当前位置:高等教育资讯网  >  中国高校课件下载中心  >  大学文库  >  浏览文档

麻省理工大学:《人类学讲义》(英文版) lecture 7-2

资源类别:文库,文档格式:PDF,文档页数:7,文件大小:100.54KB,团购合买
The ethnographic reality behind these concepts Potlatch 1. The Culture a. North West coast cultural area is mostly in Canada b. Whole series of related groups all the way up to Alaska C. Fascinating area
点击下载完整版文档(PDF)

21A.100 Prof. howe Potlatch and Kula The ethnographic reality behind these concepts Potlatch 1. The Culture a. North West coast cultural area is mostly in Canada b. Whole series of related groups all the way up to Alaska c. Fascinating area i. Agricultural is not possible under primitive conditions ii. Rely on hunting and gathering, very abundant Salmon 2. Olachen -oily fish 3. Sea mammals: whales seals 4. Shell fish iii. Unusual that these hunter-gatherers are sedentary d. Many of the groups are famous in anthropology e. The names we use are not necessarily the names the people use fo themselve f. Most famous is the Kwakiut g. Had an unusual amount of art i. Many decorated columns that have come to be called totem poles blankets iiL. Ca iv. Painted elaborate murals on their homes Homes designed for rituals 2. Wooden A-frame houses v. People started collecting their art, but not always legitimately vi. Some would be stolen, or tribe members would sell them, even though they had no individual rights to sell the art

21A.100 Prof. Howe Potlatch and Kula The ethnographic reality behind these concepts Potlatch 1. The Culture a. North West coast cultural area is mostly in Canada b. Whole series of related groups all the way up to Alaska c. Fascinating area i. Agricultural is not possible under primitive conditions ii. Rely on hunting and gathering, very abundant 1. Salmon 2. Olachen – oily fish 3. Sea mammals: whales, seals 4. Shell fish iii. Unusual that these hunter-gatherers are sedentary. d. Many of the groups are famous in anthropology. e. The names we use are not necessarily the names the people use for themselves f. Most famous is the Kwakiutl g. Had an unusual amount of art i. Many decorated columns that have come to be called totem poles ii. Woven blankets iii. Canoes iv. Painted elaborate murals on their homes 1. Homes designed for rituals 2. Wooden A-frame houses v. People started collecting their art, but not always legitimately. vi. Some would be stolen, or tribe members would sell them, even though they had no individual rights to sell the art

vii. Many collections are now giving the art back in recent years, elled by law h. Environmentally rich area 1. They were not egalitarian 1. Had a whole social hierarchy 2. Gradations of aristocrats 4. Slave j. Many different colonial powers came through this area meeting ground of colonial powers 2. Lewis and Clark 3. Russians from Bering Straits 4. Spanis 5. Later Americans and Canadians k. Heavily involved in the fur trade Sea otter 2. The practice a. Extensively observed in the late 19century i. Native blankets lil. Coppers- natively mined copper hammered into specific shapes The Canadian govt tried to stop this project Law stated: You could not have exchange of gifts with 5 or more Groups got around the law

vii. Many collections are now giving the art back in recent years, compelled by law h. Environmentally rich area i. They were not egalitarian i. Had a whole social hierarchy 1. Chiefs 2. Gradations of aristocrats 3. Commoners 4. Slaves j. Many different colonial powers came through this area i. Meeting ground of colonial powers 1. Capt. Cook visited the NW Coast. 2. Lewis and Clark 3. Russians from Bering Straits 4. Spanish from CA 5. Later Americans and Canadians k. Heavily involved in the fur trade i. Sea otter 2. The Practice a. Extensively observed in the late 19th century b. Gave away i. Native blankets ii. Hudson bay blankets iii. Coppers – natively mined copper hammered into specific shapes. c. The Canadian govt. tried to stop this project i. Law stated: You could not have exchange of gifts with 5 or more people in a single place. ii. Groups got around the law

