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The World of Goods

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TLDR
The World of Goods as mentioned in this paper is a classic of economic anthropology whose insights remain compelling and urgent, arguing that poverty is caused as much by the erosion of local communities and networks as it is by lack of possessions and contrast small-scale with large-scale consumption in the household.
Abstract
It is well-understood that the consumption of goods plays an important, symbolic role in the way human beings communicate, create identity, and establish relationships. What is less well-known is that the pattern of their flow shapes society in fundamental ways. In this book the renowned anthropologist Mary Douglas and economist Baron Isherwood overturn arguments about consumption that rely on received economic and psychological explanations. They ask new questions about why people save, why they spend, what they buy, and why they sometimes-but not always-make fine distinctions about quality. Instead of regarding consumption as a private means of satisfying one’s preferences, they show how goods are a vital information system, used by human beings to fulfill their intentions towards one another. They also consider the implications of the social role of goods for a new vision for social policy, arguing that poverty is caused as much by the erosion of local communities and networks as it is by lack of possessions, and contrast small-scale with large-scale consumption in the household. A radical rethinking of consumerism, inequality and social capital, The World of Goods is a classic of economic anthropology whose insights remain compelling and urgent. This Routledge Classics edition includes a new foreword by Richard Wilk. "Forget that commodities are good for eating, clothing, and shelter; forget their usefulness and try instead the idea that commodities are good for thinking." – Mary Douglas and Baron Isherwood

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Scale and periodicities of recorded music consumption: reconciling Bourdieu's theory of taste with facts.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make use of the anthropological view of consumption to analyse Spaniards' musical tastes and consumption and find that a higher position on the social ladder was associated with more omnivorous tastes and greater use of technologies that free the consumer from fixed periodicities in music consumption.
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Potter’s Wheel in the Iron Age in Central Europe: Process or Product Innovation?

TL;DR: The results indicate the effects of various mechanisms of cultural transmission which shaped the evolution of techniques in the Iron Age society and can be explained by shifting accents on product and process performance characteristics in changing selective environments.
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Advertisements as Artefacts

TL;DR: From analyses based in semiotics, or the science of signs, and their application to recent advertisements, this article developed an approach that is implicitly critical of many previous assessments of the relationship between advertising and meaning.
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Ethics, evaluation, and economies of value amidst illegal practices

TL;DR: In this paper, a special issue focused on illegal practices and the forms of value produced as people engage in them is presented, with a methodological orientation that attends to criminalized networks and the values they structure from the inside.
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Primitive and Modern Economics: Derivatives, Liquidity, Value, Panic and Crises, A Uniformitarian View

TL;DR: The authors investigated aspects of economics in the context of complex society and the nature of investment devices in cross-cultural comparison, placing special attention on the new global issues of money, hedge fund contracts, derivatives and other risk-spreading concepts and practices.