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Socially
Constructing Pacific Salmon
Rik Scarce
1
Montana State University
What does Anature@ mean? This general question, central to the
social construction of nature, is addressed here by examining
one of nature=s particulars, Pacific salmon, and by looking at
how one group of people, salmon biologists, imbue the fish with
meaning. Based upon historical, comparative, and qualitative
data, it appears that nature is socially constructed through
both cognitive and physical processes. ASalmon@--and indirectly
nature--emerges not as a monolithic, timeless, certain entity,
but rather as one that is manipulable, fleeting, and the product
of a variety of social relations. In particular, public policy
and economics appear to have profoundly influenced salmon
biologists= cognitive and physical constructions of salmon.
Nature exists ephemerally, not eternally. Historians and
etymologists tell us that nature as an identifiable concept can
be traced back in the Western tradition for about 4,000 years;
there has been a nature since the Greeks created the term that
initially meant Aeverything,@ phuysis. This meaning was passed
to natura, the Latin root of our word Anature,@ and nature=s
denotation further evolved through the centuries (Lewis, 1967).
Today, nature--connotative nature, a problematic, meaning-filled
concept--is constantly re-made by society, often in subtle ways.
Moreover, some argue that science is at the forefront of the
changing meanings of nature because it is vested with the
ability to create the Anew power@ in society (Latour, 1987;
Zuckerman, 1988), a theme first sounded by Robert Merton
(1968/1973). Politicians, corporations, and even the most
radical, anti-technological environmental groups invoke science
to support their constructions of nature (Scarce, 1990).
This article presents a data-based theoretical approach to
understanding science=s social constructions of nature.
Following an overview of social constructivism and the methods
employed in this study, I use salmon biology and salmon
hatcheries to illustrate the two modes of socially constructing
salmon: cognitive constructions and physical/behavioral
constructions. These demonstrate the complexity of both
science=s and society=s relationship with salmon, and with
nature more generally.
Berger and Luckmann's Constructivism
Emphasizing Meaning
This study=s analytical approach was guided by the classical
constructivism of Peter L. Berger and Thomas Luckmann. The use
of this approach bears elaboration because the Asocial
construction" of any phenomenon has become a taken-for-granted
in social and humanistic studies, a label whose theoretical
underpinnings often are overlooked or are treated as
unproblematical.
In their book, The Social Construction of Reality (1966), Berger
and Luckmann argued that we cannot help but construct social
facts. Reality is given meaning--constructed--both through
micro-level social interaction and through macro-level
activities of powerful social institutions, such as political
and economic systems. This multi-level, meaning-giving activity
is at the heart of constructivism, as some argue it is at the
heart of all sociology (Fararo, 1990).
From this key premise Berger and Luckmann argued that what is
taken as fact in societies is relative; social facts are
dependent upon the societies in which they are created. All that
is Aknown@ is contextualized by social circumstances--intimate
interactions and diffuse, powerful social forces. Societies, and
sub-groups within them, create knowledge through their
interpretations of the material world around them. There are no
objective social facts in a universal sense, only facts created
in particular social milieus at certain historical moments
(Newman, 1995).
Enter the AStrong Program@
Even as Asocial constructivism@ has become the rage in
sociology, Berger and Luckmann=s approach has been largely
ignored, with some peril. An apt example of these difficulties
emerged from one of the most active areas of scholarship in
social constructivism, the social construction of science and
technology (SCOST). Both the classical approach and SCOST share
core concerns. Like Berger and Luckmann before them, SCOST
scholars such as Latour, Bijker, Pinch, and Knorr-Cetina (Bijker,
Hughes, & Pinch, 1987; Latour, 1987; Knorr-Cetina & Mulkay,
1983; Zuckerman, 1988), have emphasized meaning creation as
inherently problematical. Two of the foremost SCOST advocates
put it simply: Ascientific findings are open to more than one
interpretation. This shifts the focus for the explanation of
scientific developments from the natural world to the social
world@ (Pinch & Bijker, 1987). This is essentially an
application of Berger and Luckmann=s notion of the relativity of
reality.
