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A Handbook of Economic Anthropology, 3rd edition

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    0576709 - EÚ 2024 RIV GB eng M - Část monografie knihy
    Thiemann, André
    Commodity Chains.
    A Handbook of Economic Anthropology, 3rd edition. Cheltenham and Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar, 2022 - (Carrier, J.), s. 368-378. ISBN 978-1-83910-891-4
    GRANT EU: European Commission(CZ) 866350 - BOAR
    Institucionální podpora: RVO:68378076
    Klíčová slova: Commodity Chains * Global Commodity Chains * Value Chains
    Obor OECD: Antropology, ethnology
    Web výsledku:
    https://www.e-elgar.com/shop/gbp/a-handbook-of-economic-anthropology-9781839108914.html

    There has always been a close connection between commodity chains and anthropology. Immanuel Wallerstein, who put forward the concept in the 1970s with Terence Hopkins, was inspired by processual Africanist ethnographers like Max Gluckman (Gordon 2018: xiii–xiv). Wallerstein wanted to trace how capitalism had extended itself from the fifteenth century through the nineteenth, becoming a capitalist, Western-dominated world-system (see Wallerstein 2011 [1974]: xviii). Anthropologists have reacted to this idea in three ways. The first is critical historical-anthropological engagement, emphasising non-Western agency at the frontiers of the world-system. The second was marked initially by a hopeful embrace of, and then productive irritation and finally disenchantment with, neoliberal globalisation. The destructive effects of global value chains became evident with the economic crisis of 2008. Subsequently, a third approach emerged as anthropologists began to study the exploitation and resistance of human and non-human beings and entities within, against and tentatively beyond the ‘capitalocene’ (see Hirsch chap. 16, this vol.). I discuss these three reactions in turn.
    Trvalý link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0346852
     
     
Počet záznamů: 1  

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