Rethinking Community in Myanmar: Practices of We-Formation among Muslims and Hindus in Urban Yangon: 2022 | Agenda Bookshop Skip to content
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Rethinking Community in Myanmar: Practices of We-Formation among Muslims and Hindus in Urban Yangon: 2022

English

This is the first anthropological monograph of Muslim and Hindu lives in contemporary Myanmar. In it, Judith Beyer introduces the concept of we-formation as a fundamental yet underexplored capacity of humans to relate to one another outside of and apart from demarcated ethno-religious lines and corporate groups. We-formation complements the established sociological concept of community, which suggests shared origins, beliefs, values, and belonging. Community is not only a key term in academic debates; it is also a hot topic among Beyers interlocutors in urban Yangon, who draw on it to make claims about themselves and others. Invoking community is a conscious and strategic act, even as it asserts and reinforces stereotypes of Hindus and Muslims as minorities. In Myanmar, this understanding of community keeps self-identified members of these groups in a subaltern position vis-à-vis the Buddhist majority population. Beyer demonstrates the concepts enduring political and legal role since being imposed on Burmese Indians under colonial British rule. But individuals are always more than members of groups. The author draws on ethnomethodology and existential anthropology to reveal how peoples bodily movements, verbal articulations, and non-verbal expressions in communal spaces are crucial elements in practices of we-formation. Her participant observation in mosques and temples, during rituals and processions, and in private homes reveals a sensitivity to tacit and intercorporeal phenomena that is still rare in anthropological analysis. Rethinking Community in Myanmar develops a theoretical and methodological approach that reconciles individuality and intersubjectivity and that is applicable far beyond the Southeast Asian context. Its focus on we-formation also offers insights into the dynamics of resistance to the attempted military coup of 2021. The newly formed civil disobedience movement derives its power not only from having a common enemy, but also from each individuals determination to live freely in a more just society. See more
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Product Details
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 01 May 2023
  • Publisher: NIAS Press
  • Publication City/Country: Denmark
  • Language: English
  • ISBN13: 9788776943271

About

Judith Beyer is Professor of Social and Political Anthropology at the University of Konstanz. She specializes in legal and political anthropology and has long-term ethnographic field experience in both Southeast Asia and Central Asia. In Myanmar her research focuses on ethno-religious minorities community activism statelessness and the state.

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