However, distinctions among these constructivisms emerge when
considering some of the finer details of the dominant approach
in SCOST, known as the Astrong program@ or Astrict@
constructivism (Spector & Kitsuse, 1977; Kitsuse & Schneider,
1989). In particular, the strong program is guided by an
idealist philosophical belief that Areality@ is a mental
construct. In contrast, Berger and Luckmann did not question the
existence of material reality. While they were not immune to
philosophical concerns, Berger and Luckmann appear to have
recognized that, as sociologists, ontology and epistemology were
not central to their interests. They wrote that Athe subjective
experience of everyday life@ that is at the core of
phenomenology Arefrains from any causal or genetic hypotheses,
as well as from assertions about the ontological status of the
phenomena analyzed@ (Berger & Luckmann, 1966, p. 20). Rather,
what was crucial were the social processes that gave material
reality its meanings.
A second distinction emerges from the strong constructivists=
philosophical idealism, for they easily slip into an
epistemological quagmire wherein their accounts of science are
constructed as truthful and stable, yet science=s accounts of
nature have no such philosophically solid ground upon which to
rest. For instance, Pinch and Bijker wrote that, Ain
investigating the causes of beliefs, sociologists should be
impartial to the truth or falsity of the beliefs, and that such
beliefs should be explained symmetrically@ (Pinch & Bijker,
1987, p. 18). This Asymmetrical@ analysis places the
constructivist observer in a privileged, objective position that
elevates the observer=s epistemology above all others. In so
doing, strong constructivism deceives itself, for constructions
of constructions nevertheless are constructions.
A similar observation prompted Stephen Fuchs to argue that
social constructivists should leave philosophical questions to
philosophers. Constructivists should accept the reflexivity they
impose upon others, reject Athe discredited metaphors of realist
epistemologies,@ and admit that their studies Aare simply
self-exemplifying@ (Fuchs, 1992, p. 30); constructivist
analyses, as constructions themselves, possess no unique claim
to truth. Accepting this simultaneously dismisses
epistemological angst and takes constructivism to heart.
Berger and Luckmann=s more modest constructivism never asserted
the vaunted status that strong constructivists seek. Theirs was
a sociology of knowledge. The classical approach provides social
analysts with an insightful critical perspective from which to
work, one that does not rest upon philosophical concepts that
have been debated through the ages. Moreover, this is a general
framework for analysis, not a road map. Berger and Luckmann
encourage researchers to consider historical context and to
appreciate both interactional and macro-level forces as they
examine the emergence and maintenance of meaning. Beyond that,
the specifics are left to the researcher.
One serious shortcoming in classical and strong constructivism
is worthy of note, however. Despite their attention to the role
of macro-level social forces in constructing social reality,
Berger and Luckmann said almost nothing about the place of power
in shaping and reinforcing constructions. The same is true for
the strong constructivists. Nevertheless, Berger and Luckmann=s
emphasis on the role of macro-level social forces in shaping
meaning easily admits power into the analysis. This article
identifies some of the powerful social institutions that affect
the meanings of salmon and examines how those institutions
bracket the constructions available to scientists.
Socially Constructing Nature
Despite the spread of constructivism in sociology and in many
other disciplines, environmental sociologists have only recently
begun to consider the social construction of nature. A measure
of how far environmental sociologists are behind others may be
found in Cronon=s (1995) major edited volume of
interdisciplinary perspectives on the social construction of
nature; it includes no chapters by sociologists. Perhaps this is
because the initial reaction by some respected sociologists to
the social construction of nature was quite negative (Dunlap,
1994; Murphy, 1994). Nevertheless, other sociologists have
developed a range of theoretical approaches (Hannigan, 1995;
Buttel, Hawkins, & Power, 1990; Buttel & Taylor, 1992; Greider &
Garkovich, 1994; Taylor & Buttel, 1992) and at least one policy
analysis study (Hajer, 1995).
A similar line of inquiry has emerged in sociology but outside
of environmental sociology proper. This work by symbolic
interactionists and constructivists, virtually ignored by
environmental sociologists, has anticipated the general Asocial
construction of nature@ by exploring how pets (Hickrod &
Schmitt, 1982; Nash, 1989), specific species of animals (Fine &
Christofordies, 1991; Cantwell, 1993), animals generally (Arluke
& Sanders, 1996), and mushrooms (Fine, n.d.) are treated as
symbols and are given meaning by owners, experimenters, viewers,
pickers, and others. Arluke and Sanders contrasted this
literature to that which predominates in sociology, writing,
AMost sociological research is anthropocentric (or
human-centered) and focuses on relationships among humans@ (Arluke
& Sanders, 1996, p. 2). This is as true for environment-oriented
sociologists as for any others. In much of the environmental
sociology research, animals, plants, and inorganic entities like
canyons and streams are the objects of social attitudes and
behaviors, but it is rare that they are treated ecocentrically,
as subjects that can be examined to reveal deeper insights about
the roles of particular social forces in the realities of
persons, animals, and places.
