The Hopi Culture

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Gift giving can be found in societies around the world. These exchanges are done for multiple reasons and intents behind gift giving can vary between cultures and traditions. Anthropologists have tried to look into gift giving within cultures to see the intent behind gifts, what a gift giver may expect in return and what the recipient values in the gift. In Peter M. Whiteley’s article Ties That Bind (2004), Whiteley has examined how gift giving in the Hopi society functions as a central connection to their social structure and what a gift means to them and how these gifts have been given to the United States in an attempt for reciprocation. Hopi and Western cultures and traditions differ which leads to differences in the tradition of gift giving. Work in Hopi …show more content…

Kinship ties are reciprocal and contain behavioral expectations; duties and rights are shared and those expectations are centered around gifts. In the Hopi society, “gifts are thus communications in a language of social belonging” (Whiteley, 2). Gift economies within the Hopi that are surrounded by ties to society solidify a sense of community. Some argue that gifts are given to build the sense of a community that also maintains a relationship with the environment surrounding them. The gift giver harbors a part of the gift within themselves and an unseen connection is built between the gift giver and receiver which weaves a deeper relationship. However, the Hopi gift-giving custom differs from other societies since the gift economy dominates much of the exchanges done in their society. There is essentially “no such thing as a free gift” (Whiteley, 2). Gift giving customs of food and utensils are often seen at ceremonies of births or marriages. These exchanges are a pillar of the Hopi society and dominate the majority of all their social

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