ABSTRACT

Exchanges are fundamental to human societies. The authors show that the study of exchanges not only serves as a key to understanding particular societies as totalities but also helps to frame a comparative mode of analysis expressed in terms of a hierarchy of values. Starting with a comparative analysis of the different vocabularies used when dealing with exchange, the authors go on to provide a detailed account of how each society's exchanges form a genuine value-oriented system. Their conclusions shed light on important issues in anthropology such as the difference between subject and object; the construction of the person in the matrix of social relations; and the contrast between 'socio-cosmic' systems and other societies which recognize a universal term of reference beyond their community.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|18 pages

The Vocabulary of Exchanges

chapter Chapter 2|76 pages

The Exchanges of Each Society Considered as a Whole

chapter Chapter 3|22 pages

Exchanges, Wholes, Comparison