
this is nice.
there was a reference to kula in blog post i read. i can’t remember hearing of it before, so i wikipediad it. it’s good.
All Kula valuables are non-use items traded purely for purposes of enhancing one’s social status and prestige. Carefully prescribed customs and traditions surround the ceremonies that accompany the exchanges which establish strong, ideally life-long relationships between the exchange parties (karayta’u, “partners”). . . Kula valuables never remain for long in the hands of the recipients; rather, they must be passed on to other partners within a certain amount of time, thus constantly circling around the ring. However, even temporary possession brings prestige and status. . . The person owning a valuable as kitoum has full rights of ownership over it: he can keep it, sell it or even destroy it. The Kula valuable or an equivalent item must be returned to the person who owns it as kitoum. The most important Muyuw men for example own between three to seven Kula valuables as kitoum while others do not own any. The fact that at least in theory all such valuables are someone’s kitoum adds a sense of responsibility to the way they are handled, reminding the recipient that he is only a steward of somebody else’s possession. The ownership of a particular valuable is, however, often not known. Kula valuables can be exchanged as kitoum in a direct exchange between two partners, thus fully transferring the rights of ownership. . . liberality is exalted as highest virtue while meanness is condemned as shameful, create powerful pressures to “play by the rules”. Those who are perceived as holding on to valuables and as being slow to give them away soon get a bad reputation
