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Gender in the Merovingian World

Saturday, 6 August 2016

Gender in the Merovingian World

In Tours, the holy woman Monegund had a little garden next to her cell where she could go to be alone (VP 19.1).  One day while she was there a woman was able to watch her from a neighbouring rooftop: ‘she gazed upon her importunely, filled with worldly desires’, and consequently went blind until Monegund healed her.  This is not the easiest passage to unravel.  Who was filled with worldly cares – Monegund or the importunely watching woman – is not entirely clear; what exactly the worldly cares were and what the transgression was that robbed the woman of her sight are likewise fairly obscure.  These ambiguities, however, have surely been present to any readers of or listeners to this text and, as Derrida (1967/1997) showed, no text has a stable, originary meaning, present to itself.  This – decidedly queer – tale raises interesting and important aspects of gender in the Merovingian world.

Gender remains an understudied area of early Frankish social history and, indeed, of early medieval history in general.  Thirty years after Joan Scott’s (1986) classic paper on gender as a useful category of historical analysis, which set out so clearly the difference between women’s history and gender history, early medieval historians remain – in relation to students of other disciplines and periods within the broad church of medieval studies – comparatively unsubtle investigators of the topic. ‘Gender’ is frequently still employed as a simple placeholder, signalling token comments about women.[1]   It is hard not to paraphrase Scott: my understanding of (for example) aristocratic patronage is not changed by the knowledge that women participated in it.  Analytical confusion remains about whether one is studying women’s history or gender history (e.g. Smith 2001; Nelson 2004; Hen 2004; etc.). Many articles putatively dealing with ‘gender’ treat women as a trans-historical or ahistorical category (egregiously, Nelson 1996, the continuing wide citation of which is indicative of the general conceptual malaise).  Although now examining masculinity as well as femininity (e.g. Hadley (ed.) 1999) early medieval historians have not (e.g. Halsall 1996; 2010a) moved on sufficiently from the idea that gender is the social construction placed upon the biological category of sex. Man and woman are timeless categories; only the way people write about or envisage them changes.

But, as Judith Butler (1999; 1993) showed, it is not so simple to separate biological sex from gender.  The way we inhabit our bodies and social space, and live our lives, is something negotiated, discursively, with society, however unconsciously, from the moment we enter the world of the Symbolic (on which see, e.g., Lacan 1978, p.238-375; Evans 1996, p.201-3).  The relationships between gender, biological sex and sexuality are not straightforward and there is no meaningful point in our lives at which we experience sex separately from gender.  The fundamentally bipolar scale of biological sex (genitalia, chromosomes, etc.) and the processes of human sexual reproduction do not and cannot in themselves determine sexuality or marital or family structures, not least because their perception and representations are as enmeshed in language as are the notions of sex, marriage, family, or idealised woman- or manhood.  Butler’s famous concept of performativity came not just from the idea of performance but also from the speech-act category of the performative: phrases (e.g. ‘I pronounce you man and wife’) which create the thing they describe (Butler 1999, p.185 is quite clear on this). It is thus not the case that a somehow natural ungendered or pre-gendered body performs gender as something extrinsic to itself, something which, unlike that notionally sexed but pre-gendered body, is contingent upon social and linguistic structures.  Gender is constituted in its performance; behind the mask is nothing or – rather – only another mask (Deleuze 1994, p.27-30).  Philosophically, this is old news and has not gone unchallenged (Copjec 1994), but it is indicative of early medieval history’s resistance to ‘theory’ that this has yet to make much impact on our subject.
Smith (2004), for example, mentions Butler’s notion of performativity once (2004, p.17), but seems to have misunderstood it, to mean performance.

Identification is an ‘enacted fantasy’ (Butler 1999, p.185).  All identities are structured ultimately by fantasy and desire: a mental image of what the identity-ideal might mean in terms of its relations with people of other identities, and a desire to occupy that space.  That means behaving towards people of other identities in particular fashion, in the manner that (one thinks) people expect, as well as in ways that might be thought best to achieve one’s own ends.  The motion towards this ideal can never be complete; however close one comes, one can never simply be the identity-ideal: thus the enactment of fantasy.

Consider another story from Gregory of Tours’ gallery of the unexpected: the case of the cross-dressing Poitevin at the tribunal of the rebellious nuns of Holy Cross (Histories 10.15). Nancy Partner (1993, p.418, 439) noted that Gregory describes this person as a man in woman’s clothing, not as a woman, but are we authorised to take that as any sort of basis for discussion, any more than we should take modern Republicans’ insistence that a transgendered person is a man ‘dressed up as a woman’ (Badash 2016)?  Are we permitted to refer to the Poitevin as ‘he’ rather than ‘she’ on Gregory’s say-so?  Whether the Poitevin lived her life as a woman or lived his life dressed as a woman is impossible to say.  Gregory reports that, when questioned, the Poitevin said that s/he had made the decision to dress as a woman because s/he was incapable of manly work (opus virile) but we cannot know what to make of this because the whole text, above all its evident distinction between biological sex and material cultural gender, is soaked in a gendered discourse of power.  One of the story’s attractions is that it is so undecidable at so many levels that trying to claim what Gregory, or the Poitevin, ‘really meant’ by any of the crucial phrases is quite pointless. In noting the story’s separation of the ‘man’ from the ‘clothing’ we are however presented with a difficult course to chart between the Scylla of essentialism and the Charybdis of endless, disabling relativism. How do we investigate agency or resistance to normative views?  How might we identify the difference between a man who dressed as a woman and a biological male who lived as a woman?

If this person was born anatomically male, that clearly did not determine the construction of his/her gender.  We do not know what was meant by the claimed incapacity to perform opus virile, or whether or how this related to her/his sexuality (Dailey 2015, p.000; Halsall forthcoming).  Thorpe’s somewhat misleading translation, upon which Partner (1993) relies too heavily, suggests that (qua man) the Poitevin was impotent.  If so, his gendering did not relate to his sexuality.  Perhaps he was married; perhaps his sexuality had little bearing on his decision to marry and try to raise a family.  Other sixth-century options visible in the story include gendering oneself as male, but refraining from all sexuality (as a monk or secular ecclesiastic), or as a married woman and similarly abstaining from sex (as a nun – married to Christ).   Even what we might suppose was the normative Frankish family unit, with a mother, father and children, was not the sole vehicle for socialisation.  The masculine child could leave his natal family and spend a long period either in another family household or in the overwhelmingly masculine society of a retinue (Halsall 2010a; 2010b).

The rebellious nuns’ accusation, that the Poitevin dressed to conceal his masculinity and thus work in a house of religious women (with no implications for his sexuality), adds yet a further dimension.  If we accept the bishops’ decision that the accusation was groundless and trust the Poitevin’s own account of the reasons for his/her costume, another unanswerable question arises: if identity is an ‘enacted fantasy’, what was the mental image or ego-ideal in question?  This story illustrates how anatomical sex, sexuality, gender, living arrangements, marriage and so on combine in a galaxy of historically-contingent ways.[2]

One advantage of studying northern Gaulish social history is, however, that while documentary sources are comparatively scarce a vast archive of material cultural data exists in hundreds of cemeteries and thousands of sixth- and seventh-century burials.[3] These have much to tell us, not least because the dead were commonly interred in an archaeologically-visible funerary costume, alongside various other artefacts – the whole (elements of clothing and the other items) referred to by the shorthand term grave-goods.   Most serious scholars have moved away from interpretations of this practice as either ‘Germanic’, ‘pagan’, or both (for critique, see Effros 2003; Brather 2004a).  Where skeletal data survive, intact burials allow us to compare a range of treatments of the body with their biological age and sex.  These allow us to separate (from our perspective) the Merovingian social treatment and experience of the body from its anatomical sex, physiological development (whether or not ever experienced separately from socio-linguistic categories) and so on.  This does not undermine Butler’s point but rather provides a way of further interrogating it in a past context. It does not solve the problems identified earlier but adds another critical perspective and an additional data-set.

As a further example, let us take Grave 32 at the cemetery of Ennery, in which a body sexed anthropologically as male was interred with objects – most notably a necklace – otherwise only found with biologically female skeletons (Simmer 1993, p.46-47; Halsall 1995, p.78-94; 2010b).  We cannot say whether the person known as ‘Ennery 32’ thought of himself as a man who dressed as a woman, or of herself as a woman, or was thought of as a woman by the community or as a man who dressed, or lived life, as a woman, or what their preference was (if any) for sexual partners (if any), or whether any link existed between that and the funerary costume.  It does not allow us to identify dominant and subversive readings (and say which was which), or by whom such opinions were held.  This case and others like it do, however, demonstrate that, while necessary to correct many fundamental errors at the time, the 1990s debate over whether the skeletal or the material evidence was ‘correct’ (e.g. Lucy 1997, Effros 2000) was theoretically misconceived.  Equally, Halsall’s (2010c) attempt to read ‘discrepancies’ between the two forms of data in terms of transgression is too unsubtle.

The sixth-century furnished burial ritual was a public event (Halsall 2010d, p.203-60).  Communal norms were important in determining the appropriate numbers and forms of goods deposited with the dead of different genders at particular stages of the life-cycle.  Thus, if the physical anthropology of Ennery 32 is correct (and there seems no good reason to doubt it), the implication is seemingly that someone born with male physical attributes was interred publicly in a way that permitted his/her identity and lifestyle to be reflected in how s/he was laid to rest before an audience.  That leaves many questions unanswerable but challenges modern ideas about what is ‘natural’, ‘traditional’ or ‘normal’ or that ground their references to the ‘natural’ and the ‘normal’ in claims about long-term European history, and does so without idealising the medieval past.  The funerary data also permit the exploration of change through time; the quantity of material recovered allows the dating of burials to roughly twenty-five-year periods (Périn 1980; Legoux, Périn & Vallet 2009).

The construction of gender had changed since the late Roman period.  Classical Roman gender construction had largely revolved around the notion of the civic Roman male, a single set of model behaviours concerned with moderation, self-control and so on.  Not only the female but also the barbarian and the animal revolved around this central focus, praised for closeness to it, derided for distance from it (Foxhall 2013 for excellent recent overview).  Whilst a barbarian might be able to perform masculine Romanness so effectively that his non-Roman origins were effaced, a woman (by which I mean anyone living a life as a woman) was apparently prevented by her sex from ever fully occupying that central position.  It would be wrong, however, to suppose that that central position was fixed or attainable even by men.  Classical civic masculinity concerned the citation of an always-unreachable ideal.  The implication of the fact that the single gendered ideal was masculine and performative is that its enactment distinguished the social actor from a set of characteristics that were gendered feminine.  In an inversion of de Beauvoir’s (2011, p.293) famous dictum one was not born a man but only ‘became’ one.  Implicit in Roman thought is the idea that (in modern terms) the default, ‘pre-social’ gender was feminine or, in terms more easily assimilable with Roman concepts, that outside this performance, while not everyone was a woman, everyone was ‘womanly’.

