When we think of giving gifts, we think of exchanging objects that carry
with them economic or symbolic value. But is every valuable thing a
potentially exchangeable item, whose value can be transferred? In The
Enigma of the Gift, the distinguished French anthropologist Maurice
Godelier reassesses the significance of gifts in social life by focusing
on sacred objects, which are never exchanged despite the value they
possess.
Beginning with an analysis of the seminal work of Marcel Mauss and
Claude Lévi-Strass, and drawing on his own fieldwork in Melanesia,
Godelier argues that traditional theories are flawed because they
consider only exchangeable gifts. By explaining gift-giving in terms of
sacred objects and the authoritative conferral of power associated with
them, Godelier challenges both recent and traditional theories of
gift-giving, provocatively refreshing a traditional debate.
Elegantly translated by Nora Scott, The Enigma of the Gift is at once
a major theoretical contribution and an essential guide to the history
of the theory of the gift.