Receipt: June 12, 2024
Acceptance: June 18, 2024
2022 marked the 150th anniversary of Marcel Mauss's birth. Along with him, his work is recognized as a source and inspiration for countless contemporary anthropological works. His writings favored multiple theoretical currents and influenced dozens of anthropologists: from the structuralism of Claude Lévi-Strauss to Marcel Griaule, Maurice Leenhardt, Louis Dumont and Roger Bastide, among others. In fact, we can see in Mauss one of the founding fathers of modern anthropology, for although he was an active member and continuator of the French Sociological School of Émile Durkheim, when he defended the primacy of the social as a constituent of reality, he distanced himself from his master uncle by emphasizing the centrality of anthropology in incorporating native interpretation into the objectivity of sociological analysis.
His most important work was the Essay on the gift (Mauss, 1923), written in 1925. In it he demonstrates - by means of the Malinowskian ethnography of the kula among the Trobriandese - that gifts given and reciprocated in an apparently voluntary and gratuitous manner have an underlying obligation. However, he does not see in this process of exchange of symbolic goods only a particular Trobriandese case, but draws from it the existence of a universal dynamic of reciprocity. On the basis of an extensive comparative anthropology in which he gathers numerous ethnographic data from many other societies (potlatch and kulas), he constructs a general concept of gift exchange. His most original idea on this subject is that of a "total social fact", since this collective form of production, consumption and distribution of goods contains several dimensions of social life: religious, legal, moral, political, family and economic.
In a modern world characterized by the economic logic of the market, interest, consumption and profit, a revision of Mauss's work, such as the one carried out by the Anti-utilitarian Movement in Social Sciences (mauss) by Alain Caillé (2000), may signify relevant rediscoveries in contemporary societies of other hidden logics involving symbolic-driven reciprocities.
Mauss's theory of the gift is highly topical. To understand why, it is necessary to explain what the gift is for Mauss and what his theory consists of. For Mauss, the gift encompasses innumerable phenomena, but, more than a phenomenon, he considers it a relation. They are goods, words, people, visits, parties, music, gestures, violence, signs, among other significant realities, which may or may not circulate as commodities, from which, once given, emanate some forms of retribution; they are "obligations," says Mauss.
Retribution can be a gift of the same type or not, immediate or not, in equivalent form or not. A good day can be reciprocated with another good day or with a smile, but for it to be a gift it must be received. Giving, when it exists, is already receiving, as indicated in the epigraph of the Essay on the gift. In this sense, receiving is already giving back. By definition, then, a gift generates some kind of retribution, which may not be material, but moral. In all cases, this implies reciprocity, but also debt - sometimes this debt acquires a radical political meaning, servitude, although there is always some kind of asymmetrical, hierarchical link.
The "good morning" that is given, even if it is reciprocated with another "good morning", differs from the one that is received next because of the position between the one who takes the initiative to give (issue) the message and the one who receives it. It is no coincidence that in court etiquette it is the superior who takes the initiative of the greeting. Mauss points out that something of the giver always goes with what is given; this inalienability of the giver in the transmission of the gift to a given recipient may be greater or lesser, depending on the context, but it means that the good that is given is linked to the figure of the giver. For example, a surname usually circulates less than a first name and carries something else, distinct from the second, something linked to the family of the giver. Anthropology has observed that many inalienable goods, which circulate little, are valuable because they are insignia, metonymies of power, such as a crown.
In addition to the difference between the positions of the exchangers, a second form of difference inherent in the gift is that which resides in the substance of what is given and what is received; in the example above, a good morning may be reciprocated not with the same words, but with a smile. A third form of difference lies in the time between what is given and what is reciprocated, not what is received, but what is reciprocated. This is the case of retribution because, if it is a matter of receiving, the gift also circulates unilaterally. Therefore, I do not see how to dissociate a gift from a debt, nor reciprocity from hierarchy; and the study of these debts (personal, national, collective) is absolutely fundamental for the human sciences.
Marcel Mauss's theory of the gift has a knowledge-generating dimension that produces new knowledge and can be deployed in many directions. Successive generations of social scientists have focused on the Essay on the gift and have found in it inspiration for economic, legal, moral, religious, feminist, political and even postcolonial debates.
This capacity for constant updating is guaranteed, in my opinion, by two characteristics of the work. First, its essayistic character, which combines the ethnography of an epoch with emic concepts and a theoretical model open to future findings. Secondly, because of the questions it is able to articulate. If we think that around the gift Mauss articulates questions about "how the social bond is made and maintained through the circulation of things"; "how the ontological blurring between things and people can be ethnographically exemplified" and "what are the tensions between interest and disinterest in gift-giving", very significant issues, we can see its potential for evolution.
