Thursday, October 9th, 2008 Zomia": Site of the Last Great Enclosure Movement of (relatively) State-less Peoples in Mountainous Southeast Asia

DateTimeLocation
Thursday, October 9, 20082:00PM - 4:00PMExternal Event, Koffler Institute
569 Spadina Avenue
University of Toronto
Room KP 108

Series

Southeast Asia Seminar Series

Description

“Zomia” is a shorthand reference to the huge, massif of mainland Southeast Asia, running from the Central Highlands of Vietnam westward all the way to northeastern India and including the southwest Chinese provinces of Yunnan, Guizhou, and western Guangxi. Zomia has, I contend, been peopled over the last 2,000 years largely by runaways from several state-making projects in the valleys, most particularly Han state-making projects. They have, in the hills, acquired, and shifted, their ethnic identities. Far from being ‘remnants’ left behind by civilizing societies, they are, as it were, “barbarians by choice”, peoples who have deliberately put distance between themselves and lowland, state-centers. It is in this context that their forms of agriculture, their social structures, and much of their culture, including perhaps even their illiteracy, can be understood as political choices.

James Scott, Ph.D., Yale University is the Sterling Professor of Political Science and Professor of Anthropology and is Director of the Agrarian Studies Program. He is a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, has held grants from the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the Guggenheim Foundation, and has been a fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Science, Science, Technology and Society Program at M.I.T., and the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. His research concerns political economy, comparative agrarian societies, theories of hegemony and resistance, peasant politics, revolution, Southeast Asia, theories of class relations and anarchism.

Contact

Jeffrey Little (asian.institute@utoronto.ca)
416 946-8996 416-946-8996


Speakers

Jim Scott
Yale University, Department of Political Science


Co-Sponsors

Asian Institute

Department of Anthropology

Department of Political Science

CIS Development Seminar Series

Centre for International Studies

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