Community as a category of empire: ‘The work of community’ among Burmese Indians in Myanmar

IF 0.6 2区 历史学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Judith Beyer
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Subsequently, I sketch the migratory history of the category following the ancestors of today's so-called ‘Burmese Indians' across the Bay of Bengal from India to Burma. The final part of the article presents the repercussions ‘community' has in contemporary Myanmar, drawing on recent legislation around ‘race and religion’ as well as my own ethnographic data from religious processions of ethno-religious minorities who find themselves in a subaltern position vis-à-vis the Buddhist majority population and an ethnonationalist state.KEYWORDS: MyanmarempireMuslimsHinduscommunalismcommunity AcknowledgmentsI wish to thank my interlocutors in Myanmar for the faith they bestowed in me, for trusting me to tell their stories and for accepting my family and me into your homes, mosques, and temples. I also thank Felix Girke for reading and commenting on this article as well as the anonymous reviewers and the editors of History and Anthropology for their constructive feedback.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ethnographic fieldwork in Yangon took place between 2012 and 2020 (a total of 15 months). In addition to participant observation, I collected the life histories and genealogies of my main interlocutors, legal documentation, statistical information, and newspaper articles, and I followed all my interlocutors on social media. Moreover, I consulted colonial-era documents compiled by state officials and housed in the India Office Records, that is, the archives of the East India Company (1600–1858), the Board of Control (1784–1858), the India Office (1858–1947) and the Burma Office (1937–1948), nowadays all located in the British Library in London. I have profited from Mandy Sadan’s meticulously researched A Guide to Colonial Sources on Burma (Citation2008), in which she has compiled extensive lists of references from all four archives, with a specific focus on what she calls ‘minority histories’.2 These first encounters would always happen in the English language as people assumed that I would not be able to understand Burmese, being a ‘Westerner’. The noteworthy part is that the person would choose the first person plural (‘We are … ’) even when it was just the two of us speaking.3 I do not recapitulate the vast literature in anthropology and sociology on community per se. Many others before have done so. See, for example, Hillery (Citation1955), McMillan and Chavis (Citation1986), Brint (Citation2001), Creed (Citation2006), Esposito (Citation2010), Rosa et al. (Citation2010).4 While community structures the possibilities of how people are socially allowed to (inter-)act and how they can perceive sameness or difference vis-à-vis others, the category would remain meaningless – or would lose much of its naturalistic appeal – without the ongoing, subtler ways in which individuals exist themselves (drawing on Sartre (Citation(1943) 1992, 460) and by which they come to embody, experience and discursively forge a sense of we that does not rely on the category of community. It is beyond the frame of this article to delve into these practices of what I call we-formation and which I see in a dialectical and dynamic relation to the work of community. I develop the concept in detail in my book (Beyer Citation2023).5 For further literature on the different connotations of communalism in colonial and contemporary India and the relation to (village) communities see, for example, Chandra (Citation1984), Chatterjee (Citation1993), Gottschalk (Citation2012), Pandey (Citation1990), Prakash (Citation2002), Nandy (Citation1990, Citation(1983) 1991), Ray (Citation2003), Sinha (Citation2006).6 See also the work of Karuna Mantena (Citation2010).7 See also Ilyse Morgenstein Fuerst’s (Citation2017) work on the racialization of religious identities in colonial India.8 The exact number of people who migrated across the Bay of Bengal to reach Burma cannot be accurately determined, as migrants regularly travelled back and forth (see Jaiswal Citation2014).9 See also Appadurai (Citation1998) on ‘enumerative strategies’ in India and Cohn (Citation1987) for an earlier analysis). On tain-yin-tha: see Cheesman (Citation2017, 467), de Mersan (Citation2016) and Robinne (Citation2019).10 See Carstens (Citation2018) on the new category Buddha-bha-tha-lu-myo (‘Buddhist ethnicity’).11 The list was published in the Myanma-language newspaper Workers’ Daily, 26 September 1990, 7.12 The colonial era personal status laws still in place in Myanmar today are The Trusts Act (India Act II) (1882), Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act. (1937), The Buddhist Women’s Special Marriage and Succession Act. (1954), The Mussalman Wakf Validating Act. No 6. (1913), The Mussalman Wakf Act. No 42. (1923) and The Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act. (1939).13 Puja is Sanskrit for ‘reverence’ or ‘worship’ and describes an elaborate prayer ritual that is usually carried out inside the temple compound by the temple priests (pujari).14 Next to skin colour, clothing styles and body decorations are the local indicators that people attribute to a person as ‘Burmese Indian’ or as ‘Buddhist Bama’.15 The Burmese concept of bha-tha evolved only in the 19th century ‘in response to the encounter with Westerner’s conceptions of religion’ (Brac de la Perrière Citation2009, 187), whereas the Burmese thathana (from Pali sāsana), signifies a more fluid and encompassing Burmese Buddhicized social space that also includes spirit worship (see Brac de la Perrière Citation2017).","PeriodicalId":46201,"journal":{"name":"History and Anthropology","volume":"196 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"History and Anthropology","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/02757206.2023.2261958","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"ANTHROPOLOGY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACTIn this article I argue that ‘community' is a category