000 03557cab a2200241 a 4500
999 _c24536
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001 024536
003 UAHC_CL
005 20170810120037.0
008 010731b xx j 000 1 eng
040 _aUAHC_CL
_cUAHC_CL
_dUAHC_CL
100 1 _aKeating, Elizabeth
245 1 0 _aMoments of hierarchy :
_bconstructing social stratification by means of language, food, space and the body in Pohnpei, Micronesia.
260 _aArlington
_bAmerican Antropological Association
_c2000
500 _aEn: American Anthropologist. -- Vol. 102 No. 2 (junio 2000), pp. 303-320. ISSN 00027294
520 _aIn this paper I examine relationships between multiple semiotic modes used to construct hierarchy, and I show the importance of going beyond our traditional notion of language to look at how social actors employ a range of semiotic resources in organizing and interpreting social relations. Using examples from Pohnpei, Micronesia, I show how notions of superior and inferior are compounded through several sign systemsÑspatial relations, food sharing, the body, and language. These systems act oppositionally as well as cooperatively to produce situated ideas of social inequality, ideas built out of disequilibrium of bodies in space, of referents in language, and distribution of resources, as well as contradictions in the interactions of these signs. The compounding of signs not only recruits multiple sensory modes and perspectives in the exposition of hierarchical relations, but entails a notion of the contradictory nature of status relations. Using examples from a Pohnpeian feast, I explore the creative interplay of sign systems in the construction of "moments" of hierarchy in a large, public setting and discuss how through the practice of title-giving, which virtually every adult member of the society participates in, a particular idea of social inequality, built out of multiple sign systems, is mapped onto each body.
650 4 _aCOMUNICACION
650 4 _aCLASES SOCIALES
_zOCEANIA
773 0 _tAmerican anthropologist
_w024522
900 _aAM. ANTHROPOL.-02/00
942 _cREVA
_2ddc