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| 1002:2.2 [2017/08/08 16:35] – [The Moka is a system] Ryan Schram (admin) | 1002:2.2 [Unknown date] (current) – removed - external edit (Unknown date) 127.0.0.1 | ||
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| - | ~~DECKJS~~ | ||
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| - | # Marcel Mauss and the gift # | ||
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| - | ## Marcel Mauss and the gift ## | ||
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| - | Ryan Schram | ||
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| - | Mills 169 (A26) | ||
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| - | ryan.schram@sydney.edu.au | ||
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| - | Wednesday, August 9, 2017 | ||
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| - | Available at: http:// | ||
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| - | ## Ongka' | ||
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| - | Last time, Ongka was in the midst of organizing his major //moka// prestation to Perewa. To do so he had to ensure that all of his followers would deliver the pigs they owed him before the date he had announced for his gift to Perewa. If he could not time their deliveries, then he would fail to make his prestation and lose his authority. | ||
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| - | Ryma, another "big man" like Ongka, and his rival, is doing whatever he can to disrupt this plan so he can present a bigger gift to his partners, and be bigger than Ongka. | ||
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| - | Then, unexpectedly, | ||
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| - | We pick up the story after //moka//s have resumed, and Ongka can plan again for his prestation to Perewa. | ||
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| - | http:// | ||
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| - | ## The Moka is a system | ||
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| - | > Moka isn't just about pigs, it's about all kinds of things. The Kawelka say that it keeps the peace. It's a way of making a name for yourself. It holds the tribe together. It's the big social event. On a more general level, Moka is a system, a framework. All over the world people operate within some kind of framework, Moka is one of them. (Nairn 1976, 44:50) | ||
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| - | Nairn, Charlie. 1976. Ongka’s Big Moka. Granada Television. http:// | ||
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| - | ## Classical Anthropology ## | ||
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| - | * Societies are wholes which are greater than the sum of their parts. | ||
| - | * Societies have boundaries and structure which maintain order. | ||
| - | * The main question for anthropology is why a society stays the same. | ||
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| - | ## Durkheim and Mauss ## | ||
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| - | **[[:Emile Durkheim]]** is a founding figure of sociology and anthropology | ||
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| - | * He wanted to analyze society as an objective fact | ||
| - | * Society is a collective consciousness, | ||
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| - | **[[:Marcel Mauss]]** was a nephew and student of Durkheim | ||
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| - | * Applied a Durkheimian analysis to economic activity | ||
| - | * [[: | ||
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| - | ## Western culture and social reality ## | ||
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| - | ### Western culture ### | ||
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| - | * Western culture values individualism. | ||
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| - | * Children are taught to be individuals. | ||
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| - | * Society and its rules is something that one should be able to choose. | ||
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| - | ### Social reality ### | ||
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| - | * Every person is, by definition, a member of a group. Most people | ||
| - | have very complex networks of ties to many people and groups. It's | ||
| - | just part of being a person. | ||
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| - | * No one can really be outside of society. There' | ||
| - | wolf child, or a Robinson Crusoe. These are myths. | ||
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| - | ## Gifts ## | ||
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| - | In the islands of PNG, fishermen exchange fish for garden food with | ||
| - | gardeners. Fishermen always cook their food in fresh water, even | ||
| - | though they live by the sea. Inland gardeners cook their food in sea | ||
| - | water, even though they have fresh water nearby. **" | ||
| - | great love of exchange, they exchange even the water of their | ||
| - | respective dwelling places and carry it home for the boiling of their | ||
| - | food" | ||
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| - | Many people throughout the world exchange things they don't need for | ||
| - | things they don't need. They even exchange identical things, like | ||
| - | water. | ||
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| - | Why? | ||
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| - | ## Gifts create obligations ## | ||
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| - | Mauss says: Because you have to. | ||
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| - | Gifts come with obligations because it is part of the system of total | ||
| - | services. Specifically, | ||
| - | obligation**: | ||
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| - | * The obligation to **give** | ||
| - | * The obligation to **receive** | ||
| - | * The obligation to **reciprocate**, | ||
| - | given. | ||
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| - | ## Gifts have spirit ## | ||
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| - | For Mauss, the Maori word *hau* means the " | ||
| - | When someone gives a gift, they give part of themselves. "The *hau* | ||
| - | wishes to return to its birthplace" | ||
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| - | ## Total services ## | ||
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| - | What, then, is society? Mauss says that the essence of society is a | ||
| - | " | ||
| - | else, and other people do everything for you. It is a state of total | ||
| - | interdependence. | ||
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| - | ## Reciprocity is everywhere ## | ||
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| - | Gift economies are not simply societies in which there' | ||
| - | gifts. A gift economy is a society in which reciprocity is a "total | ||
| - | social phenomenon." | ||
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| - | Even societies which have created the possibility of individualism, | ||
| - | the the West, still have gifts and still have reciprocity. | ||
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| - | ## Moka is a competitive system ## | ||
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| - | The moka, and the potlatch, are systems of total services of an | ||
| - | agonistic type. | ||
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| - | Agonistic means that the sides in an exchange are competing to give | ||
| - | more services to the other, and to raise the stakes of reciprocity. | ||
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| - | Competing for prestige versus gaining profit? | ||
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| - | ## What if...? ## | ||
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| - | What if we lived in a world in which everything was a gift, and everything possessed a *hau*? | ||
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| - | ## Spheres of exchange ## | ||
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| - | Many societies organize objects into distinct, ranked **[[: | ||
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| - | 1. Women as wives | ||
| - | 2. Prestige items: brass rods, *tugudu* cloth, slaves | ||
| - | 3. Subsistence items: food, utensils, chickens, tools | ||
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| - | Some things, like land, cannot be exchanged for anything, but are inherited. | ||
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| - | ## Two points about spheres ## | ||
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| - | * In spite of predictions to the contrary, money does not collapse all spheres into one market. Often money exchanges are placed in their own sphere. | ||
| - | * Western and " | ||
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| - | ## What's next ## | ||
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| - | The relationship between money and the gift is complicated and can be | ||
| - | interpreted in many ways. we will need to come back to it more next | ||
| - | week, and again and again. | ||
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| - | In tutorial, you can debate these ideas. Which side are you on? | ||
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| - | ## References ## | ||
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| - | Bohannan, Paul. 1955. “Some Principles of Exchange and Investment among the Tiv.” American Anthropologist, | ||
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| - | Fortune, R. F. 1932. Sorcerers of Dobu: The Social Anthropology of the Dobu Islanders of the Western Pacific. London: Routledge. | ||
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| - | Mauss, Marcel. 2000 [1925]. The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies. Translated by W. D. Halls. New York: W. W. Norton & Company. | ||
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| - | ## A guide to the unit ## | ||
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| - | {{page> | ||
1002/2.2.1502235359.txt.gz · Last modified: 2017/08/08 16:35 by Ryan Schram (admin)