism comes to rule and somebody decides that the Holocaust is socially constructed, will we have to regard that idea as on a par with other accounts of the Holocaust?

There's also a political downside to social constructionism. Again, take homosexuality. If homosexuals can argue that homosexuality has always existed, that it's something like a feature of nature (perhaps even genetically determined), that bolsters the case for claiming equal rights. If homosexuality turns out to be utterly malleable, a mere social construct, that opens the door for opponents to argue that it's immoral and that homosexuals ought to change their orientation. (More extreme opponents will argue that homosexuality is immoral, whether it's malleable or not.)

Hacking takes account of these "left-right" political consequences. "Social construction work," he observes, is mostly "critical of the status quo." Social constructionists, he writes, tend to hold "that X need not have existed, or need not be as it is. X, or X as it is at present, is not determined by the nature of things, it is not inevitable." Very often, Hacking adds, social constructionists go on to urge that "X is quite bad as it is," and that "we would be much better off if X were done away with, or at least radically transformed."

Mostly though, Hacking is less concerned with politics, and more with sorting out what's going on. His first move is to distinguish between claims about the social construction of objects, ideas, and a more general notion that he calls "elevator words". That is, there's a difference between such disparate objects as people, rocks, practices, experiences (such as falling in love), and ideas, including those about groupings and classifications. Furthermore, claims about the social construction of such elevator words as "facts", "truth", "reality", and "knowledge"-that is, terms about the nature of the world and how we go about understanding it-are at a different level of abstraction from what Hacking is calling ideas.

He also notes that people get confused about whether something socially constructed is therefore "real" or not. So, while "child abuse"-one of the topics to which Hacking devotes a chapter-is certainly real in our common-sense understanding of it (namely, bad things are inflicted on children), the idea of child-abuse is something that's been socially constructed: it has a history and (political) consequences (for example, treating abused children as though they were "scarred for life", which may be a bad idea).

Conversely, "satanic ritual abuse", a practice that many of the people most concerned with, or perhaps, hysterical about, child abuse claim is widespread, almost certainly isn't real. Unmasking the idea of satanic ritual abuse through social construction techniques is helpful in giving us a saner perspective on the problem of child abuse.

Inspired by philosopher Nelson Goodman and his Ways of Worldmaking (1978), Hacking is consistently illuminating in how we go about engaging in categorization of phenomena, or what he calls "kind-making". With considerable sophistication, he also takes account of the effects of inter-activity and "looping" in the business of conceiving of categories. For instance, the very idea of "gay" is acted upon by people who are called or identify themselves as gay, and that can lead to such further reconceptions as "queer" or even "the end of gay".

Hacking ranges widely in The Social Construction of What? He deals with gender, child abuse, science, rocks, madness, and even the historical anthropological dispute about whether Captain Cook was regarded as a god by the Hawaiians who eventually did him in. His pages crackle with intelligence and are very readable. Many of the topics he writes about began their life as lectures, and Hacking has had the good sense to retain much of the colloquial aspect of discussion, which saves him from temptations of dogmatism or pontification.

Although Hacking is straightforward about where he stands on the various questions he raises, he's also tremendously good-natured in allowing that his readers may not share his particular leanings. In sorting out what is and isn't useful in the social construction approach, he's written a book that's a breath of fresh air in the midst of the often stuffy atmosphere of academia. Now that he's sorted out some of the "what" of social construction, it would be a pleasure to watch him turn his attention to the endless number of books that announce "The End of" or "The Death of X". Stan Persky(Books in Canada) --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Library Journal