In countless cases. From the mobilization of a population to make solidarity donations (food, medicine, shelter) in the event of a climatic catastrophe, to a tax reform, anywhere on the planet. Mauss, following Bronisław Malinowski - and later Karl Polanyi - called payments to Melanesian chiefs (among others) "tributes". Any study of public spending, including intragovernmental (from ministries to parliamentarians, for example) is a study of gifts and, in all of them, Mauss teaches us that reciprocity is present, ordering them. My book A dívida divina (The divine debt) (Lanna, 1995) describes a municipality in northeastern Brazil based on an ethnography of exchange, in which the mayor functions as the centralizer of reciprocities. Here I emphasize the concept of hierarchical reciprocity. Gender relations are also permeated by gifts and counter-gifts that constitute domestic spheres. Mauss demonstrated that the units that Lévi-Strauss came to call "households," whether Polynesian or Northwestern American, and even the royal households of Europe, are constituted by gifts.
In the field of economics and politics, to use it to understand the morality of exchanges, i.e. to recognize the social and cultural values that regulate exchanges between social groups and that often appear as illogical, retrograde or not very rational behaviors. The theory of the gift refers to the logics of groups around the exchange of things and the things exchanged, which opens up the possibility of different paths for social life. The relationship between people and things, which implies considering their mutual constitution. In the relationship with religious objects, for example, Mauss's appeal to consider the conceptions emic of the "soul of things", taking them seriously, is very important to broaden our understanding of the agency of material forms.
Of course it is. There are several theories, each one proposing different updates, but among them I would highlight the one I consider the most important one, the Mythological of Lévi-Strauss,1 recognized as one of the fundamental scientific works of the 20th century. xx.
In The elementary structures of kinship,2 of 1949, Lévi-Strauss makes reciprocity a "principle" and proposes that the prohibition of incest is a (unique) passage from nature to culture; some of the matrimonial exchanges derived from it, between cross-cousins, could constitute - in certain contexts - a type of language. Lévi-Strauss never disavowed this theory, which he accepted as the most important development of Mauss's theory of gift, but it was criticized for its functionalism by Louis Dumont in 1971, by David Schneider and James Boon in 1974 and, even later, by Eduardo Viveiros de Castro. If this functionalism exists - moreover, the 1949 book shows that certain forms of marriage become language - it thus founds structuralism and makes it possible to understand language no longer as a mere superstructure, but with a generative capacity for social life, like that of gifts. After all, language is made of gifts, of the circulation of messages.
Beginning in 1964, in Mythologies, Lévi-Strauss demonstrates that, in addition to the prohibition of incest, there are other passages from "nature" to "culture"; these cease to be analytical terms and come to be understood as native categories. These multiple passages are no longer necessarily linked only to the exchange of persons (spouses) conceived as signs, as in 1949, but now include exchanges of signs of other kinds. Far from denying the 1949 theory that a language of marriage exists in some parts of the planet (especially in Oceania and Southeast Asia), in volume 1 Lévi-Strauss analyzes Amerindian myths as a language close to musical, and in volumes 2 (1966) and 3 (1967) he writes about how cooking can be constructed as a language. In all four volumes, Amerindian myths and worldviews are understood as composed of "codes," structured as a language. Thus, Lévi-Strauss' work is always about exchanges, messages and communication. If there are several and no longer a single passage from nature to culture, language remains the foundation of all of them. In this sense, marriage is close to myth and can be understood as language and even as narration. Infrastructures are also superstructures, both in the analyses of kinship and of myths.
On page 713 of the "Postface" of issue 154-155 of the journal L’Homme 2000, Lévi-Strauss states:
I am surprised by the uneasiness that arises today around the subject of exchange. Either the exchange of women appears as a self-evident truth, and the expression implies no comment, to the point that it seems to belong to the common language of the profession, or this notion is rejected, sometimes vehemently. Curious thing: it happens that the same article oscillates between these two positions. From one page to another, alliances are described in terms of exchange, as if it were self-evident, and the notion just used is rejected.
Lévi-Strauss takes the opportunity to clarify his thinking on the exchange of gifts and to defend the theses of his 1949 book. He explains that the cases in which marriage is defined by prohibitions, or by abduction, do not exclude exchange; in others, it takes the form of association and in others the existence of exchange units would not even be necessary. He also points out that the terms that constituted the "atom of kinship" (such as "father" or "maternal uncle") may no longer be present in practice, but never virtually cease to exist; and that among the "types" of exchange analyzed in 1949 there would be relations of transformation. In other words, in their conscious models, some anthropologists deny exchange, but this would only be possible rhetorically and at the expense of the quality of anthropology on the planet.
The reflections on kinship, beyond the one I mentioned in 2000, such as the notion of "domestic societies" coined in his courses offered between 1976 and 1982 under the title "cognatic societies", as well as the mythologies themselves, show that the study of cosmologies and cosmopolitics does not exclude, but rather presupposes, that of exchanges. The "Postface" also makes it clear that exchange is not necessarily of women, men or persons, but of signs. As we have seen, it is not even just a matter of "exchange" as such, but, as Mauss demonstrated, of the circulation of gifts.
