"I can live with doubt and uncertainty and not knowing. I think it is much more interesting to live not knowing than to have answers that might be wrong" (Richard Feynman)

Monday, September 21, 2009

Kottak Ch. 5 - Making A Living (Subsistence)

HERE ARE SOME OF THE CHAPTER OBJECTIVES
  1. Know what an adaptive strategy is. In addition, you should be familiar with Cohen's typology of societies based on their adaptive strategies.
  2. Understand examples of how today's globalizing world and state policies are altering the ways of life of many communities that traditionally practiced different adaptive strategies.
  3. Distinguish between modes and means of production
  4. Understand how industrialism leads to the alienation of producers from their products.
  5. Distinguish between the various forms of distribution and exchange, including the market principle, redistribution, and generalized, balanced, and negative reciprocity.
  6. Click here to read the previous posts on the potlatch and watch two brief videos of the ritual. Specifically, you should know what it is, where it has been practiced, and how it relates to local and regional patterns of resource abundance and shortage.
What role do religious and social ceremonies play in an economy?
Answer: The potlatch of the native groups of the North Pacific coast of North America is a good example of the integral role a festival can play in a group's economy. The sponsors of a potlatch traditionally gave away food, blankets, pieces of copper, and other material goods. In return, they gained social prestige, and the more they gave away, the more their prestige increased. Like most regions of the world, the North Pacific coast of North America is subject to local fluctuations in resource abundance. One village might have a good year while another experienced a bad one. A village enjoying a good year would take advantage of its surplus to increase its prestige by hosting a potlatch and inviting the members of the surrounding villages to attend. In this way, the potlatch created and maintained a regional economy in which a series of villages pooled their resources. The needy villages would receive the surplus from the wealthy villages, which in turn gained prestige.

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Kottak Ch. 3, Culture: Is Shared, Learned, Adaptive, Maladaptive....

What a great conversation and inquiry in the 4:10 section today! The 2:30 Section wasn't bad either but 4:10 rocked my world with their questions. Come on, great ones! Do it up!

Questions like:
  • What is cultural and what is not?
  • Is hunger cultural or biological?
  • Is hearing cultural and/or biological? Is seeing cultural?? Thanks Liping for your inquiry with me after class ended.
So let's keep it going? If you are not the symbol of your name (Kyra) and that name is not intrinsic or natural to you? What does that information make available to you about who you are, could be or want to be??

What could you then play with about who you are?? What cultural processes that we are reading about could you use to play with??

Monday, September 7, 2009

Mapping our Locations : Who We Are

Click the link or map below to go to our own ANT1001 Google Map for class members' locations and restaurants starting Fall 2009. CHOOSE MY MAPS. Then select our class map from the right sidebar and click EDIT.

Add a placemark for your home (use male or female figure and your first name and last initial only for privacy's sake). You can mark your neighborhood or your exact location. Add a placemark for your favorite restaurant.

We can then see who we are as a group based on some primary data. You can change the type of placemark from male/female figure to a form of transportation placemark to signify how you got from other locations where you once lived (airplace, bus, train/subway, etc.).

Check it out. Then we can really see who we are and where we have been and travel.