Drawing upon three research projects in the Dominican Republic and Haiti over the past eight years, this paper examines the utility of a materialist approach to understanding how social relations are negotiated and interpreted among different strata and institutions. Throughout my fieldwork in multiple sites on the island of Hispaniola, materiality repeatedly emerged as a means through which research participants' socio-economic lives are shaped. I demonstrate how factors such as race, class, gender, and nationality intersect with social-material life to create stratifying effects. At the same time, people use material forms in positive ways to develop meanings and values, practice social relations, mitigate the effects of alienation, and o...