The present research is in keeping with the dominant themes in
studies of the sociology of human-animal relationships in that
it places salmon in the center of the analysis and "unpacks" the
salmon to reveal the social processes that give rise to the
meanings attributed to the fish. Moreover, I seek to bridge the
literatures on environmental sociology and the sociology of
human-animal relationships by developing theoretical concepts
useful for understanding not only the social construction of a
single species, but of Anature@ generally.
Methods
This study was developed through comparative analysis of
historical documents and qualitative data, including interviews
and participant-observation. The goal was to develop a Agrounded
theory@--an inductive theory rooted in data--of salmon
biologists= social constructions of salmon (Glaser & Strauss,
1967; Charmaz, 1983, 1990, 1995; Strauss, 1987; Denzin &
Lincoln, 1994). I interviewed 24 salmon biologists from the
U.S., Canada, and Native American tribes, and spoke with
numerous others in non-interview encounters. Those interviewed
included 10 federal agency employees (five Canadian, all of whom
worked at a large government research station, and five from the
U.S., including three salmon hatchery biologists and two agency
researchers), nine university professors (one of whom was
Canadian), three state agency employees, one forestry
corporation biologist, and one private consultant. I conducted
fieldwork at two salmon biology conferences--one of regional
members of the American Fisheries Society that brought together
American and Canadian biologists, the other of Indian tribal
biologists--and I attended numerous public hearings on
salmon-related topics at which salmon biologists were present. I
also viewed biologists at work in fish hatcheries, accompanied
them as they gathered data on rivers and in other settings, and
spent several months observing biologists in a laboratory that
conducted DNA research on salmon.
My initial interview participants were selected both because of
convenience--they worked near my university--and because several
were highly respected in the salmon biology community, judging
from their publication records, which I checked using Science
Citations Index and a major volume reviewing the research in
Pacific salmon life histories (Groot & Margolis, 1991). However,
in most cases I sought out biologists whose names had been given
to me by their peers in a Asnowball sampling@ approach (Babbie,
1995).
The interviews were semi-scheduled--I always had a list of
questions to ask. However, the specific questions changed
considerably over the course of my research; no two interviewees
were asked all the same questions, and new topics arose in all
but the final interviews. This reflects my grounded theory
analytical approach; at each step along the way the topics of
interest emerged from my analysis of the previous round of
interviewing. The interviews lasted an average of 75 minutes and
were tape recorded. After the tapes were transcribed the
interviews were coded and the results compared to the previous
interviews. New topics were identified that were then examined
in more depth through subsequent interviews until no new issues
emerged.
Cognitive and Physical/Behavioral Constructions
Salmon biologists socially construct salmon in two fundamental
ways, and the remainder of this article explores these
analytical concepts. Cognitive constructions are those that
reveal meanings ensconced in attitudes, values, and beliefs;
they are found in texts and discourse. Physical and behavioral
constructions are embodied and enacted--as opposed to spoken or
written--sources of meaning; they are found, for example, in a
society=s technologies (such as dams, fish hatcheries, and
fishing gear), in its acted-out rituals and ceremonies (a Native
American tribe=s first salmon feast, a public hearing on a
proposed new dam and its effect upon fish), and in day-to-day
nonverbal interactions (including human-to-human and
human-to-salmon behaviors such as laboratory dissection of fish
or anglers' sport fishing. In the following sections, I treat
these approaches to constructing salmon in turn.
Cognitive Constructions: Scientists Speaking Salmon
In a thumbnail sketch, this is the life history of salmon Ain
the wild@ as scientists understand it: The seven species of
Pacific salmon found in North America are known by names like
sockeye, chinook, chum, silver, pink, steelhead, and cutthroat;
two other species live only in Asia. The genus name for all nine
is Oncorhynchus, Latin for Ahook-nosed,@ from the curvature that
male salmons= jaws take on at spawning time.
