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Inalienable possessions

Inalienable possessions (or immovable property) are things such as land or objects that are symbolically identified with the groups that own them and so cannot be permanently severed from them. Landed estates in the Middle Ages, for example, had to remain intact and even if sold, they could be reclaimed by blood kin. As a legal classification, inalienable possessions date back to Roman times. According to Barbara Mills, "Inalienable possessions are objects made to be kept (not exchanged), have symbolic and economic power that cannot be transferred, and are often used to authenticate the ritual authority of corporate groups".[1]

Marcel Mauss first described inalienable possessions in The Gift, discussing potlatches, a kind of gift-giving feast held in communities of many indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest:

It is even incorrect to speak in these cases of transfer. They are loans rather than sales or true abandonment of possessions. Among the Kwakiutl a certain number of objects, although they appear at the potlatch, cannot be disposed of. In reality these pieces of "property" are sacra that a family divests itself of only with great reluctance and sometimes never.[2]

Annette Weiner broadened the application of the category of property outside the European context with her book Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping-While-Giving, focussing on a range of Oceanic societies from Polynesia to Papua New Guinea and testing existing theories of reciprocity and marriage exchange.[3] She also applies the concept to explain examples such as the Kula ring in the Trobriand Islands, which was made famous by Bronisław Malinowski.[4] She explores how such possessions enable hierarchy by establishing a source of lasting social difference. She also describes practices of loaning inalienable possessions as a way of either "temporarily making kin of non-kin" or garnering status.

Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping-While-Giving edit

Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping-While-Giving is a book by anthropologist Annette Weiner.[5] Weiner was a Professor of Anthropology and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts at New York University, and served as president of the American Anthropological Association. She died in 1997.

The book focuses on a range of Oceanic societies from Polynesia to Papua New Guinea to test existing theories of reciprocity (gift-giving) and marriage exchange. The book is also important for introducing a consideration of gender in the gift-giving debate by placing women at the heart of the political process.[6] She finds inalienable possessions at the root of many Polynesian kingdoms, such as Hawaii and Samoa. She also credits the original idea of "inalienable possessions" to Mauss, who classified two categories of goods in Samoa, Oloa and le'Tonga─immovable and movable goods exchanged through marriage.[7]

Barbara Mills praised her investigation of how "inalienable possessions are simultaneously used to construct and defeat hierarchy", saying it "opens a boxful of new theoretical and methodological tools for understanding social inequality in past and present societies."[1]

Cosmological authentication edit

 
Young Maori woman wearing a high status feather cloak indicating nobility

Weiner states that certain objects become inalienable only when they have acquired "cosmological authentication"; that is,

What makes a possession inalienable is its exclusive and cumulative identity with a particular series of owners through time. Its history is authenticated by fictive or true genealogies, origin myths, sacred ancestors, and gods. In this way, inalienable possessions are transcendent treasures to be guarded against all the exigencies that might force their loss.[8]

She gives the example of a Māori Sacred Cloak and says that when a woman wears it "she is more than herself – that she is her ancestors." Cloaks act as conduits for a person's hau or life giving spirit. The hau can bring strength or even knowledge potentially but a person may also have the risk of losing their hau. "An inalienable possession acts as a stabilizing force against change because its presence authenticates cosmological origins, kinship, and political histories."[9] In this way, the Cloak actually stands for the person.[10] "These possessions then are the most potent force in the effort to subvert change, while at the same time they stand as the corpus of change".[11]

Paul Sillitoe queries the supposed identification of these objects with persons. He states that these objects are "durable wealth [that] is collective property that is continually in circulation among persons who have temporary possession of it. In this view, transactable objects belong to society as a whole and are not inalienable possessions associated with certain persons. An analogy in Western culture is sporting trophies, such as championship boxing belts owned by all the clubs comprising the association that controls the competition in which constituent club members compete, and which pass for agreed periods of time into the possession of particular champions, changing hands as new champions emerge."[12]

Theuws argues that "Over time, objects acquire new meanings and what was once a humble pot may become a sacred vessel." This transformation in the object is the result of ritualization or a change in cosmology.[13] In fact, "Ritual Knowledge is often a source of political power."[14]

However, these possessions may also become destabilizing, as elites reconstruct those sacred histories to identify themselves with the past; for example, Gandhi invoked the traditional hand spinning traditional cloth, khadi, to contest British rule, which Nehru referred to as Gandhi's "livery of freedom".[15]

Keeping-while-giving edit

Inalienable possessions are nonetheless frequently drawn into exchange networks. The subtitle of Weiner's book is "The paradox of keeping-while-giving"; they are given as gifts (not sold) yet still retain a tie to their owners. These gifts are not like those given in regular gift giving in the West on birthdays for example. Rather, these gifts can't be re-sold for money by the receiver because the value and the significance of the gift cannot be alienated or disengaged from its relationship to those whose inalienable possession it is.

