THE PATTERN CHANGES CHANGES : GAMBLING VALUE IN HIGHLAND PAPUA NEW GUINEA Anthony J. Pickles A Thesis Submitted for the Degree of PhD at the University of St Andrews 2013 Full metadata for this item is available in Research@StAndrews:FullText at: http://research-repository.st-andrews.ac.uk/ Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10023/3389 This item is protected by original copyright This item is licensed under a Creative Commons License The Pattern Changes Changes: Gambling Value in Highland Papua New Guinea Anthony J. Pickles This thesis is submitted in partial fulfilment for the degree of Doctorate in Philosophy at the University of St Andrews Date of Submission 14th September 2012 1. Candidate’s declarations: I, Anthony Pickles, hereby certify that this thesis, which is approximately 79,000 words in length, has been written by me, that it is the record of work carried out by me and that it has not been submitted in any previous application for a higher degree. I was admitted as a research student in October, 2008 and as a candidate for the degree of PhD in March, 2009; the higher study for which this is a record was carried out in the University of St Andrews between 2008 and 2012. Date ………………… signature of candidate ………………………………….. 2. Supervisor’s declaration: I hereby certify that the candidate has fulfilled the conditions of the Resolution and Regulations appropriate for the degree of PhD in the University of St Andrews and that the candidate is qualified to submit this thesis in application for that degree. Date ………………… signature of candidate ………………………………….. 3. Permission for electronic publication: (to be signed by both candidate and supervisor) In submitting this thesis to the University of St Andrews I understand that I am giving permission for it to be made available for use in accordance with the regulations of the University Library for the time being in force, subject to any copyright vested in the work not being affected thereby. I also understand that the title and the abstract will be published, and that a copy of the work may be made and supplied to any bona fide library or research worker, that my thesis will be electronically accessible for personal or research use unless exempt by award of an embargo as requested below, and that the library has the right to migrate my thesis into new electronic forms as required to ensure continued access to the thesis. I have obtained any third-party copyright permissions that may be required in order to allow such access and migration, or have requested the appropriate embargo below. The following is an agreed request by candidate and supervisor regarding the electronic publication of this thesis: Access to printed copy and electronic publication of thesis through the University of St Andrews. Date …………… signature of candidate ……………………………. signature of supervisor ………………………….. i Abstract This thesis explores the part gambling plays in an urban setting in Highland Papua New Guinea. Gambling did not exist in (what is now) Goroka Town before European contact, nor Papua New Guinea more broadly, but when I conducted fieldwork in 2009-2010 it was an inescapable part of everyday life. One card game proliferated into a multitude of games for different situations and participants, and was supplemented with slot machines, sports betting, darts, and bingo and lottery games. One could well imagine gambling becoming popular in societies new to it, especially coming on the back of money, wage-work and towns. Yet the popularity of gambling in the region is surprising to social scientists because the peoples now so enamoured by gambling are famous for their love of competitively giving things away, not competing for them. Gambling spread while gifting remained a central part of the way people did transactions. This thesis resists juxtaposing gifting and selfish acquisition. It shows how their opposition is false; that gambling is instead a new analytic technique for manipulating the value of gifts and acquisitions alike, through the medium of money. Too often gambling takes a familiar form in analyses: as the sharp end of capitalism, or the benign, chance-led redistributor of wealth in egalitarian societies. The thesis builds an ethnographic understanding of gambling, and uses it to interrogate theories of gambling, money, and Melanesian anthropology. In so doing, the thesis speaks to a trend in Melanesian anthropology to debate whether monetisation and urbanisation has brought about a radical split in peoples’ understandings of the world. Dealing with some of the most starkly ‘modern’ material I find a process of inclusive indigenous materialism that consumes the old and the new alike, turning them into a model for action in a dynamic money-led world. ii Acknowledgements