that is inextricably bound up with the historical development of the British empire. It was in this context that modern social theory took root, including, eventually, publications on community in anthropology and sociology that profoundly influenced nineteenth- and twentieth-century thought and that continue to shape everyday understandings of the category within and beyond academia. I first elaborate what type of work the category ‘community' was intended to do in the British empire. I then introduce two key figures who were responsible for designing, distributing and implementing two contrasting imperial theories of community. Subsequently, I sketch the migratory history of the category following the ancestors of today's so-called ‘Burmese Indians' across the Bay of Bengal from India to Burma. The final part of the article presents the repercussions ‘community' has in contemporary Myanmar, drawing on recent legislation around ‘race and religion’ as well as my own ethnographic data from religious processions of ethno-religious minorities who find themselves in a subaltern position vis-à-vis the Buddhist majority population and an ethnonationalist state.KEYWORDS: MyanmarempireMuslimsHinduscommunalismcommunity AcknowledgmentsI wish to thank my interlocutors in Myanmar for the faith they bestowed in me, for trusting me to tell their stories and for accepting my family and me into your homes, mosques, and temples. I also thank Felix Girke for reading and commenting on this article as well as the anonymous reviewers and the editors of History and Anthropology for their constructive feedback.Disclosure statementNo potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).Notes1 Ethnographic fieldwork in Yangon took place between 2012 and 2020 (a total of 15 months). In addition to participant observation, I collected the life histories and genealogies of my main interlocutors, legal documentation, statistical information, and newspaper articles, and I followed all my interlocutors on social media. Moreover, I consulted colonial-era documents compiled by state officials and housed in the India Office Records, that is, the archives of the East India Company (1600–1858), the Board of Control (1784–1858), the India Office (1858–1947) and the Burma Office (1937–1948), nowadays all located in the British Library in London. I have profited from Mandy Sadan’s meticulously researched A Guide to Colonial Sources on Burma (Citation2008), in which she has compiled extensive lists of references from all four archives, with a specific focus on what she calls ‘minority histories’.2 These first encounters would always happen in the English language as people assumed that I would not be able to understand Burmese, being a ‘Westerner’. The noteworthy part is that the person would choose the first person plural (‘We are … ’) even when it was just the two of us speaking.3 I do not recapitulate the vast literature in anthropology and sociology on community per se. Many others before have done so. See, for example, Hillery (Citation1955), McMillan and Chavis (Citation1986), Brint (Citation2001), Creed (Citation2006), Esposito (Citation2010), Rosa et al. (Citation2010).4 While community structures the possibilities of how people are socially allowed to (inter-)act and how they can perceive sameness or difference vis-à-vis others, the category would remain meaningless – or would lose much of its naturalistic appeal – without the ongoing, subtler ways in which individuals exist themselves (drawing on Sartre (Citation(1943) 1992, 460) and by which they come to embody, experience and discursively forge a sense of we that does not rely on the category of community. It is beyond the frame of this article to delve into these practices of what I call we-formation and which I see in a dialectical and dynamic relation to the work of community. I develop the concept in detail in my book (Beyer Citation2023).5 For further literature on the different connotations of communalism in colonial and contemporary India and the relation to (village) communities see, for example, Chandra (Citation1984), Chatterjee (Citation1993), Gottschalk (Citation2012), Pandey (Citation1990), Prakash (Citation2002), Nandy (Citation1990, Citation(1983) 1991), Ray (Citation2003), Sinha (Citation2006).6 See also the work of Karuna Mantena (Citation2010).7 See also Ilyse Morgenstein Fuerst’s (Citation2017) work on the racialization of religious identities in colonial India.8 The exact number of people who migrated across the Bay of Bengal to reach Burma cannot be accurately determined, as migrants regularly travelled back and forth (see Jaiswal Citation2014).9 See also Appadurai (Citation1998) on ‘enumerative strategies’ in India and Cohn (Citation1987) for an earlier analysis). On tain-yin-tha: see Cheesman (Citation2017, 467), de Mersan (Citation2016) and Robinne (Citation2019).10 See Carstens (Citation2018) on the new category Buddha-bha-tha-lu-myo (‘Buddhist ethnicity’).11 The list was published in the Myanma-language newspaper Workers’ Daily, 26 September 1990, 7.12 The colonial era personal status laws still in place in Myanmar today are The Trusts Act (India Act II) (1882), Muslim Personal Law (Shariat) Application Act. (1937), The Buddhist Women’s Special Marriage and Succession Act. (1954), The Mussalman Wakf Validating Act. No 6. (1913), The Mussalman Wakf Act. No 42. (1923) and The Dissolution of Muslim Marriages Act. (1939).13 Puja is Sanskrit for ‘reverence’ or ‘worship’ and describes an elaborate prayer ritual that is usually carried out inside the temple compound by the temple priests (pujari).14 Next to skin colour, clothing styles and body decorations are the local indicators that people attribute to a person as ‘Burmese Indian’ or as ‘Buddhist Bama’.15 The Burmese concept of bha-tha evolved only in the 19th century ‘in response to the encounter with Westerner’s conceptions of religion’ (Brac de la Perrière Citation2009, 187), whereas the Burmese thathana (from Pali sāsana), signifies a more fluid and encompassing Burmese Buddhicized social space that also includes spirit worship (see Brac de la Perrière Citation2017).