The cemetery archaeology’s implications are that this situation had changed by the early Merovingian period (see below).  The roots of this transformation should be sought in later fourth- and fifth-century shifts.  After the formal separation of the different branches of imperial service during the Tetrarchic period, a new, martial form of Roman masculinity seems to have emerged.  Late imperial military culture strongly suggests that the army began to develop new identities, stressing the opposite of the traditional model Roman male: barbarian and even animal (Halsall 2007, p.102-10).  However, this new masculinity required the older one to exist, to round out its symbolic context.  Both forms were, in the final analysis, based on Roman imperial legitimation.  The ‘martial model’ inverted civic masculine ideals but the efficaciousness of that strategy depended squarely upon those traditional ideals’ authority and prestige.  This ‘barbarizing’ identity, and the legitimacy of military and civil titles, also relied upon a link to the emperor who embodied military and civil office and both models of masculinity.  While (in a late Roman context) some could emphasize martial masculinity’s wild, fierce, animal, barbarian traits to imply a weakness in civic manhood, it always had to be remembered that anyone with an education would view such characteristics as lesser, uncivilized and womanly.  The traditional or orthodox concepts thus remained in place even as an alternative ‘reading’ of its symbols and bases (its citations, in Butler’s terms) emerged, which flagged up their implicit blind spots.

Employing Simon Critchley’s (2014) insights into Derridian philosophy, I have called this a deconstruction of classical gender (Halsall, forthcoming).  As stated, identity is a constant movement towards an ideal, so these renegotiations, oscillations and redefinitions of what such an unattainable object of identification was were crucially important in the lived gender of late and post-imperial people.  The situation I have described endured for a couple of generations beyond the deposition of Romulus ‘Augustulus’ because the post-imperial western kings continued to occupy, however notionally, positions within the imperial hierarchy and, like the emperor, to embody points at which civic and martial masculinities came together.

I would suggest that, by playing with and valorising the traditional civic male ideal’s ‘constitutive other’, this ‘oscillation’ within the masculine ideal enabled more actively idealised feminine traits to emerge, based more strongly around sex, the body and reproduction and thus not simply dependent upon the emulation of the male.  This, I suggest, is visible in the furnished inhumations, where two distinct artefact sets were employed to denote masculinity and femininity (Halsall 1995, p.79-83; Effros 2003, p.99-100, 154-63 for notes of caution; Halsall 2010b for response).

It is immediately clear that the feminine cluster of artefacts is composed, overwhelmingly, of costume or bodily adornments: brooches, earrings, hairpins, dress-pins, bracelets, necklaces.  Items that might be representative of female work – bread-cutters, weaving batons, spindle-whorls – are quite rare in a Frankish context and occur in what seem to be quite prestigious contexts.  It is also important to note that – with the important exception of weaponry – most earlier Merovingian technical and decorative expertise (especially in metalwork) was invested in items of female adornment.  Archaeologically-visible elements of sixth-century masculine costume, are usually relatively plain.  Written sources allude to jewelled or otherwise decorated belts in élite contexts, but we rarely find archaeological examples; the belt evidently did not need decoration for its symbolic weight.

The ontology of gender can be investigated through the material construction of the life-cycle, as revealed through grave-goods deposition, and the written sources’ sparse information read in the light of these more plentiful data.  The basic account can be fairly brief, and relates primarily to burial in sixth-century northern Gaul.[4]   In early childhood, the furnishing of burials made little recognition of the child’s sex.  The lack of stress in communal relations produced by a small child’s death (which should emphatically not be understood as equating with a lack of grief) meant that these burials were rarely the occasions for the expenditure of resources.  It is not unusual to find feminine artefacts in the burials of slightly older children, possibly reflecting the betrothal of the deceased child (betrothal as young as eight is attested in written sources: Venantius, Carmina 4.26).  The gendering (and indeed sexing) of the female child could then be brought about by the demands for marriage alliances that lay at the core of communal politics.  (In line with the foregoing discussion, the use of the terms male and female throughout the remainder of this chapter implies nothing about the anatomy of the person in question.) What has been called ‘interpellation’ into the gendered world (Butler 1993, p.xvii) may not have been decisive in the child’s earliest years.  It is worth noting that masculine items remain scarce in burials of subjects who died before puberty.  The exceptions invariably concern unusual and lavish burials of members of the élite (e.g. Werner 1964).  It might appear, on that basis, that aristocratic male children could be seen as sexed/gendered earlier than those of other levels of society.  This would have meant a very real difference in the experience of gender at different social levels.  It might, however, equally be that different demands of burial ritual, a need to mark a distinction from other social strata and different stresses caused by the death of a male heir, caused a young boy’s body to be gendered in his funeral in a way not necessarily reflected during his life.

The first major change in the construction of masculine and feminine identity occurred at puberty, when adolescent women were frequently interred with a wide range of feminine objects, most notably the jewellery mentioned above.  The Pactus Legis Salicae notes that the wergild of a woman of child-bearing age was three times that of a typical free, Frankish ingenuus (cp. PLS 24.8, 41.1).  Two clauses imply that this increase in legal value was triggered by the woman’s having begun to bear (or breast-feed) children (PLS 24.8: postquam coeperit infantes habere; 41.16: postquam ceperit nutrire), whereas another appears to see the woman’s value in terms of the victim being of an age where there was potential child-bearing, which it sees as beginning at twelve (PLS 65e). This evidence, alongside written references (including inscriptions), suggests that the onset of the menarche brought the immediate sexualisation of the female body, marriage and potential child-bearing.  The interpellation of a child into a fully sexed/gendered female role was sudden and brutal.  The comparatively high investment in the funeral display for women of this age presumably relates to the tension within community relations that their deaths might cause, undoing fairly recently-made marriage alliances when any children produced would have been very young.

The funerary record suggests that the masculine body remained ungendered at this age.  Weaponry is rarely found with the bodies of anatomical males in their teens, although other masculine items are occasionally present.  The difference from the feminine teenager is underlined by the fact that the Pactus marks a point of transition for males at twelve years.  It is the boy under twelve years who has the higher, 600-solidus wergild but who is also considered legally incapable (PLS 24.7).  Clearly, the law dealt with a young boy’s murder in terms of his potential to become a man. The superficial discrepancy between the legal and archaeological evidence is probably explained by the fact that the wergild relates to compensation for the damage done to a family by a killing, whereas the burial data are explained by the rift in social relationships between families caused by a death.  The transition to legal responsibility, seemingly at twelve, was marked by the first cutting of the boy’s hair – apparently making the male body visibly different from the female for the first time (PLS 24.2).  It is important to note, nonetheless, that the acquisition of legal responsibility and a non-feminine hair-style does not, according to the archaeologically-visible data at least, appear to have resulted in the full recognition of a masculine identity.  Even in the context of public ritual display, when we might expect gender distinctions and attendant costumes to have been made more visible, the deceased male was not strongly gendered.  Yet, young men’s sexual desires were well recognised by contemporaries.  Cassian (Institutes, 6.1) said that the spirit of fornication, against which a monk must strive, commenced its attacks with puberty.  It is noteworthy, however, that young male sexuality was less clear-cut.  Before twenty, sexual explorations between ‘boys’ could be treated as ‘games’ (ludi) and treated less severely than sexual relations between older men (Cummean Penitential, 10; see also Penitential of Theodore 1.2.4).  The funerary record is suggestive here too.  Double interments from the sixth-century cemetery of Ennery (‘graves’ 6 and 8: Simmer 1993, p.33, 37) and the seventh-century necropolis of Audun-le-Tiche (grave 103: Simmer 1988, p.50-53, 55), contain two males with their arms laid deliberately on top of each other (whether interlocked is difficult to say).  The subjects were all younger than about twenty.  Perhaps the somewhat ambivalent semiotics of the burial display (Halsall 2010c, p.347-9) were considered acceptable among men of this age-group.

Once into his twenties a male could expect to be buried with masculine items, including weaponry.  A more clearly gendered masculine identity could now be ascribed to the dead.  A male might by now have been serving in another household for some time, creating bonds between his family and the head of that household (Halsall 2010b).  It is likely, too, that he was betrothed.  As with younger women, his death could threaten a range of inter-familial relationships requiring their maintenance through the burial ritual.  Women dying at this stage of the life-cycle might, however, be buried with a larger overall number of grave-goods but with a less lavish display of bodily and costume adornments (see also Stauch 2008).  This stage of the female life-cycle appears to have lasted until about forty.  Again, the investment of resources in their burials should be seen in terms of the stress placed upon inter-familial alliances brought about by their deaths.  Even at forty, a woman’s eldest male children, and younger daughters, might still be unmarried, raising complicated questions about inheritance between the families involved (PLS 101, 110; Decretio Childeberti 1.1).

From about thirty, some males were buried with the full panoply of weaponry.  Evidence for male age of marriage is vague but on balance it seems that it was typically in the late twenties (Halsall 2010a).  Males dying between about thirty and sixty were typically the members of the early Merovingian community who received the most lavish interments, with numerous masculine items and other grave goods.   Explanation should again be sought in communal politics and in the synchronicity of the different generations’ life-cycles.  A man dying in his thirties or forties was probably married but his children, especially sons, would still be minors.  Even in his late forties, his eldest daughters would likely only recently have married and his eldest sons would be unlikely to be much older than twenty, well short of male marital age.  Given that marriage and fictive kin alliances around his daughters and sons were doubtless intended to secure his support or allegiance, his death questioned such ties.  Perhaps more importantly, his death left open the problem of succession as his eldest sons would not have established themselves sufficiently to inherit his communal standing.  The issues of his widow’s property and remarriage (PLS 44, 100) also pertained.  It is unsurprising, therefore, that the deaths of men of this age-group could necessitate the fullest ritual attention in feasting, gift-giving and the display of the family’s ability to lay their dead to rest in the most appropriate fashion.[5]  Importantly, the distinctions in the lavishness of male grave-furnishing become sharpest at this stage in the life-cycle.

Women older than about forty and men above sixty received far less attention in their grave-furnishing, mostly receiving interments that, like children’s, were ‘neutral’ in gendered terms.  While the burials of women above forty were sparsely furnished and rarely contained jewellery, male graves, though poorly furnished overall, occasionally included a weapon or other masculine items.  One should, however, hesitate before assuming a low esteem for old people on this basis.  The lack of investment in the archaeologically-visible elements of burials, as explained above, relates primarily to the relative lack of tension caused by deaths at this age, when children had reached maturity and established households and communal standing.  It is significant, nonetheless, that gender was more frequently marked in masculine burials than in female.

