Lecture 11: Making A Living Flashcards

1
Q

economy

A

a system of production, distribution, and consumption of resources
economics is the study of such systems

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2
Q

economic anthropology

A

study of economics in a comparative perspective

debates the issues of human nature that relate to decisions of daily life and making a living

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3
Q

“Making a Living”

A

satisfaction of the most basic survival needs

until 10,000 years ago, there was no difference b/w making a living and foraging for food
• began to change with the advent of domestication
and new food production
• only 30,000 people still forage (decreasing)

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4
Q

adaptive strategies

A
  • methods for meeting basic needs
  • before industrial revolution… 4 adaptive strategies
    1) foraging: (hunt/gather)
    2) horticulture
    3) agriculture
    4) pastoralism: rely on domestic animals to make living (milk heavy diets, often nomadic)
    5) industrialism
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5
Q

Yehudi Cohen’s typologies (overly simplistic adaptive strategies)

A

based on correlations

1) social/political organization
2) environment/geography
3) population density
4) diet

NOT: perfect, an evolutionary schema, mutually exclusive

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6
Q

foraging

A
1 depends on naturally available food
2 small populations
3 mobile
4 relatively egalitarian
5 gendered division of labor

ex: christmas at the kalihari

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7
Q

horticulture

A
1) Swiddens (slash and burn cultivation) in Santa Cruz, 
      Bolivia
2) hand-held tools
3) low yields
4) inequalities
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8
Q

agriculture

A
1 more complex tools
2 permanent plots and fields
3 sedentary lifestyle; higher population density
4 increased specialization
5 higher productivity
6 individual ownership
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9
Q

industrialism (U.S.)

A

based on machines which make the development of manufacturing, mass production, mechanization possible

produces large, mobile, skilled, specialized, and educated labor forces

controlled by states and employed by firms

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10
Q

Modes of Production

A

ways of organizing production, wresting energy from nature by means of tools, skills, organization, knowledge

structured in ways that alter the characteristics of what consumers want

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11
Q

Karl Marx

A

focused on the importance of human LABOR in transforming raw materials into desired products

labor links humans to the material world

capitalism

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12
Q

alternative ends

A

subsistence, replacement, social, ceremonial funds

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13
Q

exchange

A

economist Karl Polanyl 3 principles of exchange
•reciprocity
•redistribution
•markets

  • not always about the money
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14
Q

reciprocity

A
  • exchange relationships “gift giving”
  • desire to participate or not affects those relationships

1) generalized: exchange w/ no exception of immediate return (parent-child giving, foragers)
2) balanced: exchange with anticipation of equal return
(Xmas gifts, bartering)
3) negative: the attempt to get something for nothing (cattle raiders, expecting something selfishly)

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15
Q

Malinowski and Kula Ring

A

•reciprocity

  • kula ring: exchange network in Trobriand Islands
  • “once in the Kula, always in the Kula.”
  • objects must be passed on
  • exchange accompanied by magic and ceremony
  • reinforces status and authority, based on trust, obligation, and shame
  • different from barter
  • often resulted in marriage
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16
Q

Dating, Courtship, Marriage in America

A

•negative reciprocity
-lack of trust: “Can I trust you?”

-things become a little more balanced
“I’ll be good to you if you’re good to me’

-love, closer relations, nothing immediate expected in return

  • breakup
  • negative reciprocity, but somewhat balanced in order to re-establish trust
17
Q

Redistribution

A

• when goods or services, or their equivalent, move from the local level to a center

  • taxes, pooling, tribute…
  • food surplus that forms new states
18
Q

Potlatches

A
  • northwest coast of NA
  • communities give away food, blankets, copper, in order to gain prestige.
  • profit motive viewed potlatches as irrational and wasteful by classical economic theory
19
Q

markets

A
  • all purpose money as a relation substitute
  • supply and demand
  • fluidity, diversity
20
Q

Means of Production

A

major productive resources, such as land (territory), labor, and technology

21
Q

silent trade

A

also called silent barter; a method by traders who cannot speak each other’s language can trade without talking