Property value, obligations and rights edit

These inalienable possessions are a form of property that is inalienable, yet they can be exchanged. Property can be thought of as a bundle of rights – the right to use something, the right to collect rent from someone, the right to extract something (as in oil drilling), the right to hunt within a particular territory. That ownership may be a bundle of rights held in common by groups of individuals or lineages. The property thus becomes impossible to separate from the group owning it. "To give in this instant means to transfer without alienating, or to use the language of the West, to give means to cede the right of use without ceding actual ownership". In other words, Weiner is contending that an economy built around the moral code of gift giving provides the giver rights over what he/she has given and in turn "subsequently benefits from a series of advantages."[16] Thus, when one accepts a gift one also accepts that the giver now has rights over the receiver.

Reconfiguring exchange theory edit

Weiner begins by re-examining Mauss' explanation for the return gift, the "spirit of the gift." The "spirit of the gift" was a translation of a Maori word, hau. Weiner demonstrates that not all gifts must be returned. Only gifts that are "immoveable property" can become inalienable gifts. She further argues that inalienable possessions gain the "mana" (spirit) of their possessors, and so become associated with them. These goods are frequently produced by women, like the feather cloak above. The more prominent the woman, the more mana the object is thought to inherit. The longer the kin group can maintain the object in their possession, the more valuable it becomes; but it must also be periodically displayed to assert the group's status, and thus becomes an object of desire for outsiders.[17]

The sibling incest taboo edit

Weiner argues that the role of women in the exchange of inalienable possessions has been seriously underestimated. Kinship theory as developed by Claude Lévi-Strauss, used the "sibling incest taboo" to argue that women themselves are objects of exchange between lineage groups. Men had to find women outside their kin groups to marry hence they "lost" their sisters in order to gain wives. Weiner shows that the focus on women as wives ignores the importance of women as sisters (who are not "lost" as a result of becoming wives). Women produce inalienable possessions which they may take with them when they marry out; the inalienable possession, however, must be reclaimed by her brother after her death in order to maintain the status of the kin group. In comparing Hawaii, Samoa and the Trobriands, she argues that the more stratified a society is by ranked differences, the more important inalienable possessions produced by sisters become. The more stratified a society becomes (as in Hawaii), the closer the sibling bond ("sibling intimacy"). In these cases, women are critical to the "cosmological authentication" of inalienable possessions.[18]

The defeat of hierarchy edit

A critical part of Weiner's argument is that the ability to keep inalienable possessions outside of exchange is a source of difference, and hence brings high status. The development of Polynesian kingdoms is an example. She points to the inalienable possessions of the Australian aborigines, however, to demonstrate how the creation of hierarchy can be defeated. Australian inalienable possessions are given cosmological authentication through their religious beliefs in the Dreaming.

As an ideology, The Dreaming is immaterial but in another sense, The Dreaming flourishes because it consists of material and verbal possessions—myths, names, songs, ceremonies, and sacred objects inherited from one generation to the next. In this way, The Dreaming itself encompasses vast inalienable possessions that are authenticated by the very cosmology under which they are produced. These possessions created in and authenticated by The Dreaming circulate from one person or group to another in a limited way. The possibilities of transmission in the face of the canon for guardianship establish for ritual leaders a domain of authority that in certain situations leads to a formalized position of rank.[19]

Weiner points out that the same gender relations of "sibling intimacy" affect the exchange of these inalienable objects. Women as sisters and women as wives provide the conduit for the gifting and return gifting of these goods, allowing the givers to build prestige. However, insofar as these inalienable possessions lose their cosmological authentication, these social hierarchies lose intergenerational longevity. Because the Dreaming itself is an inalienable possession kept secret by clan elders, it can be lost and hierarchy defeated.[20]

The paradox of keeping-while-giving edit

 
A Kula bracelet from the Trobriand Islands.

