The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property explained

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The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property
Author:Lewis Hyde
Language:English
Publisher:Random House (hardbound)
Vintage Books (paperback)
Pub Date:1983
Isbn:0-394-71519-5

The Gift: Imagination and the Erotic Life of Property is a 1983 book by Lewis Hyde, in which the author examines the importance of gifts, their flow and movement and the impact that the modern market place has had on the circulation of gifts.[1] Classified as economic anthropology, some reviewers have seen it as a work of metaphysics (the branch of philosophy concerned with understanding the basics of reality, such as questions of cause and effect).[2]

Part of part I, "A Theory of Gifts", was originally published as "The Gift Must Always Move" in Co-Evolution Quarterly No. 35 in fall 1982.

Other editions and translations

The book has been republished with alternative subtitles,.[3] A 2006 printing appeared with the subtitle "How the Creative Spirit Transforms the World" and a 2007 printing as "Creativity and the Artist in the Modern World". The twenty-fifth anniversary 2007 edition contains a new preface and afterword.[3]

It has been translated into Italian (2005,), German (2008,), Chinese (2008,), Japanese (2002,) and Turkish (2007,).[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. JoAnn Schwartz. "Reviewed by JoAnn Schwartz". Retrieved 27 February 2013.
  2. O'Gieblyn . Meghan . Help, My Friend Got Me a Dumb AI-Generated Present . 2024-02-23 . Wired . en-US . 1059-1028.
  3. "The Gift - Purchase", lewishyde.com. Retrieved 11 February 2016.