
People in the Romanian village of Sateni distrust each other so much, that they would rather take a building apart than share it. Satenis think of life as struggle for scarce resources--a struggle that can lead to deception, exploitation, or predation. Cooperation with unrelated or unfamiliar partners fails while distrust permeates everyday life and cultural representations. Yet, each person engages in profound relationships with a particular set of people, expressed in cooperative actions. Living in Distrust makes sense of this worldview-one divided between strong moral relationships and deep suspicion towards the rest of the village society-through an ethnography of distrust.Drawing on two years of fieldwork, Radu Umbres offers an interdisciplinary interpretation of social interactions in a low trust society. This cognitive ethnography argues that the costs of misplaced trust made Sateni restrict their cooperative behavior to a safe set of social relationships: family, kinship, and friendship ties. Umbres explains how mutual trust appears by social agreement around culturally-codified institutions and persists only by fair cooperative interactions. Despite scarce representations or investments in the common good, the village society reproduces its low-level equilibrium of cooperation in relative stability. In an exploration of the structural influences on community morality and a defense of distrust, the book also demonstrates how investing trust in family first is an optimal strategy against ecological or political risks. By highlighting a system of dual morality sharply distinct from the Western-liberal ethos, Living with Distrust addresses perennial moral dilemmas and essential questions of secrecy and honesty, distrust and reputation.
How does a community maintain social stability and cooperation when interpersonal distrust is the dominant cultural framework? Radu Umbres, an anthropologist, utilizes two years of intensive fieldwork in the Romanian village of Sateni to examine the mechanics of social interaction in a low-trust environment. He argues that the inhabitants employ a dual-morality system, restricting cooperative behavior to a narrow circle of kin and friends to mitigate the risks of exploitation. By integrating cognitive science with ethnographic observation, the author demonstrates that this behavior is not a failure of social organization, but an optimal strategy for survival in a landscape defined by perceived resource scarcity and political instability.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of anthropology and social science recognize this work as a rigorous application of cognitive theory to ethnographic data. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a sophisticated look at the logic behind social behaviors often dismissed as irrational by outside observers.
Page Count:
246
Publication Date:
2022-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190869925
ISBN-13:
9780190869922
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!