The End of Potlatch: An Anthropological Approach to Nostromo

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
The End of Potlatch: An Anthropological Approach to Nostromo
Abstract
This study contends that the various forms of archaic trade that anthropologists have reconstructed on the Northwest Coast of America are explanatory of plot-construction and characterization in Conrad's South-American novel. My thesis is that Nostromo is a figure defined by the practice of potlatch, and that his key presence in the plot entails the representation of a culturally dislocating transition from archaic transactions to modern commerce. The theoretical framework of this chapter hinges on the insights of Marcel Mauss, Claude Lévi-Strauss, Karl Polanyi, and Georges Bataille.
Publication
Research in Economic Anthropology
Volume
25
Pages
285-298
Date
January 2007
Journal Abbr
Research in Economic Anthropology
Language
English
ISSN
01901281
Short Title
The End of Potlatch
Library Catalog
EBSCOhost
Citation
Juhász, Tamás. 2007. “The End of Potlatch: An Anthropological Approach to Nostromo.” Research in Economic Anthropology 25: 285–98. DOI: 10.1016/S0190-1281(06)25013-3.
Discipline
Publication year
Keywords
  • archaic economy
  • CONRAD, Joseph
  • embeddedness
  • history of commerce
  • LEVI-STRAUSS, Claude
  • Nostromo (book : Conrad)
  • plots (Drama, novel, etc.)
  • potlatch
  • reciprocity
  • redistribution

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