Women and Kula

This article argues that the hosting of kula partners is an important part of the exchange system that requires more attention. Women’s management of their households and resources, their training of children, and the internal networks that provide for a visiting kula partner are regarded as the be...

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Main Author: Susanne Kuehling
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society) 2025-01-01
Series:Suomen Antropologi
Online Access:https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/143800
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author Susanne Kuehling
author_facet Susanne Kuehling
author_sort Susanne Kuehling
collection DOAJ
description This article argues that the hosting of kula partners is an important part of the exchange system that requires more attention. Women’s management of their households and resources, their training of children, and the internal networks that provide for a visiting kula partner are regarded as the benefits and key motivations (‘profit’) of kula. If the hospitality is underwhelming, a visitor will not continue the partnership and, because he will share his experiences back home, this will negatively affect the future kula affairs of that household. By isolating the movements of valuables from the deep experiences of visiting and hosting, the role of women in kula is typically misrepresented as marginal and of lower value. Kula, to me and to most islanders, is not about the fame of traders, but about the cooperation of families to ensure the services, hospitality, and generosity that are so special to the region. Key words: Kula exchange, Melanesia, gender roles, women, hospitality, ethnography, power relations
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institution Kabale University
issn 1799-8972
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher Suomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)
record_format Article
series Suomen Antropologi
spelling doaj-art-bfb8670bcf85448a887799dba80bbafd2025-01-23T12:40:13ZengSuomen Antropologinen Seura (Finnish Anthropological Society)Suomen Antropologi1799-89722025-01-0149110.30676/jfas.143800Women and KulaSusanne Kuehling0University of Regina This article argues that the hosting of kula partners is an important part of the exchange system that requires more attention. Women’s management of their households and resources, their training of children, and the internal networks that provide for a visiting kula partner are regarded as the benefits and key motivations (‘profit’) of kula. If the hospitality is underwhelming, a visitor will not continue the partnership and, because he will share his experiences back home, this will negatively affect the future kula affairs of that household. By isolating the movements of valuables from the deep experiences of visiting and hosting, the role of women in kula is typically misrepresented as marginal and of lower value. Kula, to me and to most islanders, is not about the fame of traders, but about the cooperation of families to ensure the services, hospitality, and generosity that are so special to the region. Key words: Kula exchange, Melanesia, gender roles, women, hospitality, ethnography, power relations https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/143800
spellingShingle Susanne Kuehling
Women and Kula
Suomen Antropologi
title Women and Kula
title_full Women and Kula
title_fullStr Women and Kula
title_full_unstemmed Women and Kula
title_short Women and Kula
title_sort women and kula
url https://journal.fi/suomenantropologi/article/view/143800
work_keys_str_mv AT susannekuehling womenandkula