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Economic Anthropology

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This accessible and authoritative overview of the subdiscipline of economic anthropology defines and frames the field for a new generation of students in search of an inspiring and fresh way of loo...
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  • 25 February 2021
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Conventional economic thought sees the economy as the sum of market transactions carried out by rational individuals deciding how to allocate their resources among the various things on offer that would satisfy their desires. Economic anthropologists see things differently. For them, the focus is the activities, relationships and systems through which objects are produced, circulate among people and ultimately are consumed, which take different forms in different societies and even in different parts of the same society. In this way, economic anthropology takes the rational market actors of conventional economic thought and places them in the world of people, relationships, systems, beliefs and values that begins with production and ends with consumption. This accessible and authoritative introduction to the field of economic anthropology offers students a fresh and fascinating way of looking at the economic world.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 160
Publisher: Agenda Publishing
Imprint: Agenda Publishing
Publication Date: 25 February 2021
Trim Size: 8.25 X 5.85 in
ISBN: 9781788212519
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / General

Carrier draws on his own extensive fieldwork and a sampling of the best and brightest academic thinking, introducing a rich field with growing relevance to the struggles and experiences of today's students.
— Richard Wilk, Indiana University
James G. Carrier is an Associate of the Max Planck Institute of Social Anthropology and Adjunct Professor of Anthropology at the University of Indiana. His recent books include Anthropologies of Class: Power, Practice, and Inequality (co-editor with Don Kalb) and After the Crisis: Anthropological Thought, Neoliberalism and the Aftermath (editor).

Introducing economic anthropology


1. Production and what is produced


2. Changing production


3. Circulation, identity, relationship and order


4. Gifts and commodities


5. Commercial circulation


6. Considering Christmas


7. Consumption and meaning


8. Consumption in context


Afterword