Weiner has used the term to categorize the many Kula valuables of the Trobriand islanders who view those objects as culturally imbued with a spiritual sense of the gift giver. Thus, when they are transferred from one individual or group to another the objects reserve meaningful bonds associated with that of the giver and their lineage. The shell bracelets and necklaces given in exchange each have their own histories, and are thus ranked on the basis of who they have been exchanged to. There were, as well, less well known shells called kitomu which were individually owned (rather than being part of lineage history), which would be given to temporarily please a disappointed trade partner expecting a more valuable shell.[21]

The Kula trade was organized differently in the more hierarchical parts of the Trobriand islands. There, only chiefs were allowed to engage in Kula exchange. In hierarchical areas, individuals can earn their own kitomu shells, whereas in less hierarchical areas, they are always subject to the claims of matrilineal kin. And lastly, in the hierarchical areas, Kula necklaces and bracelets are saved for external exchange only; stone axe blades are used internally. In less hierarchical areas, exchange partners may lose their valuables to internal claims. As a result, most seek to exchange their kula valuables with chiefs, who thus become the most successful players. The chiefs have saved their Kula valuables for external trade, and external traders seek to trade with them before they lose their valuables to internal claims.[22]

Kula exchange is the only way for an individual to achieve local prestige without local political action. But this prestige is fleeting and does not transform into permanent differences in rank because women's participation is minor and Kula shells lack cosmological authentication. It is not Kula shells but women's cloth wealth that is connected with matrilineal ancestors. It is for this reason that women retain high prestige and authority despite the fame of male Kula exchange players.[23]

Godelier on keeping-for-giving and giving-for-keeping edit

Maurice Godelier has further elaborated on Annette Weiner's ideas on inalienable possessions in The Enigma of the Gift. He derived two theses from Weiner, to which he adds a third.

First Thesis: As discussed above, even in a society that is dominated by a gift-giving economic and moral code, the interplay of gift and counter-gift doesn't completely dominate the social sphere, as there must be some objects which are kept and not given. These things, such as valuables, talismans, knowledge, and rites, confirm identities and their continuity over time. Moreover, they acknowledge differences of identity of individuals or groups linked by various kinds of exchanges.[24]

Second Thesis: Women or the feminine element also exercise power by providing legitimation and redistributing of political and religious power among groups in a society. Godelier contends that Weiner refocuses attention on the role of women in constructing and legitimizing power.[25] While women, as wives, are frequently lowered in status, as sisters, they frequently retain equal status to their brothers. For example, in Polynesia, the woman as a sister appears to control those goods associated with the sacred, the ancestors, and the gods.

To this, Godelier adds a third thesis.

Third thesis: The social is not just the sum of alienable and inalienable goods, but is brought into existence by the difference and inter-dependence of these two spheres of exchange. Maintaining society thus requires not keeping-while-giving, but "keeping-for-giving and giving-for-keeping."[26]

Related anthropologists on exchange theory edit

  • Emile Durkheim "describes how exchange involves an intensive bonding more formidable than mere economic relations. Social cohesiveness occurs because one person is always dependent on another to achieve a feeling of completeness".[27] This comes into being via the domain of the sacred ritual that involves communal participation even as it encompasses the moment in a higher order of sacredness.
  • Bronisław Malinowski wrote Argonauts of the Western Pacific. Malinowski was a pioneer of ethnographic fieldwork in the Trobriand Islandes and researched Kula exchange. His work was later re-analyzed by Mauss and subsequently by other anthropologists.
  • Marcel Mauss wrote The Gift. He was a pioneer in the study of gift exchange. Mauss was concerned only with the relations formed by the circulation of things that men produce, and not with the relations that men form while they produce things. He is concerned, in particular, with why people give gifts, and why they feel the obligation to make a return. In fact, he contended that inalienability is based on or legitimized by the belief that there is present in the object a power, a spirit, a spiritual reality that binds it to the giver, and which accompanies the object wherever it goes.[28] This spirit then wishes to return to its source the original giver.
  • Marshall Sahlins wrote Stone Age Economics. Sahlins disagreed with Mauss on several points and contended that "the freedom to gain at others' expense is not envisioned by the relations and forms of exchange." Moreover, "The material flow underwrites or initiates social relations…. Persons and groups confront each other not merely as distinct interests but with the possible inclination and certain right to physically prosecute these interests."[29]
  • Claude Lévi-Strauss applauded Marcel Mauss for his efforts even as he criticized him of not perceiving that "the primary fundamental phenomena (of social life) is exchange itself." He believed that "society is better understood in terms of language than from the standpoint of any other paradigm."[30] Moreover, he thought that anthropologists and ethnographers, particularly Mauss, were becoming confused by the languages of those they ethnographically studied, resulting in obscure theories that didn't really make sense. He advocated structuralist analysis in an attempt to clear up certain confusions caused by Mauss' work.[31]
  • Maurice Godelier wrote The Enigma of the Gift. Godelier expanded on Weiner's work by maintaining that society requires not keeping-while-giving, but "keeping-for-giving and giving-for-keeping."[26]

Importance edit

Economists have often shunned the idea of pondering exactly why people want goods.[32] Goods serve many purposes beyond what classical economists might theorize. Goods can serve as systems of social communication according to Mary Douglas, a prominent anthropologist.[32] In fact, anthropology in general is important to economics because it talks about the socio-cultural relationships in economy and economy itself as a cultural system that is not just market-based.[33] Moreover, entire industries are often based on gift giving such as the pharmaceutical industry. In addition, gift-giving plays an important role in the cultural development of how social and business relations evolve in major economies such as in the case of the Chinese.