Other commonalities in appearance and behavior link the species
as well. For instance, they all have a complex and fascinating
life cycle. They are born in gravelly streams carved by
glaciers. After emerging from their stony nursery, the fry may
spend virtually no time at all in their natal waters or they may
remain there for up to two years. Eventually, they swim toward
the ocean as Asmolts,@ undergoing extensive transformations that
alter their body chemistry and enable them to live in salt
water. After one to five years maturing in the ocean, where
their weight increases a hundredfold, their body chemistry again
changes, this time reversing itself so that they adapt to living
in fresh water. They swim inland to the same stream where they
were born, in some instances traveling 900 miles to reach
spawning grounds 7,000 feet above sea level. There they mate
and, with the exception of some steelhead trout, die shortly
thereafter (steelhead were only recently reclassified as salmon;
the Atrout@ label persists even among biologists).
Biologists who study these remarkable fish increasingly find
their work enmeshed in economics and politics. These powerful
macro-structural institutions exert a profound influence on
biologists= constructions of salmon, at both cognitive and
physical/behavioral levels. Though they are not the only
relevant macro-level influences, these appear to be the most
influential. A Canadian government researcher, grudgingly
acknowledging this new world order for salmon biology in which
researcher freedom is displaced by political and economic
expediency, observed, ACertainly in government labs and central
agencies, that sort of thing, any notion that you would do
undisturbed research at some distance from an actual pressing
question of the day that deals with resource management, any
notion that you would do that with that remoteness to it has
long vanished. There=s just no room for it.@ Scientists= work is
inescapably and directly linked to capital and to the state,
forces from which they long felt they were at least somewhat
insulated.
Another Canadian was more accepting of the impact of economics
and politics in his construction of salmon. Explaining why he
researches sockeye salmon in particular, he said, AIt=s a very
satisfying species to work on from a whole range of
perspectives. One is it integrates a lot of the background
experience that I=ve built up to date and makes best use of it.
Second, from a commercial and practical standpoint, they=re the
most valuable of the Pacific salmon species. They generate the
most economic rent back to the general population.@ In recent
years biologists in both Canada and the U.S. have come under
increasing pressure from governments and corporations to
increase the Aeconomic rent@ that these fish Agenerate.@ These
public policy and economic pressures reflect a variety of
concerns, including public and scientific criticism of fishery
enhancement programs such as fish hatcheries, global economic
trends that compel nations to engage in international trade to
improve balance of payments and shore up their currencies, and
anxieties about ecological trends like declining salmon runs.
These social pressures exert a profound influence on biologists=
cognitive constructions of salmon. Salmon increasingly come to
be viewed in utilitarian terms, as entities for human use and
little else. Further, as governments= fiscal woes mount and as
the fishing industry demands to catch more fish, biologists find
themselves making their case for more salmon research based on
the fish=s political and economic importance. This only
reinforces the place of the utilitarian construction. A U.S.
academic researcher, also involved in studies of sockeye, told
me,
There=s lots of interest in the stock differentiation of salmon
(distinguishing different populations of salmon to avoid over
fishing smaller populations, or Astocks@), so that creates a
financial basis for this type of question. That wasn=t a driving
factor at all in doing research, but the money was.... When I
said that my Ph.D. research was really not financially based and
there was very little interest in sockeye-kokanee, the interest
in sockeye and kokanee has since exploded. And it=s exploded
because of sockeye salmon as an endangered species.... Salmon
had many of the same elements as whitefish did, and salmon are
closely related to whitefish, same family. There=s a lot more
money in salmon research than in whitefish research, so that=s
why I went to study salmon.
Here the utilitarian cognitive construction emerges as
simultaneously personal and structural. Biologists study the
Amoney fish@ because those species furnish the biologists with
the opportunity to conduct research. Economically and
politically important, salmon become cognitively constructed as
vehicles for status attainment. For while research on salmon
allows biologists to fulfill personal vocational interests and
to earn a living, the more politically and economically
important species, like sockeye, also provide salmon biologists
with greater funding and publishing opportunities, thus
increasing individual biologists= standing within the biology
community.
In elaborating on this cognitive construction of salmon as
political and economic entities, it should be noted that it is
more than a bit odd that this reality is new to fisheries
biology. AFisheries@ is a biological study that has been driven
by economic concerns from its inception nearly a century ago
(Benson, 1970). Fisheries biologists are socialized throughout
their training to emphasize the economic uses of fish. The
dominant role of economics in the discipline is never in doubt
to those trained in the prestigious schools of fisheries;
indeed, those schools were established by groups with strong
economic interests in fish production (Benson, 1970).