It is immediately apparent from this account that the experience of time itself was gendered.  Masculine and feminine life-cycles were constructed differently, with socialisation and sexualisation running at significantly different speeds.  It is noteworthy, too, how much more sexualised was the feminine life-course and how much more violently it was punctuated by gendered social expectations or by interpellation into the sex/gender system (on which, classically, Rubin 1975).  Feminine socialisation and the sexualisation of the female body were apparently simultaneous and rapid processes, supposedly occurring at the onset of the menarche.  This apparently physiological rule is immediately destabilised, however, by the Pactus’ displacement of the grounds for higher female legal status from the actuality of child-birth or breast-feeding into the potential for child-bearing, determined according to age-group (PLS 65.e).  The bearing of this upon female sexuality is unclear.  Same sex relations posed no threat to the legitimacy of children and a marriage was possibly considered to remain valid even if the woman ceased to cohabit with her husband.  Gregory (Histories 5.32) makes it clear that it was the rumour of a wife’s sexual relations with another man that brought about the violent dispute between two Parisian families; her leaving her husband is relegated to an ablative absolute sub-clause.

The female bodily adornment suggested by the grave-goods merits further reflection.  The indications are that the forms of clothing not normally archaeologically visible could also be highly decorated.  It is interesting to note the location of these items, mostly associated with the hand and arms, the breast and the hair (especially if tied up or covered, signifying marriage), the female bodily areas that Frankish law penalised touching (PLS 20.1-4, 104).  The unavailable female body is not concealed but highlighted.  Significantly, too, the costume which most emphasized these aspects began to be worn at puberty and was mostly set aside after forty: during the life-cycle stage wherein a woman’s wergild was three times higher than a freeman’s.  The law saw this as the age of the (legitimately) sexually-active woman.  The costume in which women were interred might be interpreted as symbolizing feminine ideals: the beautiful, chaste, good wife and mother.  Merovingian female status and identity were based solidly on reproductive sex and marriage.

Male socialisation took much longer, between puberty and about thirty (Halsall 2010b) and appears to have established a man’s right to marry and start a household.  It seems likely too that in the sixth century it was closely related to the acquisition of an ethnic identity, Roman or Frankish.  The Pactus (e.g. PLS 41) only assigns ethnicity to adult males.  Before about twenty it might also be that, as noted, male sexuality was given some latitude.  Although, by the sixth century, the martial, Frankish model was generally considered more dominant, various ideals of identity still existed.  The variation between burials with weapons and those without possibly relates to this and the divergence between lavishly- and poorly-furnished graves among males at this stage of the life-cycle could reflect the varying success with which males managed to achieve a fully gendered identity as the head of a household.  It is even possible that Gregory’s Poitevin chose his/her particular lifestyle as a result of the demands of that earlier phase of the life-cycle.  The crucial ‘citational’ points in the masculine life-cycle were, furthermore, much less (notionally) dependent upon physiological development and reproductive sexual practice. Again, these physiological or bodily developments should not be seen as neutral or pre-social canvasses upon which society inscribed gendered identities (Butler, 1993).

Significantly, before marriage, males were referred to as pueri (boys) regardless of physiological age (Halsall 2010b).  That this phase of the life-cycle could produce various models of masculinity is important.  As noted, the difference between mature adult males buried with weapons and those buried without might relate to ethnicity: Frankish identity was closely related to military service (Halsall 2003, p.46-48).  If the martial (Frankish) model of masculinity increasingly dominated, it nevertheless continued to relate primarily to the civic ideal represented by the free Roman male.  Traditionally, as described above, civic masculinity had been differentiated from a backdrop of ‘womanly’ characteristics, which the martial forms had in turn played upon and valorised.  Consequently, the two gendered ‘poles’ most visible in the archaeological record, the martial masculine and the feminine, were constructed not as binary oppositions but in relation to the civic masculine ideal, now weakening in its social importance.  This seemingly more ‘bipolar’ construction of gender, I suggest, opened up the space within which the anonymous Poitevin/e of Gregory’s Histories or Ennery 28 operated (Halsall, forthcoming).  The feminine was no longer necessarily the constitutive outside of the masculine.  Young males’ performance and citation of gender seems to have been much less ‘teleological’ than in female experience (Freeman 2010:4, 8, for teleological time).

Fifth-century developments in Christian attitudes to gender have been well discussed (e.g. Cooper & Leyser 2001).  The debate over, and trend towards, the absolute repudiation of sex was perhaps as yet less resolved in Gaul than elsewhere and the emphasis upon chastity and abstinence produced a convergence of masculine and feminine ideals that resembled classical gender-construction. The Church might have been a repository for many of the old ideals of civic masculinity and classical gender as the martial model became more dominant in secular life.  Many sixth-century bishops entered the church after a secular career, marriage and children.  A good example is Gregory of Langres who entered the church after a long career as a comes (VP 7.1; Wemple 1985, p.132-6 for a useful survey of the earlier Merovingian church’s ambivalent attitude to married clergy).  Unsurprisingly, the principal virtues in claiming ecclesiastical and religious authority were moderation and continence rather than asceticism. Gregory of Langres only had sexual relations with his wife for the purpose of procreation, according to his great-grandson, biographer and namesake (VP 7.1). 148 out of 293 recorded sixth-century saints are bishops (James 1982, p.55).  Although asceticism was well-known, the trend towards extreme, competitive, public renunciation noted elsewhere is far from dominant in early Merovingian religious life.  Seclusion, secrecy, modesty, and an especial worry about the vainglory that might beset ascetic virtuosi seems more heavily emphasised.  Gregory of Langres again furnishes an example. After his ordination he performed his asceticism in secret (VP 7.2).  The punishment of vainglorious (or potentially vainglorious) holy men is recorded (VP 15.2; Histories 4.34) and, famously, Vulfolaic’s attempt to emulate Syrian stylites in the Ardennes was quickly stifled by the local episcopate (Histories 8.15).  The flaws of those condemned as ‘false’ holy men doubtless included ‘showy’ asceticism (Histories, 9.6; 10.25).  Even the recluse Lupicinus’ excessive and ultimately fatal self-mortification was performed beyond public view, while walled up in a cave (VP 13.1). Some male holy men only decided to abandon the worldly possibilities of marriage and family during the long phase of pueritia.  Bracchio, Venantius, Patroclus and Leobardus all, according to Gregory, chose the religious life when faced with the social expectation that they would marry, during or at the end of this phase of the life-cycle, sometimes on their father’s death (VP 9.1, 12.2, 16.1, 20.1).  This further underlines the variety of models of gender and sexuality that were seemingly available to males at this age.

Many of the known sixth-century religious women (most of whom had royal connections) similarly had family lives before entering their religious vocation: Chlothild, Radegund, Ingitrude and Monegund.  Female monasticism was in its infancy and it was uncommon for young people to enter or be given to monasteries (De Jong 1996). Many holy women, like Ingitrude and Monegund, lived as individual religious or formed small communities of like-minded women near the great urban shrines, like that of Saint Martin, Tours.  Many such communities, like Ingitrude’s, did not survive their founder’s death and even large and prestigious houses like St John, Arles, or Holy Cross, Poitiers, could have chequered histories.  This was not, however, so different from contemporaneous male monasticism.  Early Merovingian models for female religious life were rarely provided by cloistered virgins.  The author of Saint Genovefa’s life, it has been pointed out (Wood 1988, p.378), found difficulty in finding an exemplar for a female vita, so that Genovefa appears rather episcopal (the bishop of Paris is a figure significantly absent from the text).  Over half of Venantius’ Vita Radegundae concerns her life before she secluded herself in her nunnery of Holy Cross.  Even the cult of the Virgin Mary seems not to have flourished in sixth-century Gaul. Gregory’s Glory of the Martyrs, for instance, contains very few miracles associated with her veneration (GM 8-10, 18-19).  Something like the single, masculine gendered ideal known in classical thought might have persisted in this sphere.  In the prologue to his life of Monegund (VP 19), Gregory tells us that the Lord provides holy examples of how to live: not just men but also women, who struggle ‘not feebly but manfully’ (non segniter sed viriliter), presumably accounting for Monegund’s inclusion among the ‘Fathers’.

Returning to the secular sphere, sixth-century masculine objects, apart from the – largely undecorated – belt, symbolised things that men did to or with things or other people: weapons, tools, flints, strike-a-lights, knives.  These have many implications for identity and personhood (see Cohen 2003).  By comparison, the highlighting of the female body suggested by the feminine grave-goods implies that woman was the object of the gaze.   Female identification was performed bodily, publicly, in the gaze of the community.  The ‘barbarian’ term Venantius used to describe the bejewelled costume that the saint laid aside when she renounced the world (and adequately describing that revealed by sixth-century grave-goods: ‘composita sermone ut loquar barbaro stapione’, Vita Radegundae 13.30) seems to mean ‘stepping out’ costume (McNamara, Halborg & Whatley (trans.) 1992, p.76, n.55).  Such visibility was doubtless not purely feminine; especially in northern Gaul, sixth-century society was very visible or ‘optic’, in which resources were heavily invested in public display and in which public ritual was crucial to the operation of society.  The local community, its politics and ‘structures’ were performed in front of an audience. The big cemeteries, the foci for the burial ritual discussed earlier, are one part of this.  The Pactus Legis Salicae stresses public performance as a strong component of legal procedure (PLS 46, 58, 60).  The investment of wealth in costume and display must go some way towards explaining the ephemeral traces of earlier Merovingian rural settlement.[6]    Although the sixth-century northern Gallic rural community might have been quite large, comprising several small settlements, it was nevertheless a very local arena (Halsall 2012).

This argument does not imply female passivity or a lack of status.  Although institutions or formal codes might be established by and for a masculine social élite, the everyday inhabitation of social spaces could create, in the interstices of the boundaries set out on such a ‘social map’, social standing and power (Halsall 1996, p.22-23).  Nevertheless, the evidence suggests that the motion of feminine identification in particular required performance in the gaze of others.  Ontologically, to be woman was inseparable from that visible occupation of a point in public space, in the communal gaze.  The implication of that might be that the female gaze differed subtly from the male, with the woman, instead of just looking, ‘seeing herself being seen’.  This would result in a form of bio-political control which could easily be imposed by women on other women.  In comparative perspective none of this is surprising, but it applied particularly in sixth-century Gaul.  It is interesting to compare that conclusion with the invisibility of women in so many of our documents.

