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dc.contributor.authorOliven, Ruben Georgept_BR
dc.date.accessioned2018-11-17T03:12:17Zpt_BR
dc.date.issued2005pt_BR
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10183/184809pt_BR
dc.description.abstractThis article discusses meanings of money in America. It is based on an ethnography carried out in the United States by a Brazilian anthropologist who studied banks, investment companies, health insurance, service clubs, compulsive spenders, restaurants, shops, scholarly and non-scholarlyarticles, financial magazines, books on personal finance, proverbs, expressions, etc. Money is looked at in relation to love, death, blood, semen, food, God, Catholicism and Protestantism. The author tries to compare attitudes towards money in the UnitedStates with those existing in Brazil. In North American society money, which can be regarded as a total social fact, is considered less polluting than in Brazil where it is represented as something potentially dirty perhaps because of the huge social andeconomic inequalities existing in that country. At the end the author asks if Brazil is following the North American path or whether its cultural specificities will work as counter-balancing checks.en
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdfpt_BR
dc.language.isoporpt_BR
dc.relation.ispartofVibrant : virtual brazilian anthropology. São Paulo. Vol. 2, n. 1/2 (jan./dez. 2005), p. 88-125pt_BR
dc.rightsOpen Accessen
dc.subjectDinheiropt_BR
dc.subjectMoneyen
dc.subjectCatolicismopt_BR
dc.subjectUnited Statesen
dc.subjectBrazilen
dc.subjectProtestantismopt_BR
dc.subjectDebtors anonymousen
dc.subjectIndividualismopt_BR
dc.subjectBrasilpt_BR
dc.subjectCatholicismen
dc.subjectEstados Unidospt_BR
dc.subjectProtestantismen
dc.subjectIndividualismen
dc.subjectSavingen
dc.subjectCleanlinessen
dc.titleLooking at money in Americapt_BR
dc.typeArtigo de periódicopt_BR
dc.identifier.nrb000592804pt_BR
dc.type.originNacionalpt_BR


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