anthropology ch.7
market/ commercial exchange
exchanges or transactions in which the "prices" are subject to supply and demand, whether or not the transactions actually occur in the marketplace
balanced reciprocity
explicit and short term in its expectations of return
special purpose money
objects of value for which only some goods and services can be exchanged
peasants
rural people who produce food for their own subsistence but who must also contribute or sell their surpluses to others who do not produce their own food
redistribution
the accumulation of goods or labor by a particular person, or in a particular place, for the purpose of subsequent distribution
generalized reciprocity
when goods or services are given to another without any apparent expectation of a return gift
potlach
a feast among Pacific Northwest Native Americans at which great quantities of food and goods and are given to the guests in order to gain prestige for the hosts
corvee
a system of required labor
general-purpose money
a universally accepted medium of exchange
optimal foraging theory
assumes that individuals seek to maximize the returns, in the calories and nutrients, on their labor in deciding which animals and plants to hunt collect
reciprocity
consists of giving and taking without the use of money; it mainly takes the form of gift giving or generalized reciprocity