Here we may return to Monegund, the Poitevin/e of the nuns’ tribunal and ‘Ennery 32’.  Whatever is going on in the story of Monegund and her neighbour, part of the problem is that the woman is looking. Whatever lay behind Gregory’s text, it is also clear that looking at a woman was almost impossible without some sort of thinking about sex or ‘worldly desires’ taking place.  This only underlines why female religious had to be taken out of the normal public arenas and enclosed (Dailey 2014).  This is in some ways underscored by cases like the Poitevin/e and the person buried at Ennery.  Both instances, as they are known to us, come from very public contexts: a tribunal in a civitas-capital (the Poitevin/e stepped forward coram omnibus: ‘in front of everyone’) and a burial ritual.  Lacking the overt references to the sexual body, Ennery 32’s costume would possibly be appropriate for a man who lived life dressed as a woman (Halsall 2010c, p.342-3).  Perhaps.  But by concentrating too heavily on a ‘transgressive’ interpretation, that reading ignores the important, if seemingly obvious, point that follows from Butler’s philosophy of gender: whatever the biological sex of the deceased’s bodily remains, someone who lived life as a woman and died between the ages of forty and sixty was, simply enough, buried in a costume appropriate for a woman aged between forty and sixty.  However, the deceased didn’t dress themselves for their funerals.  Ennery 32’s family (I assume) prepared and clothed the body for its burial, which must have meant that – assuming that the anthropological sexing is correct – they were well enough aware of the disjunction between the physical body and its social skin and were prepared to represent the latter in public display.  What does the expenditure of resources on this funeral display have to say to thesis that the lavishness of burial is related to the stress in society?  All we can do is throw out a series of questions and possibilities, and mistrust any attempt to close down or (hetero-)normalise them.

Important changes occurred around 600, including very significant transformations to the burial ritual (Halsall 1995, p.262-9).  Grave-goods declined and the relative investment in more permanent, above-ground commemoration increased; cemeteries became more numerous as earlier large sites ceased to be used by multiple settlements; the audience present at funerals probably declined commensurately.  These changes, surely related to the social hierarchy’s increased stability and the local élite’s security, clearly affect our evidence’s ability to answer questions about gender in the same way as before.  Nonetheless several issues deserve our attention.

The first is the shift in grave-goods to the masculine.  There is usually a marked relative decline in the number of burials marked by feminine grave-goods and in the number of types of grave-goods used to signify feminine identity (Halsall 1995, p.110-63).  Those that remain are often rather less ornate than before (Legoux, Périn & Vallet 2009).  By contrast, though weapons, the objects employed to signify at least one – probably dominant – form of masculinity in the sixth century, decline in numbers and variety, the percentage of adult male burials with at least a token weapon increases (e.g. Halsall 1995, p.134).  These aspects are surely interlinked.  More importantly for current purposes, at least some males begin to be buried in a more archaeologically visible costume, notably the great decorated plate-buckles that dominate the seventh-century Gaulish artefactual record (Lorren 2001; Legoux, Périn & Vallet 2009, p.32-35). Further, the most elaborate brooch-forms of the century, disc brooches with cabochons and filigree, can be found in masculine as well as feminine graves (e.g. Liéger, Marguet & Guillaume 1984).  Did seventh-century feminine attire really become as plain as the cemetery data suggest?  Maybe not.  Embroidered clothing, for instance, is rarely archaeologically visible (Vierck 1978; Effros 1996).  Women were possibly no longer buried in a costume that bore much relationship to formal attire in life.  This would nonetheless be significant and the change is not easy to explain away, even if it is yet more difficult to explain or describe with certainty.

Some points can nevertheless be made. The greater solidification of the social hierarchy and, compared with the sixth century, a consequent rise in the relative importance of descent and of male family- or lineage-heads seems to lie at the heart of the issue. We might, nevertheless, focus again on the issues of visibility and performance.  The later phase of the cemetery of Lavoye (Meuse) suggests that in the seventh century only one of the three different groups that had earlier used the site continued to do so for all of its burials (Halsall 1995, p.138-9, 141-2).  The others apparently interred mainly adult males at the site.  This might imply that, as the everyday social arena contracted to the still more local level of the individual settlement, political gatherings, whether at the level of the old community or higher, became more exclusively masculine affairs.  A possible development in seventh-century northern Gaul is the fragmentation of the former civitates into smaller pagus communities at a level between the old villae and the civitas (Halsall 2012).  Politics may have been played out, furthermore, to a greater extent away from the old public spaces of the cities and more in the private, or privatised, spaces of royal or aristocratic palaces or villas/estate centres, or rural monasteries.  This might have increased the political invisibility of most women.  Perhaps the masculine body now became something more crucially in the political gaze, and masculinity something performed rather differently than before.  We might consider the location of the greatest foci of display in masculine costume, the ever-larger, often lavishly-adorned plate-buckles and counter-plates, across the lower stomach.  Like the high, narrow-waisted doublets and full breeches of the late sixteenth and earlier seventeenth century, they might be read as highlighting virility.

Plate-buckles are not common in sixth-century graves and are found overwhelmingly in masculine burials (Lorren 2001, p.197).  When women began to wear these objects, they were initially small and plain.  Masculine versions then gradually became larger and more ornate as women begin to wear decorated plate-buckles.  This is an interesting dynamic.  One might suggest that as a hitherto masculine symbol was adopted by women, men redefined it, and so on.  Such a dynamic has many parallels. One is the way in which, as women began to be depicted in Roman funerary art with symbols of learning earlier only used to depict the model of a good father and husband, male sarcophagi began to show such things less and stress pastimes like hunting instead (Huskinson 1999).

Why did women start wearing hitherto masculine objects?  Perhaps this is another indication of the shift suggested earlier, back to a more ‘monopolar’ construction of gender.  The good wife, the good woman, has virtue demonstrated partly through masculine artefacts.  One might be able to move from there to consider the most lavish disc brooches in a similar light.  Rather than simply being a feminine accessory, these objects possibly transcend the normal plainness of female dress adjuncts to be as decorated as masculine brooches.  Grave 147 at Audun-le-Tiche buried in a clearly prestigious location and possibly even a founder-burial, might take on a different aspect (Simmer 1988, p.65-6, 68). This is one of the most lavish female graves of the cemetery, with unusual displays of jewellery. What is surprising, after a study of sixth-century graves, is that its occupant was an old woman.  But, if the postulated redefinition of gender around 600 is correct, it might be that the display here is not fundamentally primarily related to sex, reproduction and the family, as would have been the case earlier, and perhaps not an example either of how distinction in seventh-century funerary display was made by consciously breaking communal rules about the correct grave-goods or of the more straightforward display of familial wealth and standing (as argued by Halsall 1995, p.264-5).  The grave’s dimensions are exceptional, requiring more effort than usual for their construction.  Perhaps the recognition of female status had come to be based on other issues than marriage, sex and child-bearing.

Have we returned to something more like the Roman construction of gender?  The clearest difference between the two situations is that the martial model of masculinity is now dominant. Various factors including the spread of Frankish ethnicity had led to a shift in the ways of raising the army away from the ‘ethnically-based’ force of the sixth-century to an army based more on aristocratic retinues in the seventh (Halsall 2003, p.53-56).  This model was now, in important regards, more socially restricted, its performance confined to more select political gatherings of men.  Few if any women – indeed only a minority of men – could approach this ideal. In this connection it is noteworthy that the distinctly ‘virile’ figure of the Neustrian Queen Fredegund, leading her army to battle, belongs not to the sixth century, when she lived, but to the early eighth (LHF 36).  That was profoundly different from the classical situation.

However, another model, religious and consciously asexual, stood outside reproduction and the family.  The shifts that occurred in this area of Merovingian Gaul were subtle, but, at the risk of over-schematization, some suggestions are possible.  One aspect of the greater entrenchment of local aristocratic power around 600 was, as is well known, the increased focus on more organised rural monasticism, often, and too-simplistically, associated with the Irish holy man Columbanus (Fox 2014).  Away from towns and frequently less subject to effective episcopal domination, these houses became the foci for much of seventh-century Gaul’s secular as well as religious politics.  With grants of immunity, abbots could become almost as significant religious and political figures as bishops (Rosenwein 1999, p.59-96), while the estates with which their houses were endowed sometimes put them on a course towards equally land-owning importance.  Female rural monasteries often had a male house attached, not least to provide the nuns with officiants at mass.  Consequently, these ‘double-houses’ were often governed by women.

This flourishing and comparatively more stable monasticism possibly led to a greater level of entry into religious life during childhood or adolescence.  Some saints of traditional type are nevertheless recorded.  Saint Arnulf is unusual for having led a successful life as a warrior as well as a politician before becoming bishop of Metz (Vita Arnulfi 4-5) and eventually retiring to be a recluse in the Vosges. Nonetheless, many bishops, as before, entered the church after secular service: Eligius, Audoin and Desiderius of Cahors are famous examples.  Yet, marriage is rarely mentioned and, as with some sixth-century holy men, the crucial point seems to have come at the end of their period of unmarried apprenticeship: their pueritia.  Most of the famous abbots seem to have entered the church quite early.  If the period of pueritia had become more teleological in its gendered outcome, as the non-martial form of masculinity now dominated, sexual renunciation and the ecclesiastical life was perhaps the only alternative for those who could choose.  This limitation of gendered models was probably yet more acute for females if the suggested shift towards a more monopolar construction of gender is correct.  Chaste widows entering the religious life are attested in the seventh century (most famously with Saint Balthild) but the period’s saints’ lives are dominated by women who dedicated themselves to a virginal life early on, so that the struggles that occurred when their families’ demanded that they marry, become a common feature of the vitae.  Obviously, as more successful female houses were established and as many emerging Frankish noble families listed nuns and abbesses among their number, the availability of this gendered model increased exponentially.  It would be interesting to examine whether this was accompanied by a change in the significance of the cult of the Virgin, or whether the vitae of Roman virgin-martyrs circulated more than before.  Crucially, then, while the idealised ‘centre’ of the gendered secular world could never truly be occupied other than by a male, in the religious sphere, such a central role could be occupied, effectively, by a woman as well as a man.  It is small surprise that the seventh century was an age of great abbesses.

The roles and possibilities opened up by the performance of an identity can never remain fixed. The impossibility of stasis stems not only from the demands of, in Bourdieu’s terms, the habitus, of everyday coexistence, or the constant renegotiation of roles and statuses in Giddens’ theory of structuration, although this is clearly a major element.  It stems similarly from the fact that identities are not entities, but idealised, unattainable objects and so can never have a fixed, stable, authentic meaning.  As Derrida said in his classic (1988) discussion of performatives, the communication of such signifieds in daily performance always, through their iterability, risks miscommunication and slippage (see also Butler 1993).  There was no such single thing as medieval gender or a finite number of genders, and there was always scope for change, active renegotiation, play, transgression and, yes, repression (in all senses).  The everyday lived existence of the people of Merovingian northern Gaul between say 500 and 650 was constituted by gender and its performance.  Gender, reciprocally, delineated performance and went far beyond the simple construction of men and women.