The concept has also been applied to objects in works of fiction, such as the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings.[34]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Mills, Barbara (2004). "The establishment and defeat of hierarchy: Inalienable possessions and the history of collective prestige structures in the Pueblo Southwest". American Anthropologist. 106 (2): 238. doi:10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.238.
  2. ^ Mauss 2000
  3. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 131–47.
  4. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 32–3.
  5. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press.
  6. ^ Mills, Barbara (2004). "The establishment and defeat of hierarchy: Inalienable possessions and the history of collective prestige structures in the Pueblo Southwest". American Anthropologist. 106 (2): 239–41. doi:10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.238.
  7. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 34.
  8. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 33.
  9. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 9.
  10. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 49–54.
  11. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 11.
  12. ^ Sillitoe, Paul (2006). "Why Spheres of Exchange". Ethnology. 45 (1): 15. doi:10.2307/4617561. JSTOR 4617561.
  13. ^ Theuws, Frans (2001). Theuws, Frans; Van Rhijn, Carine (eds.). Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages Maastricht as a center of power in the early Middle Ages. Amsterdam: Brill. pp. 201–2.
  14. ^ Spielmann, K.A. (2002). "Feasting, Craft Specialization, and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small-Scale Societies". American Anthropologist. 104 (1): 195–207. doi:10.1525/aa.2002.104.1.195.
  15. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 10.
  16. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press.
  17. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 44–65.
  18. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 66–97.
  19. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 101.
  20. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 98–130.
  21. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 134–137.
  22. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 137–140.
  23. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 147–148.
  24. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 33.
  25. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 33–4.
  26. ^ a b Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 36.
  27. ^ Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The paradox of keeping-while-giving. Berkeley: University of California Press. p. 31.
  28. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. p. 6.
  29. ^ Sahlins, Marshall (1972). Stone Age Economics. New York: Aldine de Gruyter. pp. 149–83.
  30. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 6–7.
  31. ^ Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Cambridge: Polity Press. pp. 17–26.
  32. ^ a b Douglas 1979
  33. ^ Erem 2007
  34. ^ E.g. the Rings of Power, a Wizard’s staff, the sword Narsil, and the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings (Estep, Christina C. (2014). "Applying Anthropology to Fantasy: a Structural Analysis of The Lord of the Rings" (PDF). {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)); Python robes (蟒衣) in Jin Ping Mei (Volpp, Sophie (June 2005). "The Gift of a Python Robe: The Circulation of Objects in "Jin Ping Mei"". Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies. 65 (1): 133–158. doi:10.2307/25066765. JSTOR 25066765.); and secrets in Cranford (Rappoport, Jill (4 January 2008). "Conservation of Sympathy in Cranford". Victorian Literature and Culture. 36 (1): 95–110. doi:10.1017/s1060150308080066. S2CID 29398519.)

References edit

  • Appadurai, Arjun (1986). "The Social Life of Things: Commodities in Cultural Perspective". Cambridge University Press. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Douglas, Mary (1979). The World of Goods. New York, Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-13047-9.
  • Erem, Susan (2007). "An Anthropological Approach to Economics". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  • Theuws, F, van Rhijn, C (2001). Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages Maastricht as a center of power in the early Middle Ages. Brill.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Godelier, Maurice (1999). The Enigma of the Gift. Polity Press and the University of Chicago. ISBN 978-0-226-30045-0.
  • Helms, M W (2002). Tangible Durability.
  • Marcel Mauss: The Gift: The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies. Originally published as Essai sur le don. Forme et raison de l'échange dans les sociétés archaïques in 1925, modern English edition: ISBN 0-393-32043-X. Lewis Hyde calls this "the classic work on gift exchange".
  • Mills, B.J (2004). "The Establishment and Defeat of Hierarchy: Inalienable Possessions and the History of Collective Prestige Structures in the Pueblo Southwest". American Anthropologist. 106 (2): 238–251. doi:10.1525/aa.2004.106.2.238.
  • Sahlins, Marshall (1972). Stone Age Economics. Aldine Transaction. ISBN 978-0-202-01099-1.
  • Spielmann, K.A (2002). "Feasting, Craft Specialization, and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small-Scale Societies". American Anthropologist. 104 (1): 195–207. doi:10.1525/aa.2002.104.1.195.
  • Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1987). Introduction to the Work of Marcel Mauss. London, Routeledge and Kegan Paul. ISBN 978-0-415-15158-0.
  • Weiner, Annette (1992). Inalienable Possessions: The Paradox of Keeping While Giving. Berkeley, University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07604-4.
  • Wilk, R., Cliggett, L (2007). Economies and Cultures: Foundations of Economic Anthropology. Boulder, CO, Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-4365-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)

