Skip to the main content

Original scientific paper

https://doi.org/10.15176/vol53no204

More than the Sum of Infrastructural Achievements: Youth Work Actions and the Phenomenology of the Moral Gift Economy

Andrea Matošević orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-8602-6353 ; Sveučilište Jurja Dobrile u Puli


Full text: croatian pdf 200 Kb

page 61-77

downloads: 845

cite


Abstract

The analysis of youth work actions, one of the most long-lived and widespread phenomena in socialist Yugoslavia, primarily means dealing with the principle of workers’ willingness to participate in them, during their organizational lifetime of nearly fifty years. Although the declarative reasons for the organization of youth work actions were often infrastructural, the result was always, and above all, of an anthropological nature. In other words, self-sacrifice, working enthusiasm and zeal as well as socialist competitions, as inherent and not only declarative parts of work actions, were articulated on the principle of a gift. Its tripartite structure consists of giving, accepting but above all of returning, and this is why the concept of moral economy is also inherent to work actions. However, in contrast to Potlatch or other pre-industrial institutions, in work actions we notice a switch from wastefulness to frugality. Although they might appear as diametric principles, the difference between Potlatch and work actions is embedded in the place of “consumption”. While Potlatch implicitly includes the destruction of or giving away material goods and values in order to gain honour and prestige, youth shock-work implies wastefulness from the very working subjects with the same goal. This is also denoted by the self-sacrificial [samoprijegoran] principle of its articulation. This sort of proletarization of many individuals had far reaching repercussions for the community in a broad sense of the word.

Keywords

youth work actions, gift, moral economy, shame, community

Hrčak ID:

170720

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/170720

Publication date:

16.12.2016.

Article data in other languages: croatian

Visits: 2.744 *