Theses are “written” by one person; they are made by many. There are the people who read it, proofread it, comment, criticise, support, love, nourish, pay; and in social anthropology there are the people whose generosity crafted its subject matter. With so many different kinds of debt, ordering them feels like prioritising breath over bread. I have therefore organised my thanks in roughly sequential order, and I dedicate my thesis to them all. My family is fractious, that more than anything else probably led me here; but their support was always unconditional. As each year passes, each defining shift; or struggle; or loss; or addition; each alienation and re-affirmation, family means more to me. My mother’s love has always been unique. In this work I have come to know that my father and I share very much. A lust for anthropology began immediately during undergraduate studies at University College London, and took the well-trodden path from biological to social. I had the audacity to claim I was an anthropologist during my first term; I am still fantasising today. It was not until my final year, and Martin Holbraad’s course, that I knew what kind of anthropologist I wanted to be. As my M.Res and M.Phil supervisor, Martin guided me towards gambling from an interest in number. Choosing Papua New Guinea was entirely down to reading Jadran Mimica’s Intimations of Infinity (1988); it has had an enduring impact on my anthropology. From then Susanne Küchler (my second supervisor at UCL) and Allen Abramson schooled me in Melanesia. Martin went beyond the bounds of supervision, putting in long hours as Susanne, Martin and I put together grant proposals for larger projects based upon my idea; sadly they were in vain. I was awarded the Emslie Horniman Prize for Anthropological Fieldwork by the Royal Anthropological Institute, which paid for a computer for my fieldwork, and more importantly gave me hope of finding funding when the outlook was bleak. After a number of setbacks, it became clear I could not get the funding I needed to complete my studies at UCL, and it was Martin who suggested I get in touch with Dr. Adam Reed at St Andrews. I consider it the highest praise to say that was his best piece of advice. iii In large part the financial means to conduct my research came about through the resolution and commitment of the members of the University of St Andrews’ Centre for Pacific Studies. CPS were excited by my project and offered me a studentship waving my fees. Even before Adam Reed, Tony Crook and Christina Toren gave their all to help me secure a studentship, I had determined to move to St Andrews, such was their overwhelming commitment. My research was financially supported by the Economic and Social Research Council of Great Britain and Northern Ireland through a +3 Studentship won with the help of CPS. I arrived in St Andrews with everything going for me, and Adam has worked tirelessly to help me build on that position, pushing me to publish, to apply, to meet and to discuss at every opportunity. I could not wish for a more dedicated, rigorous, or inspiring supervisor. When PhD’s talk of their supervisors (as they frequently do!), I find myself boasting. I used to quote the time I sent a chapter at 9.30am and received comments at 4.45 that day; in the run up to submission he beat his own record, which now stands at 7 hours and 1 minute. I think that says it all. To the people of Goroka and Papua New Guinea I owe the greatest debt. The National Research Institute, and especially Georgie Kaupu, aided me in gaining a research visa. Rex Matang of the University of Goroka helped with the process, met me at the airport, found me my place to stay and electrified me with his passion for ethnomathematics. His loss is great, but his legacy will be felt for a long time. In Goroka I had many friends, and an adopted family whom I could never repay. They must remain anonymous here, but they are not forgotten. Loui Ipatu (whom I employed to carry out survey work on my behalf) was a source of camaraderie at times of loneliness. Particular thanks are due to Idris, Evelyn, Osama, Michael, Peter, Alfons, Simon, Nigel, Charlie, Kripel, Pastor Simon, Jeffrey, Alfred, Anna, Richard, John, Paps Keis, Helen, Blacky, David, Boski, Pamela, Franziska, Johntu, Kenox, Bob, Roni, Julie, Rocky, Christine, and Peter Purari. Chris Little, who did his fieldwork immediately after I left, stayed in my room, inherited my pots and spatula, and was adopted by my own adopted father. I feel tied to him. Franziska Herbst was a source of support during my stay. The nature of my fieldwork also meant that Gorokan strangers gave me much, often without knowing it: for many of them it was enough that I was there. I thank them. Those who have experienced this