Greater attention to the interaction between people and things and a social science that favors movement, vagueness, and passages brings new vitality to gift theory.
A new phase of capitalism, in which value is given not so much by mass production, but by financial investments (not material, in a certain sense), luxury products, violent processes of exclusion, is also contributing to an actualization of the gift, whose moral conclusion appeals to mutuality and cooperation, as opposed to a society organized on the basis of individual interest and competition.
Caillé, Alain (2000). Antropología del don: el tercer paradigma. Petrópolis: Vozes.
Lanna, Marcos (1995). A dívida divina: troca e patronagem no nordeste brasileiro. Campinas: Ed. da unicamp.
Lévi-Strauss, Claude (1968). Lo crudo y lo cocido. Mitológicas 1. México: fce.
— (1985). Las estructuras elementales del parentesco. Vol. 1. México: Planeta-De Agostini.
— (2000). “Postface”, L’Homme, vols. 154-155, abril/septiembre, pp. 713-720
Mauss, Marcel. (1923). “Essai sur le don. Forme et raison de l’échange dans les sociétés archaïques”, L’Année Sociologique (1896/1897-1924/1925), 1, pp. 30-186.
Marcos P. D. Lanna holds a degree in Economics from the University of São Paulo (1982), a master's degree in Social Anthropology from the State University of Campinas (1987), a PhD in Anthropology from the University of Chicago (1991) and a postdoctoral fellowship in Anthropology from the University of São Paulo (2006) and the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (2017, the latter with a scholarship from the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development-.cnpq, where he was a productivity scholar between 2003 and 2013). He was associate professor at the Federal University of Paraná (1995-2006) and since 2006 at the Federal University of São Carlos. He has ethnographic works in the Brazilian northeast. He has focused on research on anthropological theory, especially the works of Claude Lévi-Strauss and Louis Dumont, anthropology of complex societies, anthropology of Brazil and exchange theory. He was coordinator of the Graduate Program in Social Anthropology at the University of São Paulo. ufpr (1995-2000), Director of Anpocs (2003-2004), head of the Social Sciences Department at the University of California, Berkeley, USA. ufsCar (2008-2010 and 2019-2022). He coordinates the Center for the Study of Hierarchy and Value (nehv). He was visiting professor at the Universidad Iberoamericana in Mexico City (2004) and at the Laboratoire d'Anthropologie Sociale of the Collège de France (2023).
Renata de Castro Menezes is a tenured professor and curator in the Department of Anthropology at the National Museum of the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, a researcher at the cnpq and Faperj Scientist of Our State for the Faperj. At the National Museum, she coordinates the Ludens Laboratory of Anthropology of the Playful and the Sacred and is a professor in the Graduate Program in Social Anthropology. ppgas/mn/ufrj. She holds a BA in History, MA and PhD in Social Anthropology. She did a doctoral internship at ehess/Paris (2011-2012) and is a member of the Centre d'Études en Sciences Sociales du Religieux-CéSor. She has been a visiting researcher at New York University (2015-2016) and at the Fondation Maison des Sciences de l'Homme, Paris (2019). Her publications include the thesis "The Dynamics of the Sacred" (2004) and the collective work. Anthropology and religion: authors and themeswith Faustino Teixeira (2023). He organized the exhibition "Doces Santos" (2020) and the module "Quem sabe, samba", in the exhibition "Um museu de descobertas", at the National Museum (2023).
Marcelo Camurça is an anthropologist, full professor of the Department of Religious Sciences and of the Graduate Program in Religious Sciences at the Federal University of Juiz de Fora/Brazil. He is a researcher of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (cnpq) of Brazil. He was a visiting professor at the State University of Ceará (2018) and at the State University of Rio de Janeiro (2019-2022). He is a member of the Laboratory of Anthropology of Religions (Unicamp). He is an associate member abroad of the Laboratoire Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcités (gsrl) of the École Pratique des Hautes Études (ephe) and of the cnrs. He is a member of the Editorial Board of Social Compass of the Société Internationale de Sociologie des Religions/International Society for the Sociology of Religion (sisr/issr). He was a member of the Board of Directors of the Association of Social Scientists of Religions of Mercosur (acsrm) from 2005 to 2009 and from 2013 to 2014. He was a member of the Evaluation Commission of the Theology and Religious Sciences area of the Coordination for the Improvement of Higher Level Personnel (capes), agency of the Ministry of Education/Brazil, in 2004-2009 and 2016-2017. Publications: Social sciences and religious sciences: controversies and interlocutions.. São Paulo: Paulinas, 2008; Spiritism and the new age: interpellations to the historical Christianity. Aparecida: Santuário, 2014; Spiritism in seven lessons. Petrópolis: Vozes, 2022; and co-authored with Brenda Carranza and Cecília Mariz. New Catholic communities: in search of a postmodern space. Aparecida: Ideias & Letras, 2009.