1. They then started walking potlatches would go from house to house, with never more than 5 people in one place at a time 3. Understanding the Potlatch a. Mauss and many others have tried to make sense of this Info comes from a variety of sources c. Much of it came from Franz boas i. His methods of fieldwork heavily dependant on taking texts l1. Had people write down essays on how they did certain things, like hunting or cooking iii. People feel he didn't give enough credit to his assistants iv.Sometimes he used this method to the detriment of observation d. Missionaries were also making observations e. Since then, a whole bunch of people took a stab at explaining the potlatch f. In 1934 Ruth Benedict. a student of Boas best seller book called"Patterns of Culture Said cultures are essentially personality types blown up into larger dimensions of a society a. Pueblo Indians of American sw were Apollonian": were restrained, admired harmony 1. Opposite was Dionysian: Given to excess b. Dobuans are all paranoid, hugely suspicious c. Kwakiutl= megalomaniacs, did everything to excess,say the potlatch as an example of this Have very elaborate ceremonies g. Problem: Helen Codere, Benedicts student i. Published an essay"An Amiable Side of Kwakiutl Life saying that the Kwakiutl were actually very nice and not megalomaniacal ii. Ceremonies and potlatches are not evidence of their everyday behavior and personality

1. They then started walking potlatches would go from house to house, with never more than 5 people in one place at a time. 3. Understanding the Potlatch a. Mauss and many others have tried to make sense of this b. Info comes from a variety of sources c. Much of it came from Franz Boas￾i. His methods of fieldwork heavily dependant on taking texts ii. Had people write down essays on how they did certain things, like hunting or cooking iii. People feel he didn’t give enough credit to his assistants iv. Sometimes he used this method to the detriment of observation d. Missionaries were also making observations e. Since then, a whole bunch of people took a stab at explaining the potlatch f. In 1934 Ruth Benedict, a student of Boas, best seller book called “Patterns of Culture” i. Said cultures are essentially personality types blown up into larger dimensions of a society. 1. 3 cases: a. Pueblo Indians of American SW were “Apollonian”: were restrained, admired harmony i. Opposite was Dionysian: Given to excess b. Dobuans are all paranoid, hugely suspicious c. Kwakiutl = megalomaniacs, did everything to excess, say the potlatch as an example of this i. Have very elaborate ceremonies g. Problem: Helen Codere, Benedict’s student i. Published an essay “An Amiable Side of Kwakiutl Life” saying that the Kwakiutl were actually very nice and not megalomaniacal ii. Ceremonies and potlatches are not evidence of their everyday behavior and personality

iii. People also contradicted assumptions of the Pueblo Indians as being peaceful and reserved h. what are the alternatives? It helps environmental adaptation Rich environments with uneven distribution of resources potlatch helps spread the wealth. More wealthy groups would throw potlatches and in exchange the receiving groups would acknowledge their inferiority lll. Problem: Thats not actually what the potlatch did It wasnt about food, mainly Investigations showed that it didnt distribute wealth or food to those who needed it most i. This is one example of a functional explanation i. Looking for ways that practices and institutions in a society fulfill certain needs in a society. Seems intuitively obvious, but not i. e witchcraft and warfare 1920-1950 the Functionalist Anthropology was very popular If you break certain social rules, you may be accused of being a witch ii. In other cultures the people likely of being accused of witchcraft were overly ambitious shamans or medicine men Thought that witchcraft was a way of maintaining social conventions iv. Warfare is more difficult to explain as advantageous 1. Increases solidarity of the group(i.e. Hating the Yankee's makes Boston hang together more) k. Functionalism is mostly a game: in what way can something be functional You look at the phenomenon and try and speculate what could have caused it, instead of going to look for its source Assume that societies are in some sort of equilibrium. That notion is