To what extent are our claims to knowledge supported by reality? To what extent are they social constructs? Hacking (philosophy, Univ. of Toronto; Mad Travelers: Reflections on the Reality of Transient Mental Illnesses) is one of the best philosophers of science and society of our time. Here, as usual, he argues from carefully researched examples. Hacking refuses to be bullied into taking either side of the debate on science vs. objective truth, but he recognizes that a dizzying process started with the attempt (which he finds in Kant) to see morality as a human construct. The idea that all knowledge might be a construct inevitably follows. Unfortunately, Hacking does not explore the part played by the separation of the good from the true in the press-ganging of much science into the service of the military industrial complex; his weak chapter is on weapons research. Despite this glaring deficiency, this is a delightful bookAevenhanded, fun to read, and packed with information on everything from nuclear physics, nanobacteria, and madness to the deification of Captain Cook. For all academic libraries.ALeslie Armour, Univ. of Ottawa
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Balanced and helpful, but also frustrating, Feb 27 2001
By Todd I. Stark "Cellular Wetware plus Books" (Philadelphia, Pa USA) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
In the neverending battle to define "what is real" for each other, to persuade each other of what is good, bad, and important, one disturbing trend in academia is to jump on the bandwagon of things considered "socially constructed." The banner of social construction has become a lightning rod of sorts for all sorts of bizarre things that represent what the author refers to in terms of "rage against reason." X was socially constructed, and therefore is unreal, and even bad, and should be modified or replaced by Y.

Emotions, knowledge, the mind, the economy, the deficit, gender, mental illness, even facts and reality, all have been subjected to literary claims that they are "socially constructed."

Hacking provides an interesting perspective on this whole trend by de-emphasizing the social aspect and focusing on the construction aspect. He views this simply as a way of arguing against the inevitability of something. For example, arguing about 'social construction' of our understanding of quarks in physics, part of the standard model, the question becomes whether an alternate equally successful science could have arisen that had no such concept as a quark. Hacking then struggles with what a successful science means, and how we would recognize it. There are many examples that follow this pattern, each discussed in terms of whether X was inevitable, and thus how else it could have been constructed in our minds and in culture.

Hacking goes as far as an offhanded treatment of nominalism and essentialism relevant to this inevitability question (essential qualities are those that are seen as inevitable). He breaks down difficult questions into relatively simple ones using this same kind of straightforward procedure. In analyzing the social construction of X for many examples, he looks for those elements of X that were inevitable, and those that serve "extra-theoretical" purposes and could have been constructed differently.

One particularly unique aspect of hacking's work here, the prototype of social constructionism here is not the sociology of science in general. He uses Pickering, LaTour, and Woolgar as his prime examples, rather than folks like Harry Collins and Trevor Pinch, who are often considered in the same category. Hacking considers them distinct for his purposes, and this reveals some interesting distinctions.

What I liked best about this book is that while it is carefully done, there is an offhanded air about the points Hacking makes. He makes some very difficult analyses seem very easy by pulling particularly useful examples from the literature. He navigates a lot of difficult philosophy by asking deceptively simple questions, like "what is the point ?" rather than "what is the meaning ?"

There are some interesting sweeping gestures here like claiming that social construction can simply by thought of as an argument against the inevitability of X, and then analyzed for how committed the author is to claiming X is bad and overturning X. Another interesting example is Hacking's description of essentialism as simply a way of talking about inevitability.

This book is somewhat disappointing if you're looking for simple answers to each of the questions posed, "is X socially constructed or not ?" However, it provides an extremely helpful way of looking at each case and trying to decide whether a 'social construction' critique actually has any value, or whether it just gives the history of the topic. Perhaps most useful is Hacking's "3 sticking points" with which to address the construction of a concept: contingency, nominalism, and stability.

This is a thinking person's book, but not nearly as incomprehensible to the layman as most works of modern philosophy, and much easier to read and more helpful than most of the "social construction" literature itself.

I'd go as far as to say that in many cases, we could replace the "social construction of X" arguments with Hacking's style of analysis about inevitability and the 3 sticking points, and come up with a more enlightening answer about the reality of the X in question.

If there is any flaw that I found here it is that I didn't think there was enough detail provided on any one topic to resolve the questions asked, they are pretty much all examples, and more questions are raised than answered. That can get maddening when you are just getting interested in the topic.