inalienable, possessions, linguistic, term, inalienable, possession, immovable, property, things, such, land, objects, that, symbolically, identified, with, groups, that, them, cannot, permanently, severed, from, them, landed, estates, middle, ages, example, r. For the linguistic term see Inalienable possession Inalienable possessions or immovable property are things such as land or objects that are symbolically identified with the groups that own them and so cannot be permanently severed from them Landed estates in the Middle Ages for example had to remain intact and even if sold they could be reclaimed by blood kin As a legal classification inalienable possessions date back to Roman times According to Barbara Mills Inalienable possessions are objects made to be kept not exchanged have symbolic and economic power that cannot be transferred and are often used to authenticate the ritual authority of corporate groups 1 Marcel Mauss first described inalienable possessions in The Gift discussing potlatches a kind of gift giving feast held in communities of many indigenous peoples of the Pacific Northwest It is even incorrect to speak in these cases of transfer They are loans rather than sales or true abandonment of possessions Among the Kwakiutl a certain number of objects although they appear at the potlatch cannot be disposed of In reality these pieces of property are sacra that a family divests itself of only with great reluctance and sometimes never 2 Annette Weiner broadened the application of the category of property outside the European context with her book Inalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping While Giving focussing on a range of Oceanic societies from Polynesia to Papua New Guinea and testing existing theories of reciprocity and marriage exchange 3 She also applies the concept to explain examples such as the Kula ring in the Trobriand Islands which was made famous by Bronislaw Malinowski 4 She explores how such possessions enable hierarchy by establishing a source of lasting social difference She also describes practices of loaning inalienable possessions as a way of either temporarily making kin of non kin or garnering status Contents 1 Inalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping While Giving 2 Cosmological authentication 3 Keeping while giving 3 1 Property value obligations and rights 3 2 Reconfiguring exchange theory 3 3 The sibling incest taboo 3 4 The defeat of hierarchy 3 5 The paradox of keeping while giving 4 Godelier on keeping for giving and giving for keeping 5 Related anthropologists on exchange theory 6 Importance 7 Notes 8 ReferencesInalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping While Giving editInalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping While Giving is a book by anthropologist Annette Weiner 5 Weiner was a Professor of Anthropology and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts at New York University and served as president of the American Anthropological Association She died in 1997 The book focuses on a range of Oceanic societies from Polynesia to Papua New Guinea to test existing theories of reciprocity gift giving and marriage exchange The book is also important for introducing a consideration of gender in the gift giving debate by placing women at the heart of the political process 6 She finds inalienable possessions at the root of many Polynesian kingdoms such as Hawaii and Samoa She also credits the original idea of inalienable possessions to Mauss who classified two categories of goods in Samoa Oloa and le Tonga immovable and movable goods exchanged through marriage 7 Barbara Mills praised her investigation of how inalienable possessions are simultaneously used to construct and defeat hierarchy saying it opens a boxful of new theoretical and methodological tools for understanding social inequality in past and present societies 1 Cosmological authentication edit nbsp Young Maori woman wearing a high status feather cloak indicating nobilityWeiner states that certain objects become inalienable only when they have acquired cosmological authentication that is What makes a possession inalienable is its exclusive and cumulative identity with a particular series of owners through time Its history is authenticated by fictive or true genealogies origin myths sacred ancestors and gods In this way inalienable possessions are transcendent treasures to be guarded against all the exigencies that might force their loss 8 She gives the example of a Maori Sacred Cloak and says that when a woman wears it she is more than herself that she is her ancestors Cloaks act as conduits for a person s hau or life giving spirit The hau can bring strength or even knowledge potentially but a person may also have the risk of losing their hau An inalienable possession acts as a stabilizing force against change because its presence authenticates cosmological origins kinship and political histories 9 In this way the Cloak actually stands for the person 10 These possessions then are the most potent force in the effort to subvert change while at the same time they stand as the corpus of change 11 Paul Sillitoe queries the supposed identification of these objects with persons He states that these objects are durable wealth that is collective property that is continually in circulation among persons who have temporary possession of it In this view transactable objects belong to society as a whole and are not inalienable possessions associated with certain persons An analogy in Western culture is sporting trophies such as championship boxing belts owned by all the clubs comprising the association that controls the competition in which constituent club members compete and which pass for agreed periods of time into the possession of particular champions changing hands as new champions emerge 12 Theuws argues that Over time objects acquire new meanings and what was once a humble pot may become a sacred vessel This transformation in the object is the result of