More than that, the close analysis of Merovingian gender, in all its surprising malleability, changeability through time, and stubborn refusal to conform to the patterns that modern readers expect of ‘the medieval’, is a valuable political resource in the present, when so many politicians appeal to a mythical past ‘normality’ and ‘naturalness’ in order to attempt to fix modern sexuality and gender-relations in a particular mode.  The Merovingian case study tells us that there is nothing timeless and ‘natural’ about past gender and sexuality, other than the impossibility of keeping them in their place.

Endnotes

[1] Recently, e.g. Fox (2014, p.13): ‘The question of gender is another component of the same question. … [A]fter [Columbanus’] death women came to occupy an increasingly important place in the leadership of Columbanian communities’.

[2] This example illustrates the profound error committed by those who wish to label the chaste clergy a ‘third gender’, as though there are otherwise only two. McNamara (2002).

[3] For introductions in English to Merovingian cemeteries and their study, see Dierkens & Périn (1997); Périn (2002); Effros (2003).

[4] For fuller accounts, see Brather (2004b); (2005); (2008); Halsall (1995); (1996); (2010b); Lohrke (2004); Stauch (2008).

[5] Many of the famous early Merovingian ‘tombes de chef’ are of males of this age group such as the occupant of the famous grave 319 at Lavoye (Meuse) and the two ‘chefs’ (graves 11 and 13) recently excavated at Saint-Dizier: Joffroy (1974, pp.95-101); Truc & Paresys (2008).


[6] See, above all, Van Ossel (1992) and Peytremann (2003). Excellent overviews can be found in Burnouf et al., (2009), p.95-153, and Catteddu (2009), esp.p.25-87. In English, see Périn (2002); (2004); Zadora Rio (2003).

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Wednesday, 22 June 2016

What kind of Britain do you Imagine you Want?

The referendum: Everyone else in possession of a 'reckon' has had their say so, while there is time, I thought I'd have mine.

To cut to the chase, like the overwhelming majority of that part of the population whose education extends to degree-level or beyond, who is of a left-wing persuasion, tends to read the Guardian (if they read a paper at all) and is of my sort of age group or younger, I am firmly of the Remain persuasion.

That is not to say that the whole Remain campaign hasn't been a shambles.  The whole debate has been a sequence of ad hominem attacks, crude insults and glib scaremongering on both sides, which I suspect is what was bound to happen when you give political dialogue over to people (well, males anyway) whose education is of the private school/Oxbridge type.  In other words, when dialogue is dominated by people whose entire educational experience of debate is the confrontational, 'sparkly', point-scoring, debate-winning-at-any-cost format that is fostered by the Oxbridge tutorial system, rather than painstaking and careful reasoning. (It is of course this sort of yah-boo-sucks argument that makes up the Commons debate, PMQs etc: and the sort which - unsurprisingly - the equally private-school/Oxbridge-formed media commentariat praises as impressive or as 'winning' the exchange).

Ho hum.  So far, so normal.  But the lies, as a brief perusal of fact-checking groups like FullFact will confirm, have overwhelmingly come from the Brexit campaign. 

To recap just four:
As to the economy, who knows?  I don't.  But it is interesting that most people who do have some idea, don't think it'd be a great idea to leave the EU.  Consider The City.  Billions were wiped off share values and Sterling fell when Brexit scored a big lead in a poll.  Conversely, trading improved on a poll lead for Remain.  OK, you might say, that is the sort of stunt The City always pulls when it looks like it won't get its way - like every time a Labour government looks likely (and they say it's the Unions that hold the country to ransom...).  But think on.  What does the City fear from Labour?  Higher taxes on the rich, financial regulation of the City, a financial transactions (Robin Hood) tax, etc.  A post-Brexit Britain under Johnson, Farage (a former commodities trader after all) and the rest would be even less likely than the current government to introduce higher taxes, City regulation or a Robin Hood tax.  As far as special interests go, the interests of City 'fat cats' would if anything be safer under Brexit.  And yet the City still fears that Brexit would screw up the economy.

***

But who cares about any of this? Overwhelmingly, in a way that will have delighted Slavoj Zizek (because it amply confirms pretty much the only important idea he has had) these lies have remained almost impervious to actual fact.  As Zizek argued, things like xenophobia, anti-Semitism and racism - fear of immigrants - don't operate in the realm of the Symbolic (language, 'facts', etc) but in the realm of the Imaginary, so simple facts are almost incapable of challenging them.  As we have seen, actual facts have been dismissed as being 'more lies by the political elite', by lefty liberals, etc.  The outright lies peddled by Brexit have been parlayed somehow into an argument that 'both sides lie'...  And if both sides lie then you choose the argument that fits your prejudice.  'Schrodinger's Immigrant' who simultaneously takes your job and lazes around all day on benefits has featured overwhelmingly at the heart of this prejudice.  He is capable of featuring so strongly precisely because he does not (and cannot) exist; he is simply the imagined 'other'.  The 'other presumed to...'  who has everything you want but can't get (jobs but no work, money, women). 

This is not a figure who can be challenged effectively by Cameron because the only way of challenging his power is through the change of perspective that would focus attention on what is really screwing over the people who fear the immigrant of the Imaginary: neo-liberals like Cameron and his chums.  They are the people dismantling the NHS, ruining facilities though austerity, selling the country off to their friends and family.  The Blairite wing of the Labour party cannot challenge it because their policies of drifting ever right-ward and buying into the narrative of the 'threat' of immigration leaves it nowhere to go.

That said, far left-wing supporters of Brexit are just as deluded.  There are plenty of things about the EU that alarm me as a socialist (the treatment of Greece, TTIP, etc.) but the idea that pulling out of the EU will permit some sort of socialist alternative to appear in the UK is - in any currently envisagable world - nonsense.  Brexit will rupture the Union as Scotland demands separatism(1), leaving England in the perpetual grip of Tory governments.  The EU 'red tape' that Brexiters like Johnson want to scrap is the sort of red tape that preserves workers' rights, health and safety at work, and so on.  Brexit will, even in the very best-case scenario, give Johnson, Farage and the rest of the ideologically extreme neo-liberals three years to further erode the Welfare State, dismantle the NHS, frack under labour constituencies and so on before the next election.  See also my point about the City, above.  Being accused of wishful thinking is something that comes with the territory of being on the Left, but left-wing support for Brexit ('Lexit') is just downright suicidal.

***

If you have paid any attention to the debate, and especially if you are a 'Remainer', none of that will be any news or make any difference to your thinking, I suspect.  If you were undecided, though, allow me to appeal to the realm of the Imaginary.  What sort of Britain do you want to live in?

The worldly might of the Royal Navy in 1938. All
this is gone and never coming back
If you think you're going to get the British Empire back, or the days when Britain was on its own, a Great Power in the world, well you're not.  I am as proud as the next person of what Britain and the Empire did in the early 1940s, particularly between June 1940 and the end of 1941, and footage of Royal Navy battleships in line astern (right) makes even a liberal lefty like me feel a twang of national pride.  But those days are gone forever and, WWII aside, the British Empire was not, all in all, a Good Thing in any case.

What '1940', Churchill, Spitfires and the Royal Navy was ultimately all about though - and this is where the Right generally and the Eurosceptic Right in particular consistently mangles history - was about Britain being in Europe, fighting for Europe, as a better place, fighting against intolerance and racism. 

What Brexit has done is fuel precisely the opposite sentiment, fear about foreigners, immigrants - fears unsubstantiated by facts: indeed fears flying in the face of fact (see above) - in order to win its point.  It has argued for 'taking back control (in most cases control we already have - fact) from a shapeless figure of the wicked 'foreigner'.  It has stoked up fears of Muslims, of 'our' country swamped with brown-skinned refugees.  It has allowed its arguments to be used by far right groups like Britain First; it has essentially shared the platform with them, using fundamentally the same arguments.  There has been nastiness and divisiveness on both sides, it is true (which is one reason I dislike referenda so heartily) but the Brexit camp has shamelessly fished in the fetid waters of nationalism and racism and this has allowed people to portray those who fight for Remain, and for the rights of minorities as 'traitors'.  Last week's murder in Yorkshire was not politicised by Remain; it was already a political murder.  Claiming it had nothing to do with the Brexit debate is as politicising (more so) than wanting to fight for what Jo Cox believed.  This event had nothing to do with random loners with mental health issues.  I have mental health issues, about which, for many reasons, I make no secret but the Remain vocabulary has not prompted me to call Brexiters 'traitors' or issue death threats or want to go out and kill its campaigners, not even (to my shame) Katie Hopkins. Death threats have now been received by Yvette Cooper.  An elderly man has been attacked for handing out Remain leaflets (2) 

A Brexit vote is not a racist vote - let's be clear.  There are plenty of legitimate reasons (quite mistaken in my view, but legitimate all the same) to vote Brexit.  The Brexiters have, however, knowingly opened a Pandora's box of racist, petty nationalist unpleasantness and allowed its contents to spew across the political landscape. I am not a big fan of Billy Bragg but I will paraphrase his apparent comment (I can't now find the quote) that 'not everyone who votes for Brexit is a racist, but all the racists will vote for Brexit.'  All the nastiest elements of British politics - UKIP, Britain First, National Action, the EDL and the rest - have supported Brexit and have made arguments that are only mildly more extreme than those spewed out by their more intelligent allies and leaders, Farage, Johnson and the others.

Make no mistake, all those people will feel that a Brexit vote tomorrow legitimises their views and their actions.  A Brexit vote will make those people feel that their views are normalised and acceptable and after Brexit all that will be difficult, indeed, impossible, to get back in the box (and a post-Brexit separate Scotland will be no less petty nationalist). 

If you are undecided, ask yourself this one question: is that a Britain you want to inhabit?

***

Notes:
1: N.b.: The SNP government in Holyrood has done even less to prevent inequality than the Tory government in Westminster.

2: In Carlisle, on England Street, ironically enough.




Wednesday, 15 June 2016

Thinking about identity in early medieval archaeology

[A couple of weeks ago I travelled to Ghent to give a lecture to their cohort of archaeology doctoral students as part of a course on theory in archaeology.  My great thanks to Roald Docter and Maxime Poulain for the invitation and for an extremely pleasant evening, and to the students for their questions and discussion.  I have posted the text of the lecture not because it is in any way profound or original, or possibly even interesting, but just in case it is of any use to anyone pondering these issues.]

