Clifford Geertz’s interpretive anthropology revolutionized the study of culture by treating it as a system of meaning rather than a set of fixed structures or functions. His approach was deeply influenced by the linguistic turn, a broad intellectual movement that emphasized the centrality of language, symbols, and discourse in shaping human understanding. Thinkers like Ferdinand de Saussure, Ludwig Wittgenstein, and later structuralists and poststructuralists reshaped the humanities and social sciences by arguing that meaning is not inherent in objects or actions but is constructed through signs and language. Geertz adopted key elements of this perspective while also challenging aspects of structuralism and formalist linguistic analysis. This article explores Geertz’s engagement with the linguistic turn and his unique contributions to the study of culture.
The Linguistic Turn: From Structure to Meaning
The linguistic turn, which emerged in the early to mid-20th century, marked a shift in the humanities and social sciences toward viewing language as the foundation of knowledge and culture. Ferdinand de Saussure’s Course in General Linguistics (1916) laid the groundwork by arguing that meaning is not inherent in words but is produced through differences between signs in a structured system. Structuralists like Claude Lévi-Strauss extended this insight to anthropology, claiming that myths, kinship systems, and rituals function like language, governed by deep, universal structures of the human mind.
Later, poststructuralist thinkers such as Michel Foucault and Jacques Derrida criticized this model, emphasizing that meaning is unstable, context-dependent, and shaped by power. Wittgenstein, in his later work, also challenged static conceptions of meaning, arguing that language operates through use within specific social language games. These ideas created an intellectual environment in which meaning was no longer seen as fixed or self-evident but as constructed, contingent, and embedded in social practices.
Geertz’s Interpretive Anthropology: Culture as a Text
Geertz absorbed many of these linguistic insights but developed them in a distinctive way. In The Interpretation of Cultures (1973), he proposed that culture should be studied as a "web of significance" that people themselves have spun. He famously defined culture as:
“an historically transmitted pattern of meanings embodied in symbols, a system of inherited conceptions expressed in symbolic forms by means of which men communicate, perpetuate, and develop their knowledge about and attitudes toward life.”
For Geertz, culture is not an external structure imposed on people, as structuralists might suggest, but rather an ongoing process of meaning-making. He likened ethnographic work to textual analysis: just as a literary scholar interprets a novel, an anthropologist must interpret the “texts” of culture, from rituals to political performances to everyday gestures. His thick description methodology emphasized the layered and context-sensitive nature of meaning, rejecting the idea that culture operates according to universal laws.
Breaking from Structuralism: Agency and Interpretation
Geertz’s approach diverged from Saussurean and Lévi-Straussian structuralism in crucial ways. While structuralists sought deep structures underlying cultural practices, Geertz emphasized surface meanings as they are lived and experienced. Rather than looking for universal cognitive patterns, he insisted that meaning is always local, historical, and embedded in particular social contexts.
Moreover, Geertz rejected the idea that meaning could be fully systematized. Unlike Saussure, who saw language as a closed system of differences, Geertz saw culture as open-ended and evolving. This aligns with Wittgenstein’s later philosophy, which treats meaning as fluid and shaped by use rather than by fixed rules.
Implications for the Study of Culture
By applying the insights of the linguistic turn to anthropology, Geertz helped shift the discipline away from deterministic models and toward an appreciation of interpretation, narrative, and symbolic action. His work had profound implications:
- Ethnography as Interpretation: Geertz’s textual analogy transformed ethnographic writing, encouraging anthropologists to acknowledge their role as interpreters rather than neutral observers.
- Meaning as Contextual: He reinforced the idea that meaning is never fixed but is shaped by historical, political, and social contexts.
- Culture as Expressive, Not Just Functional: Unlike functionalists like Durkheim, who saw culture as a mechanism for social cohesion, Geertz emphasized its expressive and creative dimensions.
Between Language and Culture
Geertz’s interpretive anthropology stands as a bridge between the linguistic turn and contemporary cultural analysis. While he adopted the idea that meaning is constructed through symbols and discourse, he resisted the more deterministic aspects of structuralism and maintained a strong focus on agency and historical specificity. His approach continues to influence fields beyond anthropology, including literary studies, political theory, and philosophy.
By treating culture as a dynamic system of meaning rather than a fixed structure, Geertz provided scholars with tools to understand the richness and complexity of human life—an enduring legacy of the linguistic turn.