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Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Lesson
07
COMPARATIVE
STUDY OF PRODUCTION, DISTRIBUTION AND
CONSUMPTION IN
DIFFERENT
PARTS OF THE WORLD
What
is Economic Anthropology?
Economic
Anthropology involves examining how
different cultures and
societies produce, distribute
and
consume
the things they need to survive. All
cultures need to be able to
manage these processes,
in
accordance
with their given circumstances, to
ensure the survival of their
people.
Differentiating
Economics from Economic
Anthropology
While
economists assume that people
are preoccupied by the need to
maximize profits and this is the
basic
impulse
due to which they produce goods
and services. Economic anthropologists do
not believe profit
maximization
is equally important for all
cultures. They point out
that there are several
other processes
besides
profit maximization, which exist in
different cultures of the world by the
allocation (distribution) of
resources
need to produce goods and
services, and the distribution of the
goods and services takes
place.
For
example, these economic anthropologists
look at how different
cultures distribute land, which is
an
important
resource needed for
production of agricultural goods, and
have noticed that different
cultures
have
different ways in which this
distribution takes
place.
However,
economic anthropologists realize that
like economists they too
must answer some basic
questions
concerning
basic economic needs of
human beings, which all
cultures around the world face, given
that
some
human needs are universal
and must be met no matter
what type of culture people belong to.
Economic
Universals
Economic
anthropologists have to consider the
following economic universals,
which are of vital
importance
to human beings, no matter what
their cultural systems are
like:
a)
Regulation
of Resources: How
land, water and other natural
resources (like minerals)
are
controlled
and allocated
b)
Production:
How
material resources (sugarcane)
are converted into usable
commodities (sugar)
c)
Exchange:
How
the commodities, once produced,
are distributed among the people of a
society
Examining
the Issue of Land
Rights
Free
access to land is found in environments
where water and pasturage is
scarce. Land rights are
more
rigidly
controlled among horticulturalists and
agriculturalists than among
foragers and
pastoralists.
Division
of Labor
Durkheim
(the
famous sociologist, responsible
for establishing this branch of
study in the early
twentieth
century)
had distinguished between
two types of societies,
those based on mechanical
solidarity and
others
based
on organic
solidarity.
Societies
with a minimum specialization of
labor are held together by mechanical
solidarity, based on
commonality
of interest. In these societies, people
are more self-reliant, therefore, they
need other people to
a
lesser degree than people in
societies where people focus on
production of a very specific good or
service
and
then rely on others to provide them
other necessities of life in
exchange for their
specialized product.
18
Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Highly
specialized societies are held together
by organic solidarity, based on mutual
interdependence. Such
societies
emphasize the need for
specialization and people depend on
other people in order to obtain
the
different
things that they need.
Gender
Roles and Age
Specialization
Generally,
many cultures allocate
specific responsibilities on the basis of
age and gender. Ole people
and
those
very young are given lighter tasks in
most cases, where
circumstances permit (in
cases of extreme
poverty,
child labor can also
take place).
Similarly,
women are usually allocated
tasks which allow them to maintain
flexible timings so that they
can
look
after their homes as well. There are
exceptions to this rule however, since
many educated women
do
work
as long as men, often leaving
their children to the care of
day centers.
In
many countries around the world, the
process of urbanization has led
men to move away to the
cities in
order
to earn more cash, often
leaving women behind to undertake agricultural
work, which was
previously
done
by men. Circumstances also
compel poor women to take on
heavy work burdens, like
their men folk,
to
ensure the survival of their
families.
Moreover,
the same type of activity (weaving)
may be associated with the opposite
gender in different
cultures;
the division of labor by gender is
seen as being arbitrary.
Is
Nepotism Always
Bad?
In
many societies people relate to
each other based on the
principle of particularism (family
and kinship
ties)
rather than on universalistic terms
(using standardized exams,
interviews).
Nepotism
is not necessarily a sign of
corruption, since consideration of ground
realities like kinship ties
can
often
help determine how people
will adjust to specific work
environments.
Useful
Terms
Allocation
of resources: the
distribution of resources.
Barter:
the direct
exchange of commodities between people
that does not involve a
standardized currency.
Division
of Labor: the
set of rules found in all
societies dictating how the
day to day tasks are
assigned to
the
various members of a
society.
Reciprocity:
the
practice of giving a gift
with an expected
return.
Globalization:
the
world wide process dating back to the
demise of the Berlin wall, which involves
a
revolution
in information technology, opening of
markets, and the privatization of
social services.
Labor
specialization: a form
of having command over one
activity.
Suggested
Readings
Students
are advised to read the
following chapters to develop a better understanding
of the various
principals
highlighted in this hand-out:
Chapter
8 in `Cultural
Anthropology: An Applied Perspective' by
Ferrarro and/or Chapter 17 in
`Anthropology' by
Ember
and Pergrine
19
Introduction
to Cultural Anthropology
SOC401
VU
Internet
Resources
In
addition to reading from the
textbook, please visit the
following website for this
lecture:
Economic
Anthropology
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_anthropology
Use
the hyperlinks on the above website to
read up on the following aspects of
Economic Anthropology
for
today's lecture:
Anthropological
theories of value
The
Anthropological view of
Wealth
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