| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
DOI: 10.1177/0268580907070127 © 2007 International Sociological Association Gifts and Social RelationsThe Mechanisms of ReciprocityUniversity of Utrecht In the modern gift literature an anti-utilitarian and a utilitarian view on the giftcan be distinguished. From the anti-utilitarian perspective, the freedom of the gift is seen as one of its main characteristics, while the idea that gifts are caught in a cycle of reciprocity is downplayed. In the utilitarian approach, assumptions about rational actors weighing their preferences according to some utility are predominant. In the first approach, reciprocity is seen as undermining genuine gifts. The utilitarian approach does take reciprocity into account but fails to analyse why the principle of reciprocity is so effective. This article attempts to provide such an explanation. By illuminating both the variety of the forms of the gift and the universality of the underlying principle, it is argued that gifts reflect a multi-purpose symbolic utility that transcends both utilitarianism and anti-utilitarianism.
Key Words: gift-giving gifts reciprocity ritual social relations (anti-)utilitarianism
This article has been cited by other articles:
|
||||||||||||
