Of Dice and Women: Gambling and Exchange in Native North America |
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Authors: | Warren R DeBoer |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Anthropology, Queens College, Flushing, New York, 11367 |
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Abstract: | Although archaeologists have had success in documenting the movement and distribution of trade goods, they often fail to specify the actual social mechanisms by which such goods are shunted across archaeological landscapes. A thesis is developed that in Native North America gambling was one common mechanism for intergroup exchange. Particular attention is paid to dice games that, according to ethnographic accounts, were often played primarily by women. Building upon the pioneering compilation by Stewart Culin, game paraphernalia, playing rules, as well as odds and payoffs associated with wagering are described and mapped. The social and mythological contexts of dice games are also reviewed. Results indicate that making hitherto neglected links among exchange, gender, and gambling promises novel and more culturally informed ways of approaching the archaeological record. |
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Keywords: | gambling dice games gender trade North American Indians |
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