iii. People also contradicted assumptions of the Pueblo Indians as being peaceful and reserved. h. What are the alternatives? i. It helps environmental adaptation ii. Rich environments with uneven distribution of resources. Potlatch helps spread the wealth. More wealthy groups would throw potlatches and in exchange the receiving groups would acknowledge their inferiority. iii. Problem: That’s not actually what the potlatch did. It wasn’t about food, mainly. Investigations showed that it didn’t distribute wealth or food to those who needed it most i. This is one example of a functional explanation i. Looking for ways that practices and institutions in a society fulfill certain needs in a society. Seems intuitively obvious, but not always ii. i.e. witchcraft and warfare j. 1920-1950 the Functionalist Anthropology was very popular. i. If you break certain social rules, you may be accused of being a witch ii. In other cultures the people likely of being accused of witchcraft were overly ambitious shamans or medicine men. iii. Thought that witchcraft was a way of maintaining social conventions iv. Warfare is more difficult to explain as advantageous. 1. Increases solidarity of the group (i.e. Hating the Yankee’s makes Boston hang together more) k. Functionalism is mostly a game: in what way can something be functional. You look at the phenomenon and try and speculate what could have caused it, instead of going to look for its source. l. Assume that societies are in some sort of equilibrium. That notion is dubious

4. Potlatch: A Better Explanation a. Helen Codere-why do we assume this system as always been this way? This whole area has been in turmoil since the 18 century b. The potlatch is not in its original form. Because of all the traders explorers and colonizers, the modern incarnation of the potlatch is the end point of all these influences i. There was a huge population drop among the native peoples of the NOwcast l1. 19 century after 1835-37. About an 80% population drop iii. Each society has a whole series of titles, when the population dropped, there were almost as many titles as there were people iv. It became very ambiguous who should succeed to the title c. This combined with the fact that as the pop dropped, the people who were left became relatively rich i. Europeans paid a lot of money for sea otter skins, and these societies were at the heart of this fur trade l1. Some also started to work in the tanneries and at other jobs lll. They had a lot more wealth to put into potlatches, great d. Third element: Suppression of warfare i. People with crappy titles were struggling to keep them, and they had more wealth to throw at the effort and they also no longer had the outlet of warfare for their grudges against others so the potlatch became the arena for that anger e. Other anthropologists added to this Potlatches were relatively rare. Some times only once or twice in a The goods for the potlatch were collected and they were not really competitive or unstable, it was more to validate titles If there was a transfer of title, a potlatch would be arranged by the new title holder, inviting all the other title holders

4. Potlatch: A Better Explanation a. Helen Codere – why do we assume this system as always been this way? This whole area has been in turmoil since the 18th century. b. The potlatch is not in its original form. Because of all the traders, explorers and colonizers, the modern incarnation of the potlatch is the end point of all these influences i. There was a huge population drop among the native peoples of the NW coast ii. 19th century after 1835-37. About an 80% population drop. iii. Each society has a whole series of titles, when the population dropped, there were almost as many titles as there were people. iv. It became very ambiguous who should succeed to the title. c. This combined with the fact that as the pop dropped, the people who were left became relatively rich. i. Europeans paid a lot of money for sea otter skins, and these societies were at the heart of this fur trade. ii. Some also started to work in the tanneries and at other jobs iii. They had a lot more wealth to put into potlatches, great multiplication of d. Third element: Suppression of warfare. i. People with crappy titles were struggling to keep them, and they had more wealth to throw at the effort and they also no longer had the outlet of warfare for their grudges against others so the potlatch became the arena for that anger. e. Other anthropologists added to this: i. Potlatches were relatively rare. Some times only once or twice in a generation ii. The goods for the potlatch were collected and they were not really competitive or unstable, it was more to validate titles: 1. If there was a transfer of title, a potlatch would be arranged by the new title holder, inviting all the other title holders

from other tribes. The gifts were passed out to the visiting titleholders in order of their title hierarchy. By accepting the gifts, these people were recognizing the new titleholder's claim to his title. And in turn, they were having their own position validated 2. It was not competitive so much as people were looking for mutual validation f. The potlatches they were observed were not only after these conflating historical factors, but they were also the least typical. They were taking place at trading posts and these areas had the least cultural stability The Kula ring 5. The Kula a. In New Gunea- Studied by Malinowski 1. Tribes exchanging goods over long distances in this group of islands ii. The goods traded were ceremonial arm shells and necklaces. This was a seeming uneconomic institution, and yet people went to great lengths to engage in the practice iii. Would sail hundreds of miles in these very well made canoes b. Puzzle: why would people go to these great lengths to trade these valuables? i. The functionalists said that these used the Kula valuables to cover up for real trade. They would actually be trading food while rading the kula ii. People found out that that wasnt the case. The Trobriand Islanders had many many forms of trade that went on continuously without the Kula iii. The Kula permeated many aspects of their lives c. Answer: By participating in this trade you are validating your high status

