Houses in the Rainforest by Roy Richard Grinker;
Author:Roy Richard Grinker; [Grinker, Roy Richard]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780520915664
Publisher: University of California Press
Published: 2020-12-18T00:00:00+00:00
CHAPTER IV
The House and the Economy
âThe most that one can say about the economic aspect of the relationship is that it appears to be one of mutual convenience.â
Colin Turnbull, Wayward Servants, on the Mbuti-Bila partnerships
Part 1: : The House
In a creative study of the local Colombian economy, Stephen Gudeman (1990) suggests the house as an alternative to the model of the corporation. He argues that Colombian peasants use a model of the house to organize their social and economic lives, and he defines the house primarily in opposition to the model of the corporation, which he believes coexists in dialectical tension with the house. Gudeman holds that the house economy is an institution of such long standing that it preceded historically the development of the market and its corporate organization (1990:9). He also contends that the notion of a house economy has widespread applicability and relevance and thus asks whether, in rethinking the corporation as a model for local forms of organization, we might modify the use of that model in African studies as well.
The corporate model upon which lineage theory is based is a specifically Western model that has been imposed on others at the expense of their folk models. The house, in contrast, seems to represent the way that many people conceive of and model their own economies. In fact, one of the ancestors of descent theory, Evans-Pritchard (1940), reveals that the Nuer do not conceive of their social world in terms of a lineage model. For example, in 1933, Evans-Pritchard posed the question: âWhat exactly is meant by lineage and clan? One thing is fairly certain, namely, that the Nuer do not think in group abstractions called clans. In fact, as far as I am aware, he has no word meaning clan and you cannot ask a man an equivalent of âWhat is your clanâ â (1933, part 1:28). In The Nuer, Evans-Pritchard offered a definition of lineage that has little to do with corporate or descent groups: âA lineage is thok mac, the hearth, or thok dwiel, the entrance to the hutâ (1940:195). For Evans-Pritchard, then, lineage was the model for the hearth and home. But might the hearth and home, rather than the descent group and lineage, be the Nuer models for political opposition? Might the lineage be an imposition of a European corporate model? Or might there be, as I argue for the Lese, two or more coexisting modelsâsay, a descent model for one set of social processes, a house model for another set? Gudeman notes,
One can only wonder how the history of descent theory might have appeared had theorists of the 1940âs, instead of exporting their own market experience, used a model of the home and the hearth, as Evans-Pritchardâs own foundational work suggested (1940:192, 195, 204, 222, 247; 1951:6, 7, 21, 127,141), or the local imagery of kin groupings. We might never have established such trust in the existence of the corporate descent group or even, for that matter, the lineage. (1990:184)
Gudemanâs emphasis
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Central Africa | East Africa |
North Africa | Southern Africa |
West Africa | Algeria |
Egypt | Ethiopia |
Kenya | Nigeria |
South Africa | Sudan |
Zimbabwe |
Goodbye Paradise(3381)
Men at Arms by Terry Pratchett(2643)
Tobruk by Peter Fitzsimons(2338)
Arabs by Eugene Rogan(2153)
Pirate Alley by Terry McKnight(2097)
Borders by unknow(2070)
Belonging by Unknown(1683)
It's Our Turn to Eat by Michela Wrong(1548)
The Biafra Story by Frederick Forsyth(1524)
Botswana--Culture Smart! by Michael Main(1447)
A Winter in Arabia by Freya Stark(1414)
The Source by James A. Michener(1406)
Coffee: From Bean to Barista by Robert W. Thurston(1387)
Gandhi by Ramachandra Guha(1382)
Livingstone by Tim Jeal(1352)
The Falls by Unknown(1332)
The Shield and The Sword by Ernle Bradford(1283)
Africa: Altered States, Ordinary Miracles by Richard Dowden(1256)
Egyptian Mythology A Fascinating Guide to Understanding the Gods, Goddesses, Monsters, and Mortals (Greek Mythology - Norse Mythology - Egyptian Mythology) by Matt Clayton(1247)