ritualization or a change in cosmology 13 In fact Ritual Knowledge is often a source of political power 14 However these possessions may also become destabilizing as elites reconstruct those sacred histories to identify themselves with the past for example Gandhi invoked the traditional hand spinning traditional cloth khadi to contest British rule which Nehru referred to as Gandhi s livery of freedom 15 Keeping while giving editInalienable possessions are nonetheless frequently drawn into exchange networks The subtitle of Weiner s book is The paradox of keeping while giving they are given as gifts not sold yet still retain a tie to their owners These gifts are not like those given in regular gift giving in the West on birthdays for example Rather these gifts can t be re sold for money by the receiver because the value and the significance of the gift cannot be alienated or disengaged from its relationship to those whose inalienable possession it is Property value obligations and rights edit These inalienable possessions are a form of property that is inalienable yet they can be exchanged Property can be thought of as a bundle of rights the right to use something the right to collect rent from someone the right to extract something as in oil drilling the right to hunt within a particular territory That ownership may be a bundle of rights held in common by groups of individuals or lineages The property thus becomes impossible to separate from the group owning it To give in this instant means to transfer without alienating or to use the language of the West to give means to cede the right of use without ceding actual ownership In other words Weiner is contending that an economy built around the moral code of gift giving provides the giver rights over what he she has given and in turn subsequently benefits from a series of advantages 16 Thus when one accepts a gift one also accepts that the giver now has rights over the receiver Reconfiguring exchange theory edit Weiner begins by re examining Mauss explanation for the return gift the spirit of the gift The spirit of the gift was a translation of a Maori word hau Weiner demonstrates that not all gifts must be returned Only gifts that are immoveable property can become inalienable gifts She further argues that inalienable possessions gain the mana spirit of their possessors and so become associated with them These goods are frequently produced by women like the feather cloak above The more prominent the woman the more mana the object is thought to inherit The longer the kin group can maintain the object in their possession the more valuable it becomes but it must also be periodically displayed to assert the group s status and thus becomes an object of desire for outsiders 17 The sibling incest taboo edit Weiner argues that the role of women in the exchange of inalienable possessions has been seriously underestimated Kinship theory as developed by Claude Levi Strauss used the sibling incest taboo to argue that women themselves are objects of exchange between lineage groups Men had to find women outside their kin groups to marry hence they lost their sisters in order to gain wives Weiner shows that the focus on women as wives ignores the importance of women as sisters who are not lost as a result of becoming wives Women produce inalienable possessions which they may take with them when they marry out the inalienable possession however must be reclaimed by her brother after her death in order to maintain the status of the kin group In comparing Hawaii Samoa and the Trobriands she argues that the more stratified a society is by ranked differences the more important inalienable possessions produced by sisters become The more stratified a society becomes as in Hawaii the closer the sibling bond sibling intimacy In these cases women are critical to the cosmological authentication of inalienable possessions 18 The defeat of hierarchy edit A critical part of Weiner s argument is that the ability to keep inalienable possessions outside of exchange is a source of difference and hence brings high status The development of Polynesian kingdoms is an example She points to the inalienable possessions of the Australian aborigines however to demonstrate how the creation of hierarchy can be defeated Australian inalienable possessions are given cosmological authentication through their religious beliefs in the Dreaming As an ideology The Dreaming is immaterial but in another sense The Dreaming flourishes because it consists of material and verbal possessions myths names songs ceremonies and sacred objects inherited from one generation to the next In this way The Dreaming itself encompasses vast inalienable possessions that are authenticated by the very cosmology under which they are produced These possessions created in and authenticated by The Dreaming circulate from one person or group to another in a limited way The possibilities of transmission in the face of the canon for guardianship establish for ritual leaders a domain of authority that in certain situations leads to a formalized position of rank 19 Weiner points out that the same gender relations of sibling intimacy affect the exchange of these inalienable objects Women as sisters and women as wives provide the conduit for the gifting and return gifting of these goods allowing the givers to build prestige However insofar as these inalienable possessions lose their cosmological authentication these social hierarchies lose intergenerational longevity Because the Dreaming itself is an inalienable possession kept secret by clan elders it can be lost and hierarchy defeated 20 The paradox of keeping while giving edit nbsp A Kula bracelet from the Trobriand Islands Weiner has used the term to categorize the many Kula valuables of the Trobriand islanders who view those objects as culturally imbued with a spiritual sense of the gift giver Thus when they are transferred from one individual or group to another the objects reserve meaningful bonds associated with that