1.      Introduction
a.   What I am going to do today is take you, in a way, on a journey through my own thinking about how we ought to conceive of identity and go about exploring it in the archaeological record.  I am going to start by setting the scene with a brief overview of the ways in which identities were thought about in early medieval archaeology up to about the 1980s in the UK, when I started my own research, and which have persisted in many area (including in the UK) after that.  Then I will describe my approach to the study of identities and their place in social history, as it was in my own PhD, the book based upon it and as it was developed in my work, and others’, up until about 2010.  After that I want to make a brief critique of that way of looking at the subject, before setting out how I have – I hope – refined my thinking about identities since then.

b.   I am going to be talking mostly about the evidence of early medieval cemeteries – mainly sixth-century cemeteries and mainly in what I call ‘northern Gaul’ – but I will make some reference to other areas of archaeological research, most notably in settlements and particular types of artefact.  The cemetery archaeology of the early middle ages does provide an exceptionally fruitful avenue into the subject because the practice of burying the dead with grave-goods in the sixth century meant that we have some means of associating people of various genders and stages of the life cycle with particular types of objects and other aspects of the material cultural record.  We can compare those with other sets of associations and perhaps begin to explore the issue of identity and how it changed through time and space.  We can discuss how this might compare with other periods and places

c.     Before I start, though, I want to address the obvious criticism of the topic, which is that modern scholars work a lot on identities, but did past people care as much?  Certainly it can be argued that early medieval people did not say very much about identities, and nor do modern people, outside academia.  But they did not say very much about a lot of things that modern scholars obsess over, such as gender, ethnicity, social age, or sometimes even aristocracy or nobility.  The only social categories that they wrote much about were ones with precise legal importance, status that had implications for property and legal rights.  But I want to suggest that concepts of identity are implicated in all manner of everyday dealings and lie at the heart of social change and the lived experience of past (and present) people, even if they are rarely articulated as such.

2.      Brief historiography of identities in archaeology
a.      Cemetery archaeology
As just mentioned, the archaeology of early medieval cemeteries is a fruitful area in which to explore identities and these types of evidence have indeed been associated with particular types of identity since the earliest days of early medieval archaeology in Europe.  I will briefly run through these for those who do not specialise in this archaeology.

                                                              i.      Ethnicity
Probably the oldest, most venerable form of identity which the cemetery archaeology has been  employed to study is ethnicity.  This is largely because of a historical narrative that sees the Europe of the fifth and sixth centuries as dominated by the migration of peoples (Völkerwanderung).  New peoples from Germania established themselves in the former provinces of the western Roman Empire and it was thought that the archaeology of the period could illustrate this process.  Burials with grave-goods, especially weaponry and jewellery, were thought to be those of immigrant germani; those without were believed to be the graves of native Romans, Romano-Britons, or Gallo-Romans.

Additionally, within the graves with grave-goods, it was felt that particular styles of object could be linked with particular ethnic groups: Franks, Alamans, Saxons, and so on.

This was of course no more than an extension of the widespread archaeological belief in ‘Culture-Groups’ that could be given a significance as relating to ‘peoples’, that was common in other periods, prehistoric and ‘protohistoric’. 

These ideas are still common in some early medieval archaeology, although they have been extensively critiqued for the past twenty years and more.  Sebastian Brather’s monumental volume on ethnic identity summarises a lot of this work and should have put an end to it, but it has received something of a backlash from traditional German archaeologists, encouraged by much-publicised work by British historians of a conservative bent, and in alliance with the misuse of DNA to – allegedly – explore ethnicity.

Suffice it to say that the empirical basis for any association of the rite of furnished inhumation – burial with grave-goods – with Germanic-speaking barbarians is all but non-existent.  It must also be conceded that artefacts cannot possibly have an ethnic identity in and of themselves.  If there is an ‘ethnic’ symbolic content to these burials it needs to be examined in a much more subtle fashion and it needs to be demonstrated, rather than assumed.

                                                             ii.      Religion
Closely related to the ‘ethnic’ reading of these burials is a ‘religious’ one.  The rite of burial with grave-goods has often been assumed to be a ‘pagan’ ritual, so that graves with goods have been thought to be the burials of pagans while those without have been assumed to be the resting places of Christians.  In 1975, Bailey K. Young published his PhD thesis, which was a close and detailed exploration of the links between grave-furnishing and specific religious belief especially in an early medieval European setting but with much use of comparative material.  He demonstrated amply that there was no demonstrable link at all that could be assumed between grave-goods and non-Christian belief.  The Church passed a reasonable corpus of legislation about burial in this period but never outlawed the deposition of grave-goods, other than church property, even if some Christian theologians believed that the rite was pointless.  In addition to that, there were burials with grave-goods, sometimes with lavish grave-goods, under churches, known from both written sources and archaeological excavations: the famous burials under Cologne Cathedral and St-Denis in what are now the suburbs of Paris are classic instances of the latter.  Gregory of Tours describes a burial in a church with ‘much gold and a profusion of ornaments’ – without any critical comment – in his Histories.

All this – like Brather’s book on ethnic identity – should have killed off the links between burials with grave-goods and those without and pagans and Christians respectively, but the idea continues to refuse to go away.  One case that might concern us today concerns Martin Carver’s proposal that the Sutton Hoo ship burial and graves like it might be a conscious expression of an anti-Christian stance in the context of early seventh-century England – the period of Christian conversion.  Robert Van Noort has attempted to extend the theory to mound burials on the periphery of the Frankish world.  This is an interesting idea but it suffers from a mass of empirical problems and has been much criticised – although Carver continues to repeat it.

There may be other means of detecting religious identity in early medieval burials but, again, they require a much subtler analysis that demonstrates the links rather than assumes them a priori.

                                                           iii.      Rank and status
The third heading under which Early medieval burials were linked with social identities was ‘rank and status’.  If the inhumation rite could be understood as determined by ethnic custom and/or non-Christian religious belief, then what did the differences in furnishing signify?

The obvious answer seemed to be that they marked differences in wealth.  That does not seem an outrageous suggestion, especially if looking at the most lavish ends of the spectrum.  Archaeologists like Rainer Christlein proposed particular classifications of burials according to wealth and the types of object in them.  The most famous of these Qualitätsgruppen is Group C, which was held to be the graves of the aristocracy, and especially – in a northern Gallic context – an incoming Frankish or Alamannic aristocracy connected with the new barbarian kings of the period.

Other attempts to read status- or rank-based identities from the graves were rather less subtle and made simple linkages between particular combinations of artefacts and the legal statuses attested in post-imperial law codes like Salic Law.  In these readings a sword, spear and shield might indicate a nobleman, a sword and a spear a freeman, a scramasax or spear alone a half freeman and no weapons a slave. 

The problems of these sorts of reading are many, if the evidence is looked at closely or comparisons are made across time and place.  They would lead to the suggestion that Alamannia had a lot more aristocrats than Francia, but Bavaria was largely occupied by slaves, for example.  It would seem that there were far more aristocrats in the sixth century than the seventh and that by the late seventh century almost everyone in northern Gaul and Germany, and most of Anglo-Saxon England, had become a slave.  If one looked at the age of the deceased, it would seem that one was a slave in childhood, became a freeman in early adulthood before achieving nobility between the ages of 30 and 40 and dropping back into half-freedom or even slavery in old age!

Clearly these sorts of reading were difficult to maintain but even Christlein’s more empirically-based, less prescriptive proposition had its problems, when viewed in that sort of detailed and comparative perspective.  Most importantly, it did not really explain why aristocrats would want to deposit that quantity and qualitative level of material in their burials if their position in society was as established as he seemed to want to imply.  To answer that, as noted earlier, it had to fall back on a religious or ethnic explanation for the rite, which was – as I have suggested – unsatisfactory.

                                                           iv.      Sex/Gender
The last area where one could read identities from the burial goods was sex and gender – although what the distinction between these categories might be remained unclear.  This is in some regards the least problematic of the readings.  There does seem to be a distinction between graves buried with certain items of jewellery or dress adornments – brooches, bracelets, earrings, hairpins, necklaces and so on – and those buried with weaponry.  It does seem to be the norm that the former group are the graves of females and the latter those of men.  This is, overall, the case, but it is far less straightforward than that makes it seem, as we shall see.  Much early work made a lot of assumptions that were not tested, assuming that knives counted as weapons, or that certain forms of beads were always feminine jewellery, without considering the evidence of the bones.  These assumptions are much more problematic and have to be rejected.  Similarly, sometimes the bones themselves were sexed on the basis of the artefacts, which is inadmissible.  It was noted that far from all burials had either weapons or jewellery, so the link between furnishing and biological sex had to be more complex than might have been assumed.

Finally, the question had to be posed, as for the aristocratic graves, of why people would be buried like this.  Why did some people (but not others) have their sex marked in burial?

For an extensive, detailed and critical review of all of these early attempts to read identities from the graves of early medieval western Europe, you can do no better than read Bonnie Effros’ book, Merovingian Mortuary Archaeology and the Making of the Middle Ages (2003).


b.      Artefacts
I have mentioned at various points the ways in which certain types of artefact in graves were assumed to be indicators of identity: ethnic, religious, class or gendered.  But artefacts might have other connections with identities.  Ceramics for example might have connections with processes of food-production that are gendered or which are held to be constitutive of a particular ethnic world view.  They might also, in the case of expensive imports, or the containers of expensive imported food or drink, be markers of wealth and status.  Such aspects have been – with the exception of imports – less thoroughly explored in early medieval archaeology than in other areas.  There may be a lot more to be gained from them but these areas are difficult to establish from the archaeological record.  I am not going to be saying much about them today.

c.       Settlements
Forms of settlement have also had particular types of identity attached to them in early medieval archaeology.  The settlement forms that emerge in the north-west of Europe around the end of the Western Roman Empire, with timber halls and sunken huts – Grubenhäuser – have also often been assumed to be markers of the settlement of incoming Germanic-speaking barbarians.  This probably remains the most widespread area where ethnicity is read into the excavated record in a straightforward way.  It is, however, problematic.  As the archaeology of rural settlements has become more evenly distributed across western Europe a straightforward link between these building types and barbarian incomers has seemed ever-less plausible.  The ways in which cultural influences spread between the Roman Empire and barbaricum are probably much more complex and interesting than used to be assumed.  Quite how a building expressed an identity is also worthy of more detailed consideration.  I will return to this question briefly at the end.

3.      The approach in Settlement and Social Organisation, and after.
a.      Background
This more or less sets out the state of play when I started my PhD in the mid-late 1980s, although, as I have mentioned, some of these issues have not changed as much as one would have liked since then.  My research project was on the Merovingian diocese of Metz.  It had no especial focus other than a survey of its history and archaeology but luckily there was the cemetery of Ennery (Moselle) which had a physical anthropological study as well as what seemed to be reasonably reliable recording of the burial assemblages, and that allowed me to start to formulate some ideas.  At that stage there was very little published work on French rural settlement archaeology – one of a number of areas of French archaeology which have changed enormously for the better since then.

By way of background, the debate on Anglo-Saxon cemeteries at that date had suggested that there might be gender-specific ‘kits’ for men and women, so I started off by exploring this issue.  I saw that one could separate out the grave-goods into two groups that were never found together and that these two groups were associated with biologically male and female skeletons.  It was noticing that the most heavily gendered burials were those of particular age groups that set me off onto looking at social age and the life cycle and creating a model that could be explored with other cemeteries.

b.      Reading the cemetery data as active
Crucial to my reading was the notion that had emerged in the then-current post-processual archaeology in the UK that the archaeological record was actively and meaningfully created, rather than being a simple, passive reflection of past society.  I wanted to know why people would bury the dead with grave-goods, especially as the ethnic and religious readings seemed to me to be insufficient explanations of the practice.