from other tribes. The gifts were passed out to the visiting titleholders in order of their title hierarchy. By accepting the gifts, these people were recognizing the new titleholder’s claim to his title. And in turn, they were having their own position validated. 2. It was not competitive so much as people were looking for mutual validation. f. The potlatches they were observed were not only after these conflating historical factors, but they were also the least typical. They were taking place at trading posts and these areas had the least cultural stability. The Kula Ring 5. The Kula a. In New Gunea – Studied by Malinowski i. Tribes exchanging goods over long distances in this group of islands. ii. The goods traded were ceremonial arm shells and necklaces. This was a seeming uneconomic institution, and yet people went to great lengths to engage in the practice. iii. Would sail hundreds of miles in these very well made canoes. b. Puzzle: why would people go to these great lengths to trade these valuables? i. The functionalists said that these used the Kula valuables to cover up for real trade. They would actually be trading food while trading the Kula. ii. People found out that that wasn’t the case. The Trobriand Islanders had many many forms of trade that went on continuously without the Kula. iii. The Kula permeated many aspects of their lives. c. Answer: By participating in this trade you are validating your high status

i. If you are lucky enough to be a Kula trading partner, it is a matter of great esteem, making the travel and effort worth it Each valuable has a unique name and a history People are competing to get certain valuables iv. You re only allowed to keep them for a few months at a time v. The competition is not between the two people who are trading, it is with people who want to take your trading partner away from you vi. Sometimes people screw each other out of trading partners viL. The competition is to get as many trading partners 6. Famous form of exchange in this Trobriand society: Urigubu a. You give yams to the husband of your sister b. Many yams raised in a special garden c. People asked why? You come out even if you give and get yams All these exchanges are basically building social ties d. how does this work? What if you have no sisters? l1. What if you have 5 sisters? e. People are aware of this and they all sit down as a group and try and make it work out so that everyone ends up even f. One exception: The Chief. Since the chief can marry more than one woman he gets mush more Urigubu than he gives awa i. This is also a form of tribute to the chief g. This society was thought to have one or two dozen complex forms of exchange Until 1970s and 80s when a woman anthropologist went to study the trobriand Actually there are many more forms because the women have all sorts of forms of exchange that the male anthropologists never asked about h. All these exchanges were also involved in the maintenance of social

i. If you are lucky enough to be a Kula trading partner, it is a matter of great esteem, making the travel and effort worth it. ii. Each valuable has a unique name and a history. iii. People are competing to get certain valuables. iv. You’re only allowed to keep them for a few months at a time. v. The competition is not between the two people who are trading, it is with people who want to take your trading partner away from you. vi. Sometimes people screw each other out of trading partners. vii. The competition is to get as many trading partners. 6. Famous form of exchange in this Trobriand society: Urigubu a. You give yams to the husband of your sister. b. Many yams raised in a special garden. c. People asked why? You come out even if you give and get yams. i. All these exchanges are basically building social ties. d. How does this work? i. What if you have no sisters? ii. What if you have 5 sisters? e. People are aware of this and they all sit down as a group and try and make it work out so that everyone ends up even. f. One exception: The Chief. Since the chief can marry more than one woman he gets mush more Urigubu than he gives away. i. This is also a form of tribute to the chief. g. This society was thought to have one or two dozen complex forms of exchange. Until 1970’s and 80’s when a woman anthropologist went to study the Trobrians. i. Actually there are many more forms because the women have all sorts of forms of exchange that the male anthropologists never asked about. h. All these exchanges were also involved in the maintenance of social relations

点击下载完整版文档(PDF)VIP每日下载上限内不扣除下载券和下载次数;
按次数下载不扣除下载券;
24小时内重复下载只扣除一次;
顺序:VIP每日次数-->可用次数-->下载券;
已到末页,全文结束
相关文档

关于我们|帮助中心|下载说明|相关软件|意见反馈|联系我们

Copyright © 2008-现在 cucdc.com 高等教育资讯网 版权所有