Values and Valuables: From the Sacred to the Symbolic: Society for Economic Anthropology Monograph Series
Editat de Cynthia Werner, Duran Bell Contribuţii de Maurice Godelier, James A. Egan, Françoise Dussart, Colin Danby, Georgia L. Fox, Mahir Saul, Beth E. Notar, Lynne Milgram, Kathleen Pickering, David Mushinski, Eric J. Arnould, Carolyn Folkman Curasi, Linda L. Price, Jim Weil, Brian Moeran, Melanie Rocken Limba Engleză Paperback – 27 dec 2003
Preț: 267.09 lei
Preț vechi: 343.94 lei
-22%
Puncte Express: 401
Preț estimativ în valută:
47.30€ • 55.24$ • 41.09£
47.30€ • 55.24$ • 41.09£
Carte tipărită la comandă
Livrare economică 21 februarie-07 martie
Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76
Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780759105454
ISBN-10: 0759105456
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:0272
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția AltaMira Press
Seria Society for Economic Anthropology Monograph Series
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0759105456
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 148 x 226 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Ediția:0272
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția AltaMira Press
Seria Society for Economic Anthropology Monograph Series
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Part 2 Acknowledgements
Part 3 Introduction: Values and Valuables: From the Sacred to the Symbolic
Part 4 PART I: The Power of the Sacred
Chapter 5 Chapter 1: What Mauss Did Not Say : Some Things You Give, Some Things You Sell, but Some Things You Must Keep
Chapter 6 Chapter 2: "Keeping for Giving" and "Giving for Keeping": Value, Hierarchy, and the Inalienable in Yap
Chapter 7 Chapter 3: The Engendering of Ceremonial Knowledge Between (and Among) Warlpiri Women and Men in the Australian Central Desert
Part 8 PART II: Markets, Money, and Power
Chapter 9 Chapter 4: Conceptions of Capitalism: Godelier and Keynes
Chapter 10 Chapter 5: Little Tubes of Mighty Power: How Clay Tobacco Pipes From Port Royal, Jamaica, Reflect Socioeconomic Change in Seventeenth-Century English Culture and Society
Chapter 11 Chapter 6: The Dominance of the Cowry Relative to the Franc in West Africa
Chapter 12 Chapter 7: Ties that Dissolve and Bind: Competing Currencies, Prestige and Politics in Early Twentieth Century China
Chapter 13 Chapter 8: Crafts, Gifts and Capital: Negotiating Credit and Exchange in the Northern Philippines
Chapter 14 Chapter 9: Locating the Cultural Context of Credit: Institutional Alternatives on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
Part 15 PART III: Contemporary Valuables and Symbolic Values
Chapter 16 Chapter 10: Inalienable Wealth in North American Households
Chapter 17 Chapter 11: Virtual Antiquities, Consumption Values, and the Cultural Heritage Economy in a Costa Rican Artisan Community
Chapter 18 Chapter 12: Women's Fashion Magazines: People, Things and Values
Chapter 19 Chapter 13: Numbered Days, Valued Lives: Statistics, Shopping and the Commodification of People
Part 20 Index
Part 21 About the Authors
Part 3 Introduction: Values and Valuables: From the Sacred to the Symbolic
Part 4 PART I: The Power of the Sacred
Chapter 5 Chapter 1: What Mauss Did Not Say : Some Things You Give, Some Things You Sell, but Some Things You Must Keep
Chapter 6 Chapter 2: "Keeping for Giving" and "Giving for Keeping": Value, Hierarchy, and the Inalienable in Yap
Chapter 7 Chapter 3: The Engendering of Ceremonial Knowledge Between (and Among) Warlpiri Women and Men in the Australian Central Desert
Part 8 PART II: Markets, Money, and Power
Chapter 9 Chapter 4: Conceptions of Capitalism: Godelier and Keynes
Chapter 10 Chapter 5: Little Tubes of Mighty Power: How Clay Tobacco Pipes From Port Royal, Jamaica, Reflect Socioeconomic Change in Seventeenth-Century English Culture and Society
Chapter 11 Chapter 6: The Dominance of the Cowry Relative to the Franc in West Africa
Chapter 12 Chapter 7: Ties that Dissolve and Bind: Competing Currencies, Prestige and Politics in Early Twentieth Century China
Chapter 13 Chapter 8: Crafts, Gifts and Capital: Negotiating Credit and Exchange in the Northern Philippines
Chapter 14 Chapter 9: Locating the Cultural Context of Credit: Institutional Alternatives on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation
