Book

The demystification of Yap: dialectics of culture on a Micronesian island

University of Chicago PressChicago • Published In 1976 • Pages:

By: Labby, David.

Abstract
This is s sophisticated analysis of Yapese social structure and culture. Labby presents an emic perspective and logic, one that conforms with a materialist perspective, because according to Labby land is key. He shows how religious and social rituals regulate access to land and agricultural production. According to Labby, social hierarchy is ultimately based on land productivity, both in terms of soil fertility and history of a land's development. While men 'own' the land, women cultivate it. Marriage becomes an important institution mediating the relationship between property and labor. Labby shows how an ideology of purity and pollution and social rank control and allocate the scarce resource of land. The compliment of land and labor form the basis of a system of reciprocity between men and women, and between landholding patrilineages and labor-holding matrisibs.
Subjects
Real property
Status, role, and prestige
Clans
Kinship terminology
Community
Purification and atonement
culture
Yapese
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Oceania
Sub Region
Micronesia
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Type
Ethnologist
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 2005
Field Date
1969-1971
Coverage Date
1850
Coverage Place
Yap State, Federated States of Micronesia
Notes
David Labby
Includes bibliographical references (p. 139-141) and index
Labby attempts to articulate a social theory of traditional Yapese culture, therefore we are not talking about the colonial or modern period, although these are the only periods from which he draws his source material. Therefore, to determine the time focus for the study is problematic. Labby does not give a period or date. I suggested the time of 1850 prior to an increased contact with Western traders (Labby 1976, 3).
LCCN
75021270
LCSH
Yapese (Micronesian people)/Yap (Micronesia)