Fulltext results:
- 2.1
- ~~DECKJS~~ ====== Society as a total system ====== ===== Society as a total system ===== ==== Week 2: Society as a system of total services ==== Ryan Schram\\ ANTH 1002:... 0_-_a_cubist_painting_that_depicts_the_concept_of_society_a_society_is_a_whole_that_is_greater_than_the_sum
- 4.1
- at his present was the Tiv people’s future. Is a society in which commodity exchange dominates truly a uni... Shipton 1989) ===== Inside of every contemporary society, there are two competing principles ===== ==== A provisional conclusion ==== * Every society is based on the obligations of reciprocity, even ... obligations is not visible to the people in that society. * All societies have at least two spheres of
- 5.2
- race descent are the mechanism by which people in society are assigned to discrete groups. Kinship categories give a structure to society. Claude Lévi-Strauss ([1949] 1969) argues that a society’s rules governing marriage are in fact the basis of a society’s kinship categories. ===== The universality of
- 2.2
- = The obligations of the gift ===== ==== Week 2: Society as a system of total services ==== Ryan Schram\\... gation ===== [[:Marcel Mauss]] argues that every society is a whole that is greater than the sum of its pa... 12). ===== Total services ===== What, then, is society? Mauss says that the essence of society is a “system of total services” in which everything one does is fo
- 7.1
- n reading:** Mazelis (2015); Nelson (2000) ===== Society as rules ===== Mauss says the gift comes with ob... e a rule you must obey. * In a Maussian view of society, people are rule-followers. * Society itself is a system of rules. ==== Do we agree that society has rules and being a social subject is following
- 2022
- e I: Gifts and commodities** ^^^^\\ | **2** | **Society as a system of total services** | Eriksen (2015b) | Mauss ([1925] 1990) |\\ | Aug 08 | 1. [[2.1|Society as a total system]] | | |\\ | Aug 10 | 2. [[2.2|T... al Semiotics of Colors in Mauritius.” //Signs and Society// 4 (2): 176–214. https://doi.org/10.1086/688513.... y and Ethnic Diversity.” //Comparative Studies in Society and History// 36 (3): 549–74. https://doi.org/10.
- 5.1
- me form of kinship is not recognized. * In each society and in every community, people organize kinship relationships differently, and each society assigns different degrees of importance to these ... ither matrilineal or patrilineal, everyone in the society belongs to exactly one group. Everyone has a plac... ersity of California Press. Hua, Cai. 2001. //A Society Without Fathers Or Husbands: The Na of China//. N
- 4.2
- mode of exchange belonging to different types of society, we see now that both modes exist in every society. * Gift exchange and capitalist institutions coexist ... living fossil. He straddles two worlds within one society. He makes money from selling coffee, and he keeps
- 6.1
- and the overall social and economic structure of society. You wouldn’t ask people in Pulau Langkawi or Mai... learn to read the presence of immigrants in their society through the lens of narratives of migration ====
- 6.2
- ction and consumption created a new structure for society. * Fordism (named for Henry Ford but the produ... ’s entitlements and obligations as members of the society. * Mass production also depends on mass emplo
- 3.2
- = The conventional view of history is that every society moves from tradition to modernity, from a state o
- 3.1
- xchange of commodities.// Marx wants to know why society moved from #1 to #2. ===== Marxist analysis is a
- 7.2
- hropologists would say that kinship is whatever a society recognizes as kinship, and that people are not mo
- 8.1
- y and Ethnic Diversity.” //Comparative Studies in Society and History// 36 (3): 549–74. https://doi.org/10.
- 8.2
- y and Ethnic Diversity.” //Comparative Studies in Society and History// 36 (3): 549–74. https://doi.org/10.