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Culturing Money: Double Movements in the Marshall Islands [Kõva köide]

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The idea of culture has become a creative framework in Marshall Islanders quest to realise a community based on communality, meaningful work, and self-reliance. These values are consciously pitted against selfishness, wage-labour, and money dependency, which are values commonly deemed to belong to the realm of the economy. Culturing Money analyses what sort of conceptual and practical work that the dialectics of culture and economy can do for Marshall Islanders in their quest for a meaningful life where self-reliance is the ultimate goal.

Arvustused

This is an unusually brilliant contribution to general anthropological theory. It is clearly argued and brings back the concept of culture in engagement with material and social practices in a way that makes it highly relevant to anthropologists at large. Ingjerd Hoëm, Professor, Department of Social Anthropology, University of Oslo

List of Illustrations

List of tables, figures, and maps

Preface

Acknowledgements

Notes on the Text



Introduction: Manit and Mani, Culture and Money



Chapter
1. Connections: The Local Economy as an Ethnographic Field

Chapter
2. Legacies: Copra, Craft, and Passports

Chapter
3. Mutual Aid: How Work Brings Kinship into Being

Chapter
4. Helping the People: Marshallese Fundamentals for a National
Economy

Chapter
5. Be Marshallese, Buy Marshallese: Marketing Culture

Chapter
6. Emergent Authenticity: The Ambivalence of Cultural Commodities



Conclusion: Culturing Money



References

Index
Ola Gunhildrud Berta is an MSCA postdoctoral fellow at the Department of Social Anthropology at the University of Bergen. He has done ethnographic fieldwork in the Marshall Islands since 2013. His ongoing research project is part of the interdisciplinary SEAS program and explores ocean-centered pursuits of sovereignty and development in the Marshall Islands.