From Land to Mouth The Agricultural "Economy" of the Wola of the New Guinea Highlands Paul Sillitoe
- Price: £45.00
- Add to Basket Buy ebook
- Series:
- Yale Agrarian Studies Series
- Format:
- Hardback
- Publication date:
- 07 Jan 2011
- ISBN:
- 9780300142266
- Dimensions:
- 512 pages: 235 x 156 x 38mm
- Illustrations:
- 172 black-&-white illustrations
Categories:
Among the Wola people of Papua New Guinea, our category economy is problematic. Distribution is unnecessary; the producers of everyday needs are the consumers: produce goes largely "from land to mouth" - with no implication that resources are scarce. Yet transactions featuring valuable things -- which are scarce -- are a prominent aspect of life, where sociopolitical exchange figures prominently. The relationship -- or rather the disconnection -- between these two domains is central to understanding the fiercely egalitarian political-economy. In this detailed investigation of a Highland New Guinea agricultural 'economy' and acephalous political order--the most thorough inquiry into such a tropical subsistence farming system ever undertaken--esteemed anthropologist Paul Sillitoe interrogates the relevance of key economic ideas in noncapitalist contexts and challenges anthropological shibboleths such as the "gift." Furthermore, he makes a reactionary-cum-innovative contribution to research methods and analysis, drawing on advances in information technology to manage large data sets.
Over a span of more than three decades, Sillitoe has compiled a huge body of ethnography, gaining unprecedented insights into Highlands' social, economic, and agricultural arrangements. He uses these here to illuminate economic thought in nonmarket contexts, advancing an integrated set of principles underpinning a stateless-subsistence order comparable to that of economists for the state-market. Sillitoe's insights have implications for economic development programs in regions where capitalist assumptions have limited relevance, following his advocacy of development interventions more respectful of existing social orders.
Paul Sillitoe is professor in the anthropology department of Durham University, and Shell Chair of Sustainable Development at Qatar University, Doha, Qatar.
"[T]his huge volume is a superb example of ethnography at its finest, combining traditional questions with state-of-the-art technology. . . . Ethnographically exemplary and theoretically idiosyncratic, Sillitoe's volume will be important reading for scholars in any discipline interested in ecology, farming and social organization, and will be enjoyed by anthropologists for Sillitoe's refusal to toe the orthodox line."--Alex Golub, "Pacific Affairs"--Alex Golub "Pacific Affairs "
-
Black Ranching Frontiers
Andrew Sluyter£35.00 -
Milk
Deborah Valenze£11.99 -
Milk
Deborah Valenze£18.99 -
The Banana Tree at the Gate
Michael Roger Dove£40.00 -
The Politics of Food Supply
Bill Winders£45.00 -
Chicken
Steve Striffler£10.99 -
Chicken
Steve Striffler£18.95 -
The Tragedy of the Soviet Countryside v. 1
Lynne Viola£35.00 -
Farming the Red Land
Jonathan L. Dekel-Chen£35.00 -
The Great Meadow
Brian Donahue£25.00 -
Smart Alliance
J. Gary Taylor£20.00
-
All the Trees of the Forest
Alon Tal£40.00 -
Managing the Mountains
Sara M. Gregg£16.99 -
Dancing with the River
Kuntala Lahiri-Dutt£40.00 -
Every Twelve Seconds
Timothy Pachirat£11.99 -
From Precaution to Profit
Brian J. Gareau£45.00 -
Black Ranching Frontiers
Andrew Sluyter£35.00 -
American Georgics
Edwin C. Hagenstein£18.99 -
The Politics of Food Supply
Bill Winders£15.99 -
Notes from the Ground
Benjamin R. Cohen£20.00 -
Every Twelve Seconds
Timothy Pachirat£30.00 -
American Georgics
Edwin C. Hagenstein£25.00 -
Contesting Development
Patrick Barron£35.00 -
The Banana Tree at the Gate
Michael Roger Dove£40.00 -
The Art of Not Being Governed
James C. Scott£18.00 -
Managing the Mountains
Sara M. Gregg£35.00 -
Squeezed
Alissa Hamilton£15.00 -
Land Reform in Russia
Stephen K. Wegren£40.00 -
Notes from the Ground
Benjamin R. Cohen£40.00 -
Squeezed
Alissa Hamilton£22.50