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4.0 out of 5 stars An Impolite Feud Properly Gerrymandered, Oct 19 2003
By Benjamin B. Eshbach "Ben Eshbach" (Los Angeles, Ca) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
For about forty years now there's been a war between two groups of knuckleheads. One group uses social constructionism (or constructivism) to deflate the necessity and relevance of their pet peeves - science is sometimes one of the peeves. The other group of knuckleheads, usually professional peevers, argue back that social constructionists are a bunch of knuckleheads. The practical result of this feud has been significant shifts in social policies, research grant funding, tenure, education programs and a host of tangible issues that bother a lot of knuckleheads, like me.

Professor Hacking tries to take the middle ground in this debate. In a series of disjointed chapters (some of which were published before in different contexts) he explains social constructionism in a way that both (a) deflates some of the bad armchair constructionist-speak and (b) makes good sense of constructionism to skeptics of the *discipline* - who really can't be blamed after all. I mean, since Berger and Luckmann's outstanding treatise so much poop has been published under that rubric.

Professor Hacking admirably accomplishes this mediation by clarifying, loudly and slowly as it were, exactly what social constructionism IS NOT. This is a handy way to quell mis-directed criticisms, hopefully. Less ink is spent telling us what it IS in any way that wasn't already (mis)understood by its critics. It's not a bad idea to have some basic understanding of the sociology of knowledge going into this - and I don't mean the kind of knowledge one gleans from reading books which APPLY constructionism; they're usually the poop.

The chapter about Child Abuse and the chapter about Weapons Research (and parts of the one on Natural Sciences) are worth the price of the book. For me it didn't get going 'till about half way through. Professor Hacking's style was sometimes strained to be neutral. The book did not flow well from chapter to chapter - and I was surprised that he could write a chapter called "Madness: Biological or Constructed?" with only a glance toward Thomas Szasz. Maybe I'm just old fashioned.

I gained a lot of respect for the author while reading this. The book both educated me on the state and history of the feud AND provided me with a better understanding of where Professor Hacking is coming from. This knucklehead gives it 4 stars.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Are the Science Wars a Social Construction?, Mar 31 2003
By Kevin Currie-Knight "Education Grad Student" (Newark, Delaware) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
Like many people might, I looked at the title of this one and fell in love. "Social construction of what?" I'm in, I said to myself, for a great 'take em down' kind of book a la Dawkins and Sokal and, honestly, I love those kind of books. Well, I used to; untill Hacking took all the fun out!!

Why do I say that? Because I've been fooled all these years by gross caricaturizations of social constructionism (which, as were told, ALWAYS must be synonymous with relativism). This book, the only neutral one I've seen, is devoted to explaining, I think, to both sides of the debate (if you want to call it that!) that there is much more middle ground than is realized. Like most answers to most questions, the most likely answer to "Are you a social constructivist?" should be "It depends on the circumstance".

Hacking, a philosopher of science, goes through different meanings of social construction: on the less contreversial side, we have laws and I.Q. Not many will say these aren't real in the sense that they work, but besides that they don't really exist. You can't hold them, directly observe them; they are social tools. In the middle, you have mental disorders and averages. Like the others, they don't exist outside of our classification of them. (one might make a case for mental retardiation, but ask five psychiatrists what "schizophrenia" is and you will get five different answers). The most contreversial, of course, are things like gender and physical matter. Both of these things are observable, thus, it is hard t osee how social construction can change anything with them. Hacking calmly explains how some people suggest you can.

Anyhow, Hackings point is that most of us, however small a degree, are social constructionists about something; we just didn't know it. For my part, on Hackings three part quiz (try it, you'll like it!) I scored a 4-5-1. I never would've realized that by reading more of the polarized books about the science wars and the straw-men therein. Makes me woner...Are the science wars social constructs?....

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