Fulltext results:
- 6.1 @1002:2024
- elationship? ===== Society as rules ===== Mauss says the gift comes with obligations for giver and rec... reciprocity a rule? ===== Pierre Bourdieu (1977) says that Mauss’s mistake is that we can only see reci... e said he would. Something was at risk. Bourdieu says that when people give and receive, timing is ever... n what it feels like to do something. As Bourdieu says, * Habitus is **“a system of durable, transpos
- 2.1 @1002:2024
- Why? ===== Gifts create obligations ===== Mauss says: Because you have to. Gifts come with obligation... tal services ===== What, then, is society? Mauss says that the essence of society is a “system of total
- 9.2 @1002:2024
- kinship very much the way Schneider ([1968] 1980) says that Americans have always imagined kinship: A **... itual Strivings.” In //The Souls of Black Folk: Essays and Sketches//, 1–12. Chicago: A. C. McClurg. htt
- 2.2 @1002:2024
- his society many exchanges are gifts also. Mauss says that the essence of society is a “system of total
- 4.1 @1002:2024
- mily is compact (?) and has less generations. Who says that’s normal? * Nayar and Musuo families only
- 6.2 @1002:2024
- n can be borrowed (Stack [1974] 2008, 66). Stack says that people of The Flats have “fictive kinship” w
- 7.2 @1002:2024
- s write something else. How we see this question says a lot about how we think. ===== We think in meta
- 8.2 @1002:2024
- . “Science as a Vocation.” In //From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology//, edited by C. Wright Mills and H.
- 9.1 @1002:2024
- place” (Douglas [1966] 2005, 44). * As she also says, “Where there is dirt, there is system” (Douglas