“modl-making” in the lands of the Econ

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For those who did not pursue the links in the Larry Boland CR Scholar post, you missed a treat in the anthropological study of the economists. A sample:

A  comparison of  status  relationships  in  the different  “fields” shows a definite  common  pattern.  The dominant  feature, which makes  status relations  among  the  Econ  of  unique  interest  to  the  serious  student,  is  the way  that  status  is  tied  to the manufacture of certain  types of  implements, called  “modls.” The  status of the adult male  is determined by  his  skill  at making  the “modl” of  his  “field.” The  facts (a) that  the Econ  are  highly status-motivated, (b) that status is only  to be achieved by making ”modls,” and  (c)  that most of  these “modls” seem  to be of little or no practical use, probably  accounts for  the  backwardness  and  abject cultural poverty  of the  tribe.  Both the  tight  linkage  between  status in  the tribe  and  modl-making and  the  trend  toward  making  modls  more  for  ceremonial  than for practical purposes  appear. Moreover, to be  fairly recent developments, something which  has  led  many  observers  to  express  pessimism  for the viability  of  the  Econ culture.

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