will know how wonderful it is. The majority immediately identified with my research and opened up to tell me all they could. I hope that my exposition here lays a foundation so that I iv may answer their desires in the future. To the gamblers: Yupela stap gut, sindaun, hamamas, o bom bai bomim yu! Help has come from many corners while I wrote. I have wonderful colleagues at St Andrews, particularly Chris, Fiona, Simon, and Victor. Chris Gregory has helped me in various guises since we met in Cambridge in 2011. Upon Adam’s advice, in 2011 I contacted Joel Robbins of University of California San Diego and introduced myself, asking if he would sponsor me for an application to the ESRC for an Overseas Institutional Visit. From that time Joel did everything he could to assist me, finding office space while on sabbatical, putting in a word for me to present at the University of Virginia and University of Toronto, and finding a place on a panel at the American Anthropological Association of that year. Rupert Stasch was equally generous with his time and support, most notably organising a special Pacific-Amazon discussion day. Julien Clement was a great interlocutor, friend, and surf-buddy while I was there. Kathy Creely of UCSD’s Melanesian Archive was instrumental in helping me to track down information from every conceivable source; it was her help that largely led to the form of my Prologue. I supplemented that research at the Cambridge University Library and Haddon Library. For similar services I would like to thank participants of the Association of Social Anthropologists of Oceania’s email list (ASAONET). I had even more good fortune when I met Steffen Dalsgaard in Manchester. He suggested I come to Aarhus as a visiting Ph.D. and secured funding for my three month visit from the Aarhus University Research Foundation, to whom I am most grateful. It was there that the first half of my thesis and a publication now under review were redrafted and infinitely improved. And in Steffen and the rest of the Aarhus posse I found great warmth and intellectual stimulation. Versions of these chapters were presented at University of California San Diego, the University of Virginia, the University of Toronto, Cambridge University Social Anthropology Seminar series, University of St Andrews (both Departmental Senior Seminar and Centre for Amerindian Studies), and the Centre de Recherche et de Documentation sur l'Océanie (Université de Provence). These immeasurably strengthened the chapters. Three anonymous reviewers and the editor of the Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute also helped tighten up a version of chapter six when it was submitted as an article. For reading and proofreading chapters in v the final days, I thank (in chapter order) Simon Pickles, Christopher Hewlett, Bronwyn Johnston, Alistair Rankin, and Chloe Nahum-Claudel. When I was writing up I fell in love with Chloe. We share so much, and have worked to share even more. We wrote up together; she shared my lows, my application woes, and battled my language problems with me. Together we talk through our theses, ideas, politics, futures, and the best way to do spaghetti carbonara. She puts up with my unrelenting silliness, and my ever-present work-guilt. My thesis did not begin with her, but it ends as we find new frontiers. With all this assistance, any remaining shortcomings are very much my own. vi Contents PROLOGUE Cardography 1 Gambling: Contemporary of the Gift 6 Goroka (Plus One) Gambling 16 ONE False Questions and Ethnographic Theory: Michael Makes a Bet 24 False Questions 26 Michael and the Tyranny of Denomination 32 Scenario One 35 Scenario Two 42 A ‘Look’ at Money and Value 48 Chapter Outlines 57 TWO The Pattern Changes Changes, or How to Win at Cards 61 Thought vs. Speed: The Games 67 How to Play… 74 1. Kwin – Cornering 75 2. Bom – Think Fast 90 How to Win at Cards 99 Conclusion 104 THREE Challenge: The Fastest Money in Goroka 106 Chalinj (‘Challenge’) 110 Street Marketing as ‘Logic’ 118 Marketing and Card Gambling, Kindred Modes of Attraction 123 Produce Markets in Passing 127 Kakaruk and Chuave Markets 130 Chalinj Revisited 136 Conclusion 140 vii FOUR To be a Big-Shot: ‘Big-Men’, Pokies and Money 143 ‘Big-men’ and “Finance” 146 A Night at the Pokies 152 Big-Men & “Lesser Men” 157 How to Play… Pokies 162 “Financial” Winnings 169 Conclusion 174 FIVE The Origin of Pooling 176 Pooling – Some Familiar Scenes 179 Origins of Origin 189 Pooling – State of Origin Bets 193 1. Collective Bets 195 2. Big Bets and Satellites 202 Conclusion 207 SIX Pocket Calculator 210 A Pocketful 216 Simon’s Skills 224 In Each Other’s Pockets 232 Conclusion: Pocketing the Difference 234 APPENDIX 237 REFERENCES 243 viii
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