Ethnic isolationism in the China-South-East Asia borderlands

dc.contributor.authorTapp, Nicholas
dc.contributor.editorChristian Culas
dc.contributor.editorFrancois Robinne
dc.date.accessioned2015-12-10T22:18:40Z
dc.date.issued2010
dc.date.updated2020-12-13T07:33:11Z
dc.description.abstractBesides these theoretical and practical points against ethnic isolationism, for many decades now anthropologists have been confronting peoples who have consciously and wittingly reformulated their cultural traditions in response to external pressures and influences, even often in reflexive reaction to anthropologists� own interventions in societies other than their own. These �invented� traditions, as Hobsbawm and Ranger (1983) called them, or inventions of cultureas Wagner called it even earlier (1981 [1975]), have showed an astonishing tendency to creative cultural syncretism, adopting and moderating cultural influences from a variety of different sources, to forge renewed and particular cultural identities (see Hanson 1989; Jackson 1989; Levine 1991). Whether or not cultures have always been in quite such a state of dynamic reworking, these phenomena, and above all where there is an awareness of the fabricated nature of �traditional� cultures rather than the kind of ethnic fundamentalism we consider below, have made it trebly difficult for us to conceive of cultures, either now or in the past, as bounded, isolated entities in the way that they were presented by structuralfunctionalists and other cultural relativists. Moreover, throughout the 1990s, and associated with the more practical facts of globalisation considered above, we had the popularisation of various theories of the �post-modern�, which stressed the free-floating nature of the signifiers of identity in a consumption-oriented world, the absence of ultimate reference points, and the shifting and fluid nature of cosmopolitan identities in a mobile and diasporic conjuncture. The stress on travel, mobility, cosmopolitanism, and at once on the liberation of the signifier, led us still further away from any residual faith there might have been in localised cultural essences which might be viewed purely in their own terms, in isolation, without reference to the infinite mobility and fluidity of the world they inhabited.
dc.identifier.isbn9780415559367
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/1885/51512
dc.publisherRoutledge, Taylor & Francis Group
dc.relation.ispartofInter-Ethnic Dynamics in Asia: Considering the Other through ethnonyms, territories and rituals
dc.relation.isversionof1st Edition
dc.titleEthnic isolationism in the China-South-East Asia borderlands
dc.typeBook chapter
local.bibliographicCitation.lastpage192
local.bibliographicCitation.placeofpublicationAbingdon, UK and New York, USA
local.bibliographicCitation.startpage185
local.contributor.affiliationTapp, Nicholas, College of Asia and the Pacific, ANU
local.contributor.authoremailu4006603@anu.edu.au
local.contributor.authoruidTapp, Nicholas, u4006603
local.description.embargo2037-12-31
local.description.notesImported from ARIES
local.identifier.absfor160104 - Social and Cultural Anthropology
local.identifier.absseo970116 - Expanding Knowledge through Studies of Human Society
local.identifier.ariespublicationu9512106xPUB225
local.identifier.doi10.4324/9780203861387-21
local.identifier.uidSubmittedByu9512106
local.type.statusPublished Version

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