Yet until recently biologists have been able to entertain an
expansive view of what constitutes fisheries research. In the
Aold days@ that came to an end in the 80s, a biologist could
study the details of salmon Alife history@ such as mate
selection and juvenile salmon behavior simply because the
research filled a gap in the knowledge about the fish. In turn,
others in the discipline could use that new knowledge to fulfill
economic or policy goals like improving runs or catches. The
discipline still was the primary force directing researchers=
constructions of the salmon.
Today, however, biologists are witnessing a shift in macro-level
forces on their work. No longer is science the primary
determinant of research needs. Instead, politics and economics
impress upon scientists a new sense of urgency, and these
pressures lead to a narrowing cognitive construction of salmon.
Even to biologists the salmon become embodiments of public
policy and tools for economic gain. Most revealing
sociologically is not so much the idea that salmon have come to
be mere surrogates for political or economic power in the
biologists= eyes as that salmon have become political and
economic objects for powerful social forces, and these have
transformed biology. The transformation occurs by controlling
resources, especially by funding highly specific projects
directed at an Aactual pressing question of the day.@ The effect
is to control the research questions available to biologists,
and this affects their cognitive constructions of the salmon.
Political and economic entities resocialize biologists to view
salmon in utilitarian terms. Salmon long have been constructed
as important economic entities, whether the society was
pre-Columbian (Hunn, 1992) or industrial. But never before have
those who study salmon been compelled to adopt a policy and
economics-based cognitive construction in order to pursue their
work.
Recognition of the compelled shift in cognitive construction has
left biologists questioning their individual and collective
future. One biologist said, AI=m frankly concerned about what=s
happening to research because I think it=s being affected too
much by the weathervane, harum-scarum problems of management and
too much by the weathervanes of politics.@ The discipline=s
historical yet sometimes tenuous ties to economics and politics
have almost become its exclusive determinants.
It should be noted that, while this analysis represents an
interpretation of the dominant scientific cognitive construction
of salmon, a minority of biologists are countering the
utilitarian view. They argue that salmon possess an Ainherent
worth@ entirely apart from their economic value, and the Asystem@
in which they rightfully belong is an ecosystem, not an economic
system. Said a Washington state biologist, AThey are not only a
commodity resource, which is how they have been viewed most
often in the past, but also an animal that is part of a very
complex ecosystem which we are a part of, deserving of our
respect and appreciation for its value. I=d like to see far more
appreciation for the salmon=s welfare than we=ve given it in the
past.@ Such ecocentric cognitive constructions--developed as
reactions to current policy, economic, ecological, and social
trends--may have substantial impact in the future. For now they
are an emergent perspective that challenges the dominant
construction of salmon directed by the most powerful social
institutions.
Physical and Behavioral Constructions: Scientists Building
Salmon
Northwest Fish Hatchery, where I interviewed and observed
several biologists, embodies the physical and behavioral
construction of salmon as few other artifacts do. Scientists
there mass-produce salmon in a controlled process, an assembly
line in which salmon are physically constructed deliberately and
rationally, emphasizing efficiency and productivity. Built in
the 70s, the hatchery was required as mitigation for a massive
dam that completely blocked the ANorthwest River@ to
upstream-migrating salmon. The entire Northwest River salmon
Arun,@ or population, was to be perpetuated in the hatchery. But
perpetuation was less important than production, and salmon
hatcheries were designed as massive fish production enterprises.
They are biological versions of automobile factories.
Biologists initially argued that salmon produced at Northwest
Hatchery would be the same fish as Northwest River salmon, that
hatchery fish would be indistinguishable in any way from their
wild ancestors. However, beginning the first year that the
hatchery raised fish, biologists re-created the run in the sense
that they made it anew. Biologists were under intense political
pressure not merely to keep the run going but to produce even
more salmon than historically returned to the Northwest River.
Doing so would prove to politicians and anglers, a powerful
constituency, that the millions spent on the hatchery were
justified. But, in responding to this pressure, the scientists
inadvertently physically constructed an entirely new salmon run.
