by C. A. Gregory Foreword by Marilyn Strathern New Preface by the Author Christopher A. Gregory’s Gifts and commodities is one of the undisputed classics of economic anthropology. On its publication in 1982, it spurred intense, ongoing debates about gifts and gifting, value, exchange, and the place of political economy in anthropology. Gifts and commodities is, at once, a critique of neoclassical economics and development theory, a critical history of colonial Papua New Guinea, and a comparative ethnography of exchange in Melanesian societies. This new edition includes a foreword by anthropologist Marilyn Strathern and a new preface by the author that discusses the ongoing response to the book and the debates it has engendered, debates that have become more salient in our evermore neoliberal and globalized era.





Chris Gregory’s work constitutes probably the single most important body of eco­nomic anthropology produced in the last half century.… This new edition of Gifts and commodities will be remembered as an enduring classic for a very long time to come.

—David Graeber, London School of Economics, author of Debt: The first 5,000 years

Gifts and commodities was a major intervention in studies of Melanesian exchange systems, fundamentally changing our understanding of the transactions themselves, their historical transformations, and the variations in meanings people attached to them.… Long out of print, this beautiful new edition allows this classic text to be a touchstone for a new generation of thinkers in and beyond anthropology.

—Martha Macintyre, University of Melbourne, editor (with Mary Patterson) of Managing modernity in the Western Pacific

Gifts and commodities is one of only a small handful of books from the latter part of the last century that fundamentally shifted the foundations of anthropology.… [T]he book now returns to wide circulation in this second edition with its thought-provoking new preface. Gregory’s power to shake things up and to lift the bar for anthropological debate in a wide range of areas remains as strong as ever.

—Joel Robbins, University of Cambridge, author of Becoming sinners: Christian­ity and moral torment in a Papua New Guinea society

336 pages

ISBN: 9780990505013

Price: $35.00

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Table of Contents

Front Matter



Front Matter

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Foreword

by Marilyn Strathern

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Preface to the first edition

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Preface to the second edition

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Acknowledgments

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Introduction



Introduction

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Part One: Concepts



Chapter I: The competing theories

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Chapter II: A framework of analysis

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Chapter III: Gifts and commodities: Circulation

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Chapter IV: Gifts and commodities: Reproduction

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Chapter V: Traditional and modern goods: A critique

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Part Two: Theory



Chapter VI: The transformation of gifts into commodities in colonial Papua New Guinea

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Chapter VII: The transformation of commodities into gifts in colonial Papua New Guinea

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Conclusion



Conclusion

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Back Matter



Mathematical appendix: A matrix approach to the calculus of kinship relations

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References

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Reviews

Carrier, James G. “Gifts and Commodities (Second Edition), by Chris A. Gregory.” Anthropological Forum 26, no. 2 (2016): 197-199.

The reappearance of this work is timely, for two reasons. One reason is that, since around 2000, neoclassical economics, with its methodological individualism, has lost much of the authority that it had in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Instead, those concerned with economy are adopting more systemic, macroscopic approaches. Gregory’s book is timely because it begins with a substantial consideration of key elements of neoclassical economics, presented in terms of what Gregory calls ‘economics’, and contrasts them with what is probably the most established systemic approach, political economy. The second reason concerns intellectual shifts in anthropology. In that same last quarter of the twentieth century, many in the discipline rejected their own systemic, macroscopic approaches and adopted orientations that are more individualistic. There are signs that this shift is begin to reverse itself, and Gregory’s book is timely because it is a useful reminder of the strength of more systemic approaches and of the ways that they can help us to make sense of a range of phenomena in a range of societies… If we want to move forward from recording the form of the world that we see to asking ourselves why it has taken that form, this book offers an inspiring approach.

Hann, Chris. “Can the gift be sponsored?” Journal of the Royal American Institute 22, no. 4 (2016): 984-989.

Although he pays his respects to Mauss in constructing this broad category, Gregory’s gift economy has only tenuous links to the ethnography of Maori hau or to ceremonial exchange systems such as kula. A gift economy is one which does not artificially demarcate production from consumption, as the neoclassicals do in their models. Unlike commodity economies, which emphasize production and productive consumption, gift economies (correctly identified by Mauss as an earlier evolutionary stage) privilege consumption and consumptive production. The agents of the gift economy are not driven by profit maximization but pursue self-replacement (social reproduction), exemplified through inter-clan exchanges, and above all through the gift of women in marriage. Echoing Stephen Gudeman’s contemporaneous interest in the cultural construction of material livelihoods, Gregory pays close attention to ethnographic accounts of food and commensality, of fertility, sexuality, and cosmology. He argues that in a gift economy classificatory kin terms are the analogue of prices in a commodity economy, ingeniously linking Morgan to Levi-Strauss and illustrating with a wide range of ethnography in which every continent is represented.

Sear, Cynthia. Book Review: Chris Gregory, Gifts and Commodities, 2nd edition.

Despite the difficulty the reader may have with this text, the original work remains an inspiration for any student wishing to publish anthropological theory that reaches and engages with debates outside the discipline. As Gregory states, many countries have been ‘developed’ based on economic theories. Economics as a discipline is an, if not the, authoritative voice in domestic and global politics (cf. the 2010 documentary Inside Job). Hence the charge outlined by Gregory, that the economic method is insufficient, has potentially huge ramifications. Yet, as Gregory notes in the preface to the second edition, much of the book’s reception has remained within in the discipline, and to his disappointment it ‘has had no impact on the thinking in the dominant mainstream paradigm: members of the economics discipline have simply ignored it’ (p. x1iv). This new edition, we hope, will maintain and perhaps help to elevate the work’s status as a rigorous counter -argument to theories that remain largely unquestioned in political decision-making.

Choice Reviews:

In this reissue of his provocative and widely influential 1982 study, anthropologist Gregory focuses on ethnographic data from Papua New Guinea to challenge economic analyses based on a universalistic and ahistorical ‘theory of goods.’ Instead, he identifies and explains differences between economic systems based on clan-related gift exchange and consumption and those based on class, production, and commodity exchange. In so doing, he disputes the relevance and applicability of neoclassical economic concepts, methods, and theory for the investigation of non-capitalist economic organization and development. Though trained as an economist, Gregory rejects the notion of capitalism as a ‘natural’ form of economic organization. Rather, he follows the models of political economy represented by Quesnay, Smith, and Marx and synthesizes their conceptual foundations with the kinship studies of Morgan, Mauss, and Levi-Strauss to develop a ‘theory of gifts’ in which consumption and reproduction based on social relationships predominate over the role of individualistic production and profit. Although the book is not a revision, the new thirty-three-page preface provides extensive response to works by Appadurai and others and clarifies the major points of Gregory’s analysis. An indispensable part of any collection on economic anthropology or Papua New Guinea. . . . Essential.

Customer Reviews

Concluding, Gregory emphasizes the neoclassical model’s poor explanatory potential — this in my opinion is the text’s strongest contribution and renders it an enduring classic. He argues that the model incorrectly universalizes categories specific to Western capitalism, which have in turn resulted in dismissive explanations of gift exchange as a primitive form of capitalism, hindering the analysis of local realities.