of the giver and their lineage The shell bracelets and necklaces given in exchange each have their own histories and are thus ranked on the basis of who they have been exchanged to There were as well less well known shells called kitomu which were individually owned rather than being part of lineage history which would be given to temporarily please a disappointed trade partner expecting a more valuable shell 21 The Kula trade was organized differently in the more hierarchical parts of the Trobriand islands There only chiefs were allowed to engage in Kula exchange In hierarchical areas individuals can earn their own kitomu shells whereas in less hierarchical areas they are always subject to the claims of matrilineal kin And lastly in the hierarchical areas Kula necklaces and bracelets are saved for external exchange only stone axe blades are used internally In less hierarchical areas exchange partners may lose their valuables to internal claims As a result most seek to exchange their kula valuables with chiefs who thus become the most successful players The chiefs have saved their Kula valuables for external trade and external traders seek to trade with them before they lose their valuables to internal claims 22 Kula exchange is the only way for an individual to achieve local prestige without local political action But this prestige is fleeting and does not transform into permanent differences in rank because women s participation is minor and Kula shells lack cosmological authentication It is not Kula shells but women s cloth wealth that is connected with matrilineal ancestors It is for this reason that women retain high prestige and authority despite the fame of male Kula exchange players 23 Godelier on keeping for giving and giving for keeping editMaurice Godelier has further elaborated on Annette Weiner s ideas on inalienable possessions in The Enigma of the Gift He derived two theses from Weiner to which he adds a third First Thesis As discussed above even in a society that is dominated by a gift giving economic and moral code the interplay of gift and counter gift doesn t completely dominate the social sphere as there must be some objects which are kept and not given These things such as valuables talismans knowledge and rites confirm identities and their continuity over time Moreover they acknowledge differences of identity of individuals or groups linked by various kinds of exchanges 24 Second Thesis Women or the feminine element also exercise power by providing legitimation and redistributing of political and religious power among groups in a society Godelier contends that Weiner refocuses attention on the role of women in constructing and legitimizing power 25 While women as wives are frequently lowered in status as sisters they frequently retain equal status to their brothers For example in Polynesia the woman as a sister appears to control those goods associated with the sacred the ancestors and the gods To this Godelier adds a third thesis Third thesis The social is not just the sum of alienable and inalienable goods but is brought into existence by the difference and inter dependence of these two spheres of exchange Maintaining society thus requires not keeping while giving but keeping for giving and giving for keeping 26 Related anthropologists on exchange theory editEmile Durkheim describes how exchange involves an intensive bonding more formidable than mere economic relations Social cohesiveness occurs because one person is always dependent on another to achieve a feeling of completeness 27 This comes into being via the domain of the sacred ritual that involves communal participation even as it encompasses the moment in a higher order of sacredness Bronislaw Malinowski wrote Argonauts of the Western Pacific Malinowski was a pioneer of ethnographic fieldwork in the Trobriand Islandes and researched Kula exchange His work was later re analyzed by Mauss and subsequently by other anthropologists Marcel Mauss wrote The Gift He was a pioneer in the study of gift exchange Mauss was concerned only with the relations formed by the circulation of things that men produce and not with the relations that men form while they produce things He is concerned in particular with why people give gifts and why they feel the obligation to make a return In fact he contended that inalienability is based on or legitimized by the belief that there is present in the object a power a spirit a spiritual reality that binds it to the giver and which accompanies the object wherever it goes 28 This spirit then wishes to return to its source the original giver Marshall Sahlins wrote Stone Age Economics Sahlins disagreed with Mauss on several points and contended that the freedom to gain at others expense is not envisioned by the relations and forms of exchange Moreover The material flow underwrites or initiates social relations Persons and groups confront each other not merely as distinct interests but with the possible inclination and certain right to physically prosecute these interests 29 Claude Levi Strauss applauded Marcel Mauss for his efforts even as he criticized him of not perceiving that the primary fundamental phenomena of social life is exchange itself He believed that society is better understood in terms of language than from the standpoint of any other paradigm 30 Moreover he thought that anthropologists and ethnographers particularly Mauss were becoming confused by the languages of those they ethnographically studied resulting in obscure theories that didn t really make sense He advocated structuralist analysis in an attempt to clear up certain confusions caused by Mauss work 31 Maurice Godelier wrote The Enigma of the Gift Godelier expanded on Weiner s work by maintaining that society requires not keeping while giving but keeping for giving and giving for keeping 26 Importance editEconomists have often shunned the idea of pondering exactly why people want goods 32 Goods serve many purposes beyond what classical economists might theorize