The idea that the grave-goods revealed a straightforward, passive, functional picture of the dead person was also being criticised at that point.  Heinrich Härke, for example, had argued at length that not everyone who was buried with weapons could have been a warrior in life.

But it nevertheless seemed plausible that the grave-goods presented an idealised picture of what someone of a particular age and sex might have been like.  The effort expended on the furnishing of the grave, I argued in various articles, was linked to the stress in local society brought about by the death in question.  Thus the burials which contained the most lavish grave-goods displays were typically those of women in their teens, who we might assume – on the basis of written data – were of marriageable age or married, women between 20 and 40, who we might assume had died before their children had reached the legal age of majority, and men between the ages of 40 and 60 – later work suggested that the ages of 30-50 might have been more significant – who had died before their sons had married and settled down.  The ideas about marriageable age of men and women were largely drawn from contemporary Frankish written sources.  Tying the grave-goods display to the life cycle, to marriages and other alliances between families and to issues of inheritance allowed one to understand the blurred edges of the categories created.  It seemed furthermore that claims to a higher standing in the community were made by exaggerating the norms of what was suitable for particular people.  If, for example, young adult males were appropriately buried with weaponry, spears for example, then a family would show its status by burying a young adult male member with several spears or multiple types of weapon.  If young adult women were buried with jewellery, they buried a dead young woman with lots of jewellery, or with jewellery of high value.

A couple of other issues need to be mentioned.  The first was that this evidence was a sign of significant social competition at the local level, which I have associated with the collapse of the Roman land-holding pattern in the region, the villas and the imperial estates, in the crisis around AD 400 and afterwards.  That meant that it was a manifestation of identities that might only be archaeologically visible in certain circumstances, and not generalisable to other times and places in the broader early medieval period.  One objective of my work was to show that evidence – written and excavated – needed to be kept rigidly within its geographical and chronological context.

The second issue was that this manifestation was related to those aspects of status which were of importance in producing the burial evidence itself: in other words, they only related to aspects of identity which were made visible when a death created tensions within or between families that needed to be smoothed over via the burial ritual.  I suggested, for example, that while the deaths of women over 40, or old people did not case this kind of stress and thus were not marked with the sorts of display appropriate to other groups, status and respect might have been manifested in other ways, such as the construction of the tomb. It did not necessarily mean that there were no forms of higher status available to people of those age-groups.

The fortunate thing about working on Merovingian Gaul was that there was sufficient written data relating to age, gender, marriage and inheritance, and on ideas about the different stages of the life cycle to compare with the archaeological pattern and, using the two together, produce a rounded image of society and to make the assumption plausible that the images of particular social groups that one might extrapolate from the patterning in the cemetery data could be related to idealised pictures of the social roles and standing of people of those groups.

c.       Links and barriers on the social map
The way I moved from the data drawn from the cemeteries, combined with a separate study of the written data for the period, to think about identities and social status was by means of thinking in terms of links and barriers.  A link was a shared identity, which could be stressed when trying to forge a bond or common cause with another social actor.  A barrier was something that could be raised to stress difference with another person, to create social distance, to reject claims at a common interest, and so on.

To illustrate this I employed a provisional vocabulary of vertical, horizontal and diagonal barriers, to refer to barriers raised by different gender, rank and other aspects such as kin-group ethnicity religion. Every person stands at a unique intersection of these barriers or, better, a space delineated by them on what I called the social ‘map’.  In this thinking, I was motivated by a desire to question the assumption that early medieval people only thought of themselves as members of groups; it seemed to me that an individual (I will come back to the issue of individuals or individuality) was always a member of a number of different groups simultaneously. 

Someone could be, for example, a young adult male, legally not a slave or half-free person, claiming a Frankish ethnic identity, a Christian, a member of a particular kindred by blood, with certain other kin relations by marriage and other forms fictive kinship, a member of some other person’s household or following.

I used the analogy of choosing to play a card from a ‘hand’ that you had been dealt during a game of cards.  Some cards one would have from birth, others might be acquired or lost during the course of a life-time, or even changed for others.  An identity in this context would be one of these cards, ‘played’ in social interaction.  It would raise a barrier or stress a likeness or bond depending upon the aim of the individual.

We could, to take a specific historical example, look at the relations between Gregory of Tours and the count of Tours, Leudast, which Gregory describes in his Histories.  The two had many shared identities or statuses but also a number of different ones.  As things were, they chose to stress the things that emphasised difference, but they could instead, had they so desired, have focused on the things they had in common.

d.      Dynamism
What I wanted to do with this model, however, was not just to stress the agency of the people of the time but also find a way of explaining change through time, because it was quite clear that things did change during the Merovingian period.

To this end I employed the work of the French sociologist, ethnologist and philosopher Pierre Bourdieu and the British sociologist Anthony Giddens.  Bourdieu’s ‘theory of practice, especially the concept of the  Habitus, and Giddens’ concept of structuration seemed especially helpful in thinking about the relationship between agency, structures and rules. 

What seemed especially pertinent was the stress laid by these two thinkers on the ways in which structures generate action as well as constraining it.  The structures or the rules were themselves created by the cumulative knowledge of what the correct or the wrong way was for a person of one ‘identity’ to relate to someone of another specified ‘identity’.  Thus,  implications of the ‘barriers’ on the ‘map’ were in effect performed by people.  Every modification that was accepted rather than chastised, however subtle and whether towards a weakening or strengthening of divides, added itself to a ‘memory bank’ of correct interactions.  The nature of identities and the barriers they raised, their social worth or the sorts of status they brought and in which situations, was thus constantly renegotiated, however subtly.  The ‘map’, therefore, was more or less impossible to fix in a particular form.

4.      A critique of all that
a.      I now want to critique that position and point out some areas where it was problematic – if you haven’t spotted them already! First of all, it was a very functional way of thinking. Much of the model was sociological – Weberian, with a dash of Gary Runciman and Michael Mann – in its inspiration and formulation and was concerned with how people achieve aims vis-à-vis other people.  It was concerned with status and power in that perhaps slightly confrontational fashion. It was principally a theory of status, value, worth and social roles.

b.      Following on from that, the model seemed to work according to the idea that identity was a stable entity that could be communicated more or less unproblematically in social relations.  It implied that identities were not only things that you had but also things that you were in a fairly straightforward way.

c.    This meant that there was a sense of free choice in the deployment of identity, as is clear in the card-playing analogy.  You picked an identity and invoked the power that went with it in achieving your aims.

d.  This implied a limited thinking about what power was, restricted simply to inter-personal relations and with a strictly utilitarian focus.  This limitation should have been clear from a closer study of some of the theoretical works that I based my thinking on.

e.      What an identity was, therefore, was not properly critiqued or theorised. Given that it was explicitly claimed in Settlement and Social Organisation that social change were sought in the ‘interplay of identities’ this was quite a serious problem but I don’t think that this was untypical.  A great deal of work in early medieval studies, historical and archaeological, over the past twenty years, has been overtly concerned with identity but with similarly little theorisation.  It similarly sees identity as an unproblematic category.

f.     Finally, I think I was too concerned with the notion of the individual, as opposed to the member of a group.  As I noted earlier, I wanted to query the idea that medieval people only thought of themselves as members of collectives, but I think that I moved to far in the direction of the individual.  This – the individual – is a notion that I would now reject as a product of modern western capitalist thinking.  I do not accept that medieval people had no notion of themselves other than as group members, and I continue to see them as each standing at the intersection of a number of different groups, but I think that the notion of identity itself undercuts  the idea of individuality.  As I will come back to discuss, the idea of an identity implies something shared with others.  As the Argentinian philosopher Miguel Benasayag has written in his critiques of the idea of the individual, these shared identities act as parts of the self which reaches out to incorporate others.  For this and other reasons to which I will return, the social actor is very much ‘dividual’, that is to say the social self can be divided into a number of dimensions.

g.      I do not wish to suggest that the things stressed in my earlier thinking on this subject do not matter or are wholly wrong, but that they need to be re-thought and built upon or refined.

5.      Philosophical Approaches
a.      If the theory I was working with in the 1990s and 2000s was mostly sociological in its inspiration, the work I have drawn upon more recently, in revising it, has been much more heavily based upon philosophy and, to some extent, psychoanalysis.  These approaches have been very important for my own work, because they have pointed up the shortcomings not only of my own work but also of early medieval studies in general.

b.      Michel Foucault
The first approach that I want to mention is the one that I still need to think most about.  This might seem odd, given that the work of Michel Foucault has been ‘domesticated’ by historians and archaeologists for so many years now, to the extent that in many areas historians mention Foucauldian thinking as a preamble to critiquing and moving beyond it.  It has almost become a mainstream, fairly traditional approach.

I read some Foucault early on in my research but I appear to have taken his ideas on board rather more in my general thinking about the world than in my actual academic work.  Yet there are at least two main areas where I need to revisit Foucault and make more explicit use of his thinking.  The first concerns power and discourse.  The conceptualisation of power in my early work, as I said a moment ago, is too narrowly utilitarian and directly, consciously interpersonal.  Such power exists, of course, and it is the power one notices, but if I had made more use of Foucault’s thinking on discourse and how networks of power exist in the very ways in which the world is organised and spoken about, and about how a social actor positions him or herself, this would have modified that view of interpersonal action in important ways.  I am currently working upon a study of western Europe around 600 and, although this period of change – and its importance – was something that I had recognised and spoken about in the early 1990s, it occurs to me now that it might more helpfully be examined, partly at least, in Foucauldian terms as a change in episteme.  The bases upon which the world was classified and in which those classifications were imbued with power changed importantly in the late sixth century.

The second area where I have recently realised that I need to take Foucault more into account is the body.  As with the networks of unspoken power, this is something that really ought to have been apparent from the reading I did of Bourdieu.  One of the key elements of Bourdieu’s notion of the habitus is that it is spatial and bodily; it is not a simple matter of being a particular category; one occupies space and disposes one’s body in such a way as to create that identity or category.  Similarly, the way that space is organised produces identities.  I will come back to these issues of ‘bio-power’.

c.       Jacques Lacan
More significant for the ways I have revised my thinking about identity in recent years has been the work of the psychoanalyst and philosopher Jacques Lacan.  Lacan’s work has been influential in many areas of the humanities, most notably, perhaps, in literature and tends to produce almost hysterical reactions on the part of historicists whenever his name is mentioned.  It was largely this sort of reaction that led me to suspect that Lacan must have something to say that was worth reading, if only to see what all the fuss was about!

