Fulltext results:
- tiv_spheres_of_exchange
- # Tiv spheres of exchange # The Tiv people of northern Nigeria organize their local system of exchanges into separate spheres. While Tiv people regularly exchange with each other, not every objects can be exchanged for any other object, and each exchange is conducted in a certain manner and only with certain people. The model of spheres of exchange is an attempt by Paul Bohannan (1955) to explain
- 3.1 @1002:2018
- : * A social system creates separate spheres of exchange. * The spheres of exchange in one society determine how people understand new ways of exchange. * Many societies opt for 'develop-man' instead ... t, and everything possessed a hau? ## Spheres of exchange ## Many societies organize objects into distinct
- 3.2.1 @1002:2019
- ~~DECKJS~~ # Spheres of exchange ## Spheres of exchange Ryan Schram ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world Module 3, Week 2, Lectures 1... ce" (Mauss 2000 [1925], 12)? ## Tiv spheres of exchange Everything of value would be **embedded** in soc... nizes objects into distinct, ranked [[:spheres_of_exchange|spheres of exchange]]. One example is the Tiv of
- 4.1 @1002:2022
- ~~DECKJS~~ ====== Spheres of exchange in historical perspective ====== ===== Spheres of exchange in historical perspective ===== ==== Week 4: Spheres of exchange & The efflorescence of exchange ==== Ryan Schram\\ ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world\\ Monday, August 2
- 4.2 @1002:2022
- ~~DECKJS~~ ====== The efflorescence of exchange ====== ===== The efflorescence of exchange ===== ==== Week 4: Spheres of exchange & The efflorescence of exchange ==== Ryan Schram\\ ANTH 1002: Anthropology in the world\\ Wednesday, Augus
- 2.2 @1002:2018
- . ## Gifts ## In the islands of PNG, fishermen exchange fish for garden food with gardeners. Fishermen al... h water nearby. **"Intoxicated with great love of exchange, they exchange even the water of their respective dwelling places and carry it home for the boiling of thei... une 1932: 206). Many people throughout the world exchange things they don't need for things they don't need
- kula
- # Kula The **Kula Ring**, or **kula exchange**, refers to the gift exchange of shell valuables in the islands of the Massim, in Milne Bay Province, Papua New Guinea. Partners exchange one of two different kinds of valuables, and rece... the same person. This particular feature of kula exchange was important for the anthropologist [[Bronislaw
- 2022 @1002:2022
- s contradictions]] | | |\\ | **4** | **Spheres of exchange & The efflorescence of exchange** | Sharp (2013) | Bohannan (1959); Bohannan (1955); Sahlins (1992) |\\ | Aug 22 | 1. [[4.1|Spheres of exchange in historical perspective]] | | |\\ | Aug 24 | 2. [[4.2|The efflorescence of exchange ]] | | |\\ ^ **Module II: Kinship and care in t
- 4.1 @1002:2018
- * You can think of commodities as a "[[:sphere of exchange]]." When you exchange commodities for money, and back again, you are following certain rules. * The sal... represent money. 1. **C - M - C'** *The simple exchange of goods.* 2. **M - C - M'** *The making of profit through the exchange of commodities.* Marx wants to know why society
- 2.1 @1002:2022
- === Gifts ===== In the islands of PNG, fishermen exchange fish for garden food with gardeners. Fishermen al... h water nearby. **“Intoxicated with great love of exchange, they exchange even the water of their respective dwelling places and carry it home for the boiling of thei... 32] 1963, 206). Many people throughout the world exchange things they don’t need for things they don’t need
- 3.1 @1002:2022
- * You can think of commodities as a “[[:sphere of exchange]].” When you exchange commodities for money, and back again, you are following certain rules. * The sale ... t M represent money. - **C—M—C’** //The simple exchange of goods.// - **M—C—M’** //The making of profit through the exchange of commodities.// Marx wants to know why society
- 3.1.1 @1002:2019
- ths. ## Gifts In the islands of PNG, fishermen exchange fish for garden food with gardeners. Fishermen al... h water nearby. **"Intoxicated with great love of exchange, they exchange even the water of their respective dwelling places and carry it home for the boiling of thei... une 1932: 206). Many people throughout the world exchange things they don't need for things they don't need
- research-exercise @1002:2020
- ation by an anthropologist on the topic of gifts, exchange, economic organization, or a related topic. Make ... hannan or built on his ideas about Tiv spheres of exchange. (For those interested in a retro research experi... an anthropologist((Bohannan’s work on spheres of exchange has been taken up by economics and political econ... , analysis, and conclusion on the topic of gifts, exchange, economic organization, or a related topic. In yo
- 2020 @1002:2020
- x ([1867] 1972) === Week 8 (Oct. 19): Spheres of exchange === Required readings: Piot (1999) Recommended ... 2050700085946]]. ———. 1955. “Some Principles of Exchange and Investment Among the Tiv.” //American Anthrop... ublishers Ltd. Eriksen, Thomas Hylland. 2015a. “Exchange and Consumption.” In //Small Places, Large Issues... nclusion.” In //The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies//, translated by W. D. Halls
- 2.1 @1002:2018
- utorial, and discuss your ideas in class. ## Why exchange? Do people have, as Adam Smith says, a natural "propensity to truck, barter, and exchange" things they have for things they need (Smith 1843 [1776], 6)? If so, why do people exchange bagi for mwali, and then exchange mwali for bagi? Why do people often exchange identical things, like a pot