Chapter 3
Given or constructed? Identity in
cultural anthropology
‘I became a black man when I arrived in England’
If  ‘Who    am  I?’ is  a   tricky  question,   ‘Who    are we?’    is  hardly  less    troublesome,
being   grounded    as  it  is  in  today’s identity    obsession.  Humanity    is  one,    but at  the
same    time    divided into    multiple    groups. Scattered   around  the globe,  humans
exhibit many    variations  in  terms   of  race,   language,   religion,   descent and kinship,
residential patterns,   use of  tools,  dress,  diet,   and so  on. These   features    constitute
‘ethnicity’,    marking what    seem    to  be  clear   distinctions;   yet their   usefulness  for a
coherent    classification  is  limited.    They    are contingent, and hence   subject to
perpetual   change, and they    are vague,  allowing    for partial and shifting
attachment. What    is  more,   how we  see ourselves   often   does    not match   how
others  see us.
Writer  Inua    Ellams  made    the point   succinctly. In  autumn  2017,   his Barber  Shop
Chronicles  was staged  in  London  to  considerable    acclaim.    The play    tackles the
‘African    male’,  or  rather  the peculiarly  homogeneous idea    of  the African male    in
the UK. In  a   newspaper   interview,  Ellams  remarked,   ‘I  became  a   black   man
when    I   arrived in  England’.   He  is  a   black   man,    but during  his childhood   in
Nigeria,    his blackness   was never   an  issue.  It  had no  important   role    in  the
formation   of  his identity;   in  England,    it  became  a   central part    of  it.
Ethnographic imagination
Cultural anthropology, a natural child of Western colonialism, has for decades