The important thing that I have taken away from reading Lacan and especially work by Lacanians like Slavoj Zizek, is the way that an identity is not something that one can be said to be or to possess but something that one wants to be or possess.  Identity, therefore, is a motion towards an ideal, which one never reaches.  What matters here for the study of society and the interplay of social actors is that that ideal is not simply a matter of being what you want to be but also of trying to be what you think other people expect of people in that role.  Thus, in a much quoted aphorism, Lacan said that a fool who thinks he is a king is no crazier than a king who thinks he is a king.  What he meant is that a king is not something one can simply be by virtue of occupying a particular place in society, but it is constituted by the web of correct behaviours that make up ‘being a king’: how one is expected to behave and how people will behave towards you.  I hope that you can see how this makes for an important modification to the way I thought about social interaction earlier.  It is no more about the instrumental deployment of an identity in a situation by one agent with regard to or at the expense of another.  This is a significant modification of the model I set out earlier.  It adds in a sense of constraint that in some ways can be assimilated with the Foucauldian ideas I described a few minutes ago.  What Lacan calls the field of the Symbolic, the world of language, of signifiers, is what he also calls the Big Other.  The Big Other is the ‘they’ in the question ‘what do they want of me?’ refers to.  You could also elide it with the notion of ‘society’ in the model I proposed earlier: structures made up of what people think are the expected correct modes of behaviour.

d.      Jacques Derrida
Most of all, though, my work has been influenced since 2009 or so by reading the work of Jacques Derrida.  As far as identity is concerned, the insights of Derrida that I found most helpful were those that form the very bedrock of his philosophy: that meaning is inherently unstable; that there is no point of origin where a concept is self-identical.  If we are thinking about identity, as we are, then this point is of particular importance.  It can be taken alongside the Lacanian (and other) ideas I just discussed to emphasise the point that the identity, or the ego ideal, towards which one is moving in social interactions, is inherently unstable (I think Lacan would have disagreed with this but we can leave that to one side). It complements the Lacanian thinking in seeing the world as a world of interconnected signs in what Derrida would have called a textual sense.  It is a collection of signifiers and Derrida showed that the relationship between the signifier and the signified is slippery and cannot be fixed.  Most importantly, the meaning of the identity in question is always rounded out by its position vis-à-vis all the others; put another way, any identity aways has traces of its opposites, its ‘constitutive other’.  To give an example from the period I study, the notion of what a Roman was (and how a proper Roman behaved), was constituted in part by the notion of what a non-Roman (a barbarian) was and how they behaved.  There is always a level of difference behind the concept, against which even the most original conceptualisation has to be put.  This is what is meant when I say that there was no stable fixed point of meaning for an identity; no point where it was identical and coextensive with itself.

It is important to correct the misapprehension – often put about by people who do not seem to have read Derrida – that Derrida was some sort of nihilistic linguistic idealist who said that ‘anything goes’ or that any reading is as good as any other.  There have been few readers of texts more careful and attentive than Jacques Derrida.  What Derrida was saying is that, to use a geometrical metaphor, the coordinates of any given system can all remain in place relative to each other if one accepts the set of meanings that ground that system, at its point of origin, but that at some point the acceptance of those meanings is a choice based upon something other than empirical data. The point of origin is therefore not fixed and stable.

The other key aspect of Derridian thought, as far as identity is concerned, is his work on ‘performatives’.  This is especially relevant as it dealt with linguistic philosophy about statements that made something so in the act of saying them: the phrase ‘I do’ in a marriage ceremony, for example, or ‘I pronounce you man and wife’, or ‘I name this child Jacques’, or ‘I crown you King of England’.  These are statements where the truth described by the statement was created by the statement itself.  Analytical philosophers wanted to have this as a fixed category of truth-statement, so you can see why Derrida, with his interest in truth or meaning never being coextensive with itself, found it interesting. 

Derrida’s argument – in a nutshell – was that there was never a point where you could be sure that a truth was created by the statement; there was always scope for miscommunication, deliberate or otherwise, and play.  There was always room for meanings to slide.  If you want to go beyond linguistic philosophy into the realm of social history then the implications are quite clear and can tally with some of the points made earlier.  For one thing, they add conceptual depth to our understanding of how social structures are impossible to fix in a particular mode.   It gives us a way of understanding how epistemes, in Foucault’s terms, can change (something which Foucault had difficulty accounting for, rather than just describing)

e.      Judith Butler
This led on to the work of Judith Butler, who developed the idea of performativity, especially in gender identity.  Butler’s work problematises the ideas that there is a meaningful difference in terms of experience between sex and gender, or that gender is the social construction of sex.  Her work is important in stressing how we perform not simply gender but our sex as well, and that there is really no time when we experience the two as separate things.  In an archaeological context, Butler’s philosophy is interesting to engage with because we have the biological and the cultural evidence to work with.  This allows us to explore areas where the skeletal data for ‘sex’ and the material cultural evidence for ‘gender’ do not seem to coincide.  This has been important for my own work, in questioning traditional ideas about early medieval sex and sexuality.  The branch of theory known as ‘Queer Theory’, which Butler’s early work played a big part in establishing, has also been important in thinking about ideas of gender and sexuality.  We might be able to think about multiple readings of the data, dominant and subversive ways of seeing the idealised pictures presented in the cemetery data, which were available to contemporaries and which further problematises the stable transmission of information about the subjects of burials.

f.        Conclusions
I have also been interested in other works about the problems of the term ‘community’, when associated with ‘identity’ but I do not have time to discuss them.  Overall, what my thinking since 2009-10 has done is to complicate what had been too functional and straightforward a picture but in a way that I find productive.  Many of the bare bones of the initial theory would remain in place.  I still think the dimensions of identity are valid and the notion of the interplay of identities in local politics has some value for some purposes.  So too does the reflexive relationship between structure and action. The idea of performance is underlined and extended however.  We have added extra levels to the description and analysis, resulting in the possibilities of a ‘thicker’ historical anthropology or sociology of early medieval communities.  Furthermore, and here this links with other thinking that I have done, we can envisage the outcomes of socio-political action not simply in terms of the achievement or denial of aims but also, moving away from the Grand Narratives beloved of students of the past, historical and archaeological, as unintended, accidental, ironic outcomes.

6.      Mechanisms of change and (attempted) stasis
a.      In the last part of my lecture, I will home in on the cemeteries of northern Gaul in the earlier Merovingian period to examine possibilities of examining change, and perhaps look at a couple of interesting examples, where multiple readings are possible.

b.      I have said something already about how social structures can change through the constant interplay of identities.  I started off by saying that we can imagine social structure as a mental image of how the correct modes of behaviour between all the different categories on the social map.  This means that it is a cumulative performance.  And yet, as I said, it is very difficult to attempt to maintain that structure in any sort of ideal form.  There are means by which people might actively try to modify it, through the subtle infraction of the rules, and strategies such as humour, for testing the strength of boundaries or barriers and for retreating from difficult situations when such attempts are met with a strongly negative response. 

c.       There are also mechanisms by which the situation changes simply through the demands of everyday coexistence.  In a society like that of northern Gaul, with probably few slaves dwelling in households alongside their owners, it might have been impractical to police all the harsher boundaries between slave and free all of the time, something that might explain the Laws’ repeated concerns about slave-free marriage.

d.      In addition to those factors, which I discussed 20 years ago, we have to add the dimensions of miscommunication and slippage, and the fact that any social actor’s performance of an identity is not a straightforward enactment of a fixed set of roles but something constrained by the social actor’s own expectations as well as by the potential reactions of other agents.  This is another way of seeing each person as caught in a web of power relations, not as a free agent, as was probably too strongly implied in my early work.  The bases of legitimate social power usually lead people to believe that it is correct for them to behave in a particular way towards someone who stresses an identity associated with authority or another form of higher status, not that they should try and challenge that authority or difference in status.  Actions designed to produce one outcome might produce another one entirely.

e.      If we examine the cemeteries of northern Gaul we can perhaps see some of these slippages through time. One area where this might be possible is in the gradual spread of the custom of furnished burial itself, from a small number of families of apparently high local standing to, eventually, most of the archaeologically-visible community (visible in the large cemeteries of the sixth century).  What seems to have begun as a means of cementing the local standing of locally-important families became a frequently competitive rite in which families strove to maintain and perhaps enhance their local standing, preserve or remake relationships through the display of their ability to bury the dead with the appropriate attention.

f.        Another area where slippage might be visible is in the material construction of gender.  In Frankish burials of the sixth century, plate- or plaque-buckles are generally found in masculine graves – something which tallies with what we know of the symbolism of the belt in late and post-imperial contexts. Around the end of the sixth century though we begin to observe them in feminine burials.  As they begin to appear in the graves of women, the plaque-buckles in male burials get larger and more decorated, in response.  As a symbol is taken over by a different group from that with which it was first associated, we can observe a response aimed at maintaining a distinction.

g.      In thinking about more significant change, that period around 600 is especially significant, not east because it seems to result from the sort of fundamental change that resulted in a major disruption of the webs of power alluded to earlier.  The bases of status, authority and identity were seriously challenged after the Wars of the Emperor Justinian and resulted in a whole new set of ideas, that can be seen in a number of areas, not least gender, ethnicity, aristocracy, the various grades of freedom.

h.      I have discussed the slippage in the meaning of status an identity, which I have argued is inevitable.  Might one at least attempt to preserve some stability in the meaning of identities?  Here I think the most obvious area is in the social use of space.  In the Roman period (and others, of course) the élite lived in separate rural dwellings with elaborate approach routes and imposing reception rooms.  In these circumstances a clear frame was provided for social interaction and the performance of identity, which formalised and made clear the norms and expectations involved.  Areas of informal interaction were clearly marked off.

i.        Outside what we can see of early medieval churches, however, this aspect is less easy to find in sixth-century Northern Gaul.  Settlements are not very archaeologically visible and those that we know do not seem to be particularly clearly differentiated.  As far as one can see, there was much less use of space in the Roman fashion.  Interactions between different groups do not seem to have been as tightly governed in that fashion – perhaps even in the royal court.  This meant in important ways that identity was potentially being performed in the communal gaze almost all of the time that one was outside the house.  This must have meant that interactions could take place in all sorts of settings.  This, I think, is one reason why so much effort appears to have been lavished upon the manifestation of social identity in costume in this period.  The barriers or social distances and the correct, expected norms of behaviour involved in interactions were flagged up by costume.

7.      Conclusion

It is almost certainly the case that the inhabitants of sixth-century northern Gaul did not think of themselves in terms of many – perhaps most – of the categories that I have discussed here, although some of those aspects of their identity were remarked upon and thought of as important.  Nevertheless, even if entirely modern in its framing, I think that, if theorised in sophisticated fashion, the concept of identities and their interplay provides a valuable means of analysing past societies and, on that basis, thinking about the present.