For example, the biologists shifted the timing of the run simply
by breeding the first fish to return to the hatchery with one
another, and, once enough eggs were fertilized to produce the
next generation, the remainder of the fish arriving at the
hatchery to spawn were killed without being bred. (The phrase
Abeing bred@ emphasizes biologists= practice of Amating@ fish
themselves, mixing milt and eggs in buckets rather than allowing
fish to spawn on their own, uncontrolled; this may be the most
explicit example of the physical construction of salmon.) A
biologist explained what occurred in those early days: ASo over
a few years, and this happened here, we got the peak of the run
that=s now in the first week of April in this hatchery. Well,
out here in the wild the first week of April is probably not the
peak; we=re probably moving them a month ahead.@ Scientists
believe that run timing is genetically determined and that such
a severe shift in timing--moving the peak of the normal
distribution-shaped run from early May to early
April--corresponds with a loss of genetic diversity of unknown
magnitude. Hatchery production techniques, combined with
biologists= incomplete knowledge of the salmon, produced a new
fish rather than perpetuating the old Awild@ one, as was
biologists= stated intention. A new salmon was literally
constructed.
Actually, the hatchery physically constructed two new salmon.
One was characterized by its altered run timing and other
changes, such as the increased survivability and weight of the
smolts (due to the Aideal@ hatchery conditions which protect
juvenile fish from predators and allow them to eat all they
want) and the reduced average weight of adults.
The other new salmon was one of ambiguous parentage, fish
neither of entirely hatchery nor wild origin, the Anatural@
salmon. A hatchery biologist explained, AWe call it >natural
spawning.= There=s a terminology that is starting to get
uniform. Natural spawning is where you have hatchery influence
and wild spawning is where there has been little or no hatchery
influence. Of course, this (hatchery) has...influence here, so
it would be what we would consider natural spawning.... How
successful it is, we aren=t sure.@
In other words, some Ahatchery@ salmon, those bred by
biologists, return to spawn the next generation in the streams
and rivers near hatcheries but not in the hatcheries as
biologists intend them to do. They are unintentionally beyond
the control of the hatchery operators, like the breeding
dinosaurs in Jurassic Park (Crichton, 1990). And to hear
biologists speak of it, the consequences are nearly as
disastrous. In this case, the gene pool of the wild salmon is
Apolluted@ when hatchery and wild salmon mate. Recent research
indicates that hatcheries may need periodic infusions of genes
from wild fish in order to avoid genetic problems, but if
hatchery and wild fish have been mating, the truly wild genes my
be difficult or impossible to locate. Hatcheries may
inadvertently doom themselves.
The Complete Picture: Combining Cognitive and
Physical/Behavioral Constructions
Hatcheries have been the basis for two reproductive classes of
salmon: one is the hatchery salmon, the other the Anatural,@
part wild/part hatchery salmon. Both of these salmon, whether
deliberately or accidentally physically constructed by
biologists, are cognitively constructed by the biologists as
genetically and behaviorally inferior to a third class, wild
salmon. The wild salmon are cognitively constructed as the ideal
salmon, one that scientists argue is essential and unconstructed
(Soulé, 1995) but which is supremely meaning-filled. The wild
salmon is a Apure,@ Apristine@ salmon (Russell, 1995; Evernden,
1992) uncorrupted by human activity. Thus, hatchery biologists=
cognitive construction of the wild salmon is at odds with the
physical constructions they create. Wild salmon are the perfect,
unadulterated, sacred salmon; hatchery salmon are tainted,
unnatural, social in origin, and profane (Durkheim, 1954).
The resolution of this contradiction between cognitive and
physical constructions might be found at the nexus of biology
and economics. Wild salmon populations can survive indefinitely
(barring human-caused or natural catastrophe), and as such,
theoretically, will yield a constant economic return through
commercial and recreational fishing. Thus, the closer hatchery
fish can be brought to the wild ideal, the greater the potential
economic returns. That which is nearer the pure is both
ecologically viable and economically valuable.
However, biologists find it difficult to achieve this ideal,
complete construction, to say the least. A remarkable example
comes from a conference presentation by biologists who worked
for a Native American tribal hatchery. Their intention was to
Afully utilize@ the carrying capacity of a portion of one river
system where coho salmon had spawned for millennia (carrying
capacity is Athe maximum population of a given species which a
particular habitat can support indefinitely@ [Catton, 1980, p.
