Co-opting the stars: Divination and the politics of resistance in Buddhist Thailand

IF 0.4 3区 社会学 Q3 AREA STUDIES
Edoardo Siani
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Abstract

Beginning in 2020, young people in Thailand have led rallies to protest the interference of the military and the monarchy in politics. They have also condemned the role played by Buddhist discourse and court ritual in celebrating kings as divine. ‘No God, No King, Only Human’ reads a protest sign. Simultaneously, however, some groups of protesters have used the same ‘religious’ repertoire, such as the astrological tradition of the court, in their activism, turning it into an instrument of resistance. This article explores this apparent ambivalence via an ethnographic focus on divination, a long-standing central feature of Thai politics. Drawing from a decade of fieldwork conducted with diviners (mo du) and their clients from both pro-regime and pro-democracy camps, including prominent young activists, I argue that progressive individuals do not necessarily need to reject cosmological ideas and rituals deemed conservative in order to resist. Rather, many proactively co-opt them to enhance their own position in the polity, further demonstrating the inability of those in power to live up to accepted moral standards. This strategy, which builds on a Southeast Asian tradition of millenarianism, mobilises dogmatic notions including karma in support of narratives and practices of resistance.
选星:泰国佛教中的占卜与抵抗政治
从2020年开始,泰国年轻人举行集会,抗议军方和君主制干预政治。他们还谴责了佛教话语和宫廷仪式在庆祝国王神圣方面所扮演的角色。一个抗议标语上写着“没有上帝,没有国王,只有人类”。然而,与此同时,一些抗议者团体在他们的行动主义中使用了同样的“宗教”曲目,例如法院的占星术传统,将其变成了一种抵抗的工具。本文通过对泰国政治长期以来的中心特征——占卜的民族志关注,探讨了这种明显的矛盾心理。根据我对占卜者(mo du)和他们来自亲政权和亲民主阵营的客户(包括著名的年轻活动家)进行的十年田野调查,我认为进步的个人并不一定需要为了抵抗而拒绝被认为是保守的宇宙学观念和仪式。相反,许多人积极地拉拢他们来提高自己在政体中的地位,进一步表明当权者无法达到公认的道德标准。这一战略建立在东南亚千禧年主义传统的基础上,动员包括因果报应在内的教条观念来支持抵抗的叙述和实践。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
61
期刊介绍: The Journal of Southeast Asian Studies is one of the principal outlets for scholarly articles on Southeast Asia (Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, East Timor, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam). Embracing a wide range of academic disciplines in the humanities and social sciences, the journal publishes manuscripts oriented toward a scholarly readership but written to be accessible to non-specialists. The extensive book review section includes works in Southeast Asian languages. Published for the History Department, National University of Singapore.
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