社区作为帝国的一个范畴:缅甸缅甸印第安人的“社区工作”
摘要本文认为,“共同体”是一个与大英帝国的历史发展密不可分的范畴。正是在这种背景下,现代社会理论生根发芽,包括最终在人类学和社会学中发表的关于社区的出版物,这些出版物深刻地影响了19世纪和20世纪的思想,并继续塑造学术界内外对这一范畴的日常理解。我首先阐述了“社区”这一范畴在大英帝国打算做什么类型的工作。然后,我介绍了两位关键人物,他们负责设计、传播和实施两种截然不同的帝国主义社区理论。随后,我概述了这类人的迁徙历史,跟随今天所谓的“缅甸印第安人”的祖先,从印度穿过孟加拉湾来到缅甸。文章的最后一部分介绍了“社区”在当代缅甸的影响,引用了最近关于“种族和宗教”的立法,以及我自己的民族志数据,这些数据来自少数民族宗教的宗教游行,他们发现自己在-à-vis佛教徒占多数人口和民族主义国家中处于次等地位。我要感谢我在缅甸的对话者们对我的信任,感谢他们信任我来讲述他们的故事,感谢他们接受我和我的家人进入你们的家园、清真寺和寺庙。我还要感谢Felix Girke对本文的阅读和评论,以及《历史与人类学》的匿名审稿人和编辑们的建设性反馈。披露声明作者未报告潜在的利益冲突。注1在2012年至2020年期间(共15个月)在仰光进行了民族志实地调查。除了参与观察之外,我还收集了主要对话者的生活史和家谱、法律文件、统计信息和报纸文章,并在社交媒体上关注了所有的对话者。此外,我还查阅了由国家官员编纂的殖民时期的文件,这些文件保存在印度办公室记录中,即东印度公司(1600-1858)、控制委员会(1784-1858)、印度办公室(1858-1947)和缅甸办公室(1937-1948)的档案,这些档案现在都位于伦敦的大英图书馆。我从曼迪·萨丹(Mandy Sadan)精心研究的《缅甸殖民资源指南》(Citation2008)中获益良多,在这本书中,她从所有四个档案中收集了大量参考资料,并特别关注她所谓的“少数民族历史”这些第一次接触总是发生在英语中,因为人们认为我不能理解缅甸语,因为我是“西方人”。值得注意的是,即使只有我们两个人说话,这个人也会选择第一人称复数(“我们是……”)我不概述人类学和社会学中关于社区本身的大量文献。在此之前,已经有很多人这么做了。例如,参见hilery (Citation1955)、McMillan and Chavis (Citation1986)、Brint (Citation2001)、Creed (Citation2006)、Esposito (Citation2010)、Rosa等人(Citation2010)虽然社区构建了人们如何在社会上被允许(相互)行动的可能性,以及他们如何感知与-à-vis他人的相同或差异,但如果没有持续的、更微妙的个人存在方式(引用萨特(Citation(1943) 1992, 460),并且他们通过这种方式来体现、体验和话语构建一种不依赖于社区类别的我们的感觉,这个类别将仍然毫无意义-或者将失去其自然主义的吸引力。深入研究这些我称之为“自我形成”的实践,以及我在与社区工作的辩证和动态关系中看到的实践,超出了本文的框架。我在我的书中详细阐述了这个概念(Beyer Citation2023)关于殖民地和当代印度社群主义的不同内涵以及与(村庄)社区的关系的进一步文献,请参见钱德拉(Citation1984),查特吉(Citation1993),戈特沙尔克(Citation2012),潘迪(Citation1990),普拉卡什(Citation2002),南迪(Citation1990, Citation(1983) 1991),雷(Citation2003),辛哈(Citation2006)参见Karuna Mantena的作品(Citation2010)参见Ilyse Morgenstein Fuerst (Citation2017)关于殖民地印度宗教身份种族化的研究。8无法准确确定穿越孟加拉湾到达缅甸的确切人数,因为移民经常往返(见Jaiswal Citation2014)参见Appadurai (Citation1998)关于印度的“枚举策略”和Cohn (Citation1987)的早期分析。关于这一点:参见Cheesman (citation2017,467), de Mersan (Citation2016)和Robinne (Citation2019)。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
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0.00%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: History and Anthropology continues to address the intersection of history and social sciences, focusing on the interchange between anthropologically-informed history, historically-informed anthropology and the history of ethnographic and anthropological representation. It is now widely perceived that the formerly dominant ahistorical perspectives within anthropology severely restricted interpretation and analysis. Much recent work has therefore been concerned with social change and colonial history and the traditional problems such as symbolism, have been rethought in historical terms. History and Anthropology publishes articles which develop these concerns, and is particularly interested in linking new substantive analyses with critical perspectives on anthropological discourse.
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