Part 15 PART III: Contemporary Valuables and Symbolic Values
Chapter 16 Chapter 10: Inalienable Wealth in North American Households
Chapter 17 Chapter 11: Virtual Antiquities, Consumption Values, and the Cultural Heritage Economy in a Costa Rican Artisan Community
Chapter 18 Chapter 12: Women's Fashion Magazines: People, Things and Values
Chapter 19 Chapter 13: Numbered Days, Valued Lives: Statistics, Shopping and the Commodification of People
Part 20 Index
Part 21 About the Authors
Recenzii
Values and Valuables counters an earlier, rigid model of separate spheres of exchange with fluid propositions about the flow of commodities, valuable and ritual objects that highlight the role of power in the reconfiguration of exchanges. It will no doubt become a significant text for students of systems of exchange and currencies in capitalist and non-capitalists economies.
Values and Valuables is a broad collection that builds on the insights of Marcel Mauss, Karl Polanyi, and especially Maurice Godelier to explore the non-economic aspects of economic relations. Exploring exchanges from those among foraging societiesto the Antiques Road Show these papers examine how the local and global are connected in important ways that are seldom analyzed in their entirety by conventional economics. The authors show how symbolic and materialist analyses can be combined synergistically to develop a deeper understanding of how societies work.
This collection throws a fresh, clear light upon the borderlands between market and non-market exchange. Diverse chapters dissect a dazzling range of relationships between people and things, and between people through things, using the widest variety of methods of analysis. Sacred ritual objects, 'traditional' crafts and heirlooms share the stage with rival currencies, credit unions, dreams and brand names. The connection demonstrated between classic and post-modern material makes this an exceptional course reader.
Cynthia Werner and Duran Bell bring together scholarship on how economies and cultures work to show the connections among the economic, the political, and the holy in ways that only the holistic, comparative, and ethnographic approach of anthropology can illuminate, with its critical examination of received theory and insistence on accurate detailed local historical and ethnographic description. These anthropologists bridge the theoretical and the real to show that money may assume symbolic value as a means of domination or resistance and how human lives and life can become commodities just as money can become sacred.
Values and Valuables is a broad collection that builds on the insights of Marcel Mauss, Karl Polanyi, and especially Maurice Godelier to explore the non-economic aspects of economic relations. Exploring exchanges from those among foraging societiesto the Antiques Road Show these papers examine how the local and global are connected in important ways that are seldom analyzed in their entirety by conventional economics. The authors show how symbolic and materialist analyses can be combined synergistically to develop a deeper understanding of how societies work.
This collection throws a fresh, clear light upon the borderlands between market and non-market exchange. Diverse chapters dissect a dazzling range of relationships between people and things, and between people through things, using the widest variety of methods of analysis. Sacred ritual objects, 'traditional' crafts and heirlooms share the stage with rival currencies, credit unions, dreams and brand names. The connection demonstrated between classic and post-modern material makes this an exceptional course reader.
Cynthia Werner and Duran Bell bring together scholarship on how economies and cultures work to show the connections among the economic, the political, and the holy in ways that only the holistic, comparative, and ethnographic approach of anthropology can illuminate, with its critical examination of received theory and insistence on accurate detailed local historical and ethnographic description. These anthropologists bridge the theoretical and the real to show that money may assume symbolic value as a means of domination or resistance and how human lives and life can become commodities just as money can become sacred.