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Showing papers by "Clifford Geertz published in 2018"


Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: There has been a long tradition of peasant market studies in anthropology as discussed by the authors, but much of it has been merely descriptive inductivism gone berserk, which has often been the case, skimming off the other's more generalized ideas and misapplying them.
Abstract: There have been a number of points at which anthropology and economics have come to confront one another over the last several decades-development theory; preindustrial history; colonial domination. Here I want to discuss another where the interchange between the two disciplines may grow even more intimate; one where they may come actually to contribute to each other rather than, as has often been the case, skimming off the other's more generalized ideas and misapplying them. This is the study of peasant market systems, or what I will call bazaar economies. There has been by now a long tradition of peasant market studies in anthropology. Much of it has been merely descriptiveinductivism gone berserk. That part which has had analytical interests has tended to

566 citations