272]). The scientists captured wild fish, bred them in the
hatchery, and released what they computed to be the proper
number of smolts into streams to Amaximize yields@ so that the
stream operated at full capacity. They reported, AIn situations
where seeding levels are adequate to achieve, or nearly adequate
to achieve, carrying capacity, (they) have resulted in a loss of
naturally produced fish (that is, fish born in the streams)
through replacement.... On a system-wide basis, fry
supplementation...would likely result in benefits to the river
and to the fishery less than half the time.@ The scientists=
efforts achieved few of their intended goals, and in some
instances the practice harmed wild salmon. Yet again, the
intended physical construction resulted in unintended
consequences that actually harmed the revered, and often
dwindling, Anatural@ (wild) fish populations.
Even when its control fails, as it inevitably does in ways
similar to the breakdowns that large technological systems
experience (Perrow, 1984), biology=s presence is felt. Only by
cognitively constructing a pure wild salmon can scientists
understand what they physically create at salmon hatcheries.
There, salmon the ideal is corrupted and multiple new salmon are
constructed literally and cognitively.
Conclusion
Meanings are not definitions; they are not directly
apprehensible. Rather, they emerge from the consideration of a
variety of interactions, and they must be interpreted to be
understood. The interactions outlined here constitute what
phenomenologist Don Ihde refers to as Aembodiment relations.@ He
writes that these Asimultaneously magnify or amplify and reduce
or place aside what is experienced through them@ (Ihde, 1990, p.
76). For example, whenever any social group imbues a salmon with
meaning--whether by speaking of it, carving a likeness of it
into a piece of wood, producing it in a fish hatchery, or
inserting a microchip in its back to study it--it is no longer
the being as simply experienced. By magnifying the produced
salmon through our hatcheries and other technologies we reduce
the experience of the salmon.
As Berger and Luckmann argued, this is inevitable. For nothing
is more central to humans as social beings than our ability to
communicate and to work together using tools. Communication is
impossible without abstracting experiences into meanings, and
our use of tools inheres meaning-filled activity as well. Our
cognitive and physical constructions of salmon impose meanings
upon the fish, in a social sense creating them.
What does this allow us to say about the social construction of
nature more generally? I think the general categories of
cognitive and physical constructions are likely to hold for
numerous species and for places as well--such as streams,
canyons, and the atmosphere--although elaboration of these
categories, including the extent to which cognitive and
physical/behavioral constructions are temporally distinct, will
be worthwhile. Thus, those categories may be useful when
particulars are considered. But nature as other or as everything
is another matter. The question is begged: is nature as a whole
socially constructed, or does its construction proceed only
through particulars, such as salmon? That question remains a
challenge.
Notes
1. Correspondence should be sent to: Rik Scarce, Department of
Sociology, Montana State University, Bozeman, Montana,
59717-0238; electronic mail: rscarce@montana.edu. My thanks to
Sue Monahan, Petra Uhrig, and the reviewers for their helpful
comments on drafts of this article.
2. Berger and Luckmann, too, noted the importance of reflexivity
to constructivists, although their approach fell short of
clarifying the issue. They wrote,
To be sure, the sociology of knowledge, like all empirical
disciplines that accumulate evidence concerning the relativity
and determination of human thought, leads toward epistemological
questions concerning sociology itself as well as any other
scientific body of knowledge....How can I be sure, say, of my
sociological analysis of American middle-class mores in view of
the fact that the categories I use for this analysis are
conditioned by historically relative forms of thought...?
Far be it for us to brush aside such questions. All we would
contend here is that these questions are not themselves part of
the empirical discipline of sociology. They properly belong to
the methodology of the social sciences....The sociology of
knowledge, along with the other epistemological troublemakers
among the empirical sciences, will "feed" problems to this
methodological inquiry. It cannot resolve these problems within
its own proper frame of reference. (Berger & Luckmann, 1966, p.
13-14).
3. The related literature from other disciplines is extensive,
though in general it does not speak to the range of concerns
raised by sociologists. For example, see: in anthropology
Douglas (1966, 1970, 1975, 1982, 1985) and Lawrence (1982, 1985,
1997); in psychology Dake (1991, 1992) and Dake and Wildavsky
(1990); in English Pauly (1987); in environmental education
Russell (1995); in environmental history Cronon (1983), Evernden
(1992), Jardine, Secord, and Spary (1996), Merchant (1989); in
environmental studies Bird (1987) and Rogers (1994); in
geography Goin (1996), Mugerauer (1995), and Simmons (1993); in
philosophy Vogel (1996); and interdisciplinary works include
edited volumes by Soulé and Lease (1993) and Cronon (1995).
4. "Northwest Fish Hatchery" is an agglomeration of several
hatcheries observed during the course of my research.
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