Goods can serve as systems of social communication according to Mary Douglas a prominent anthropologist 32 In fact anthropology in general is important to economics because it talks about the socio cultural relationships in economy and economy itself as a cultural system that is not just market based 33 Moreover entire industries are often based on gift giving such as the pharmaceutical industry In addition gift giving plays an important role in the cultural development of how social and business relations evolve in major economies such as in the case of the Chinese The concept has also been applied to objects in works of fiction such as the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings 34 Notes edit a b Mills Barbara 2004 The establishment and defeat of hierarchy Inalienable possessions and the history of collective prestige structures in the Pueblo Southwest American Anthropologist 106 2 238 doi 10 1525 aa 2004 106 2 238 Mauss 2000 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 131 47 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 32 3 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press Mills Barbara 2004 The establishment and defeat of hierarchy Inalienable possessions and the history of collective prestige structures in the Pueblo Southwest American Anthropologist 106 2 239 41 doi 10 1525 aa 2004 106 2 238 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press p 34 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 33 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 9 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 49 54 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 11 Sillitoe Paul 2006 Why Spheres of Exchange Ethnology 45 1 15 doi 10 2307 4617561 JSTOR 4617561 Theuws Frans 2001 Theuws Frans Van Rhijn Carine eds Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages Maastricht as a center of power in the early Middle Ages Amsterdam Brill pp 201 2 Spielmann K A 2002 Feasting Craft Specialization and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small Scale Societies American Anthropologist 104 1 195 207 doi 10 1525 aa 2002 104 1 195 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 10 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 44 65 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 66 97 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 101 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 98 130 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 134 137 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 137 140 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press pp 147 148 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press p 33 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press pp 33 4 a b Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press p 36 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The paradox of keeping while giving Berkeley University of California Press p 31 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press p 6 Sahlins Marshall 1972 Stone Age Economics New York Aldine de Gruyter pp 149 83 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press pp 6 7 Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Cambridge Polity Press pp 17 26 a b Douglas 1979 Erem 2007 E g the Rings of Power a Wizard s staff the sword Narsil and the One Ring in The Lord of the Rings Estep Christina C 2014 Applying Anthropology to Fantasy a Structural Analysis of The Lord of the Rings PDF a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Python robes 蟒衣 in Jin Ping Mei Volpp Sophie June 2005 The Gift of a Python Robe The Circulation of Objects in Jin Ping Mei Harvard Journal of Asiatic Studies 65 1 133 158 doi 10 2307 25066765 JSTOR 25066765 and secrets in Cranford Rappoport Jill 4 January 2008 Conservation of Sympathy in Cranford Victorian Literature and Culture 36 1 95 110 doi 10 1017 s1060150308080066 S2CID 29398519 References editAppadurai Arjun 1986 The Social Life of Things Commodities in Cultural Perspective Cambridge University Press a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Douglas Mary 1979 The World of Goods New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 13047 9 Erem Susan 2007 An Anthropological Approach to Economics a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Theuws F van Rhijn C 2001 Topographies of Power in the Early Middle Ages Maastricht as a center of power in the early Middle Ages Brill a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Godelier Maurice 1999 The Enigma of the Gift Polity Press and the University of Chicago ISBN 978 0 226 30045 0 Helms M W 2002 Tangible Durability Marcel Mauss The Gift The Form and Reason for Exchange in Archaic Societies Originally published as Essai sur le don Forme et raison de l echange dans les societes archaiques in 1925 modern English edition ISBN 0 393 32043 X Lewis Hyde calls this the classic work on gift exchange Mills B J 2004 The Establishment and Defeat of Hierarchy Inalienable Possessions and the History of Collective Prestige Structures in the Pueblo Southwest American Anthropologist 106 2 238 251 doi 10 1525 aa 2004 106 2 238 Sahlins Marshall 1972 Stone Age Economics Aldine Transaction ISBN 978 0 202 01099 1 Spielmann K A 2002 Feasting Craft Specialization and the Ritual Mode of Production in Small Scale Societies American Anthropologist 104 1 195 207 doi 10 1525 aa 2002 104 1 195 Levi Strauss Claude 1987 Introduction to the Work of Marcel Mauss London Routeledge and Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 415 15158 0 Weiner Annette 1992 Inalienable Possessions The Paradox of Keeping While Giving Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07604 4 Wilk R Cliggett L 2007 Economies and Cultures Foundations of Economic Anthropology Boulder CO Westview Press ISBN 978 0 8133 4365 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Inalienable possessions amp oldid 1136429605, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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