Year published :November 2012

Pages :246 pp.

Size :14x21 cm.

Rights :Southeast Asia

ISBN: 9786162150555

Buddha on Mecca's Verandah, The

by Irving Chan Johnson

The Buddha on Mecca's Verandah examines the many ways in which people living along an international border negotiate their ethnic, cultural, and political identities. This ethnography of a small community of Thai Buddhists in the Malaysian state of Kelantan draws on rich, original vignettes to show how issues of territoriality, identity, and power frame the experiences of borderland residents.

Although the Thai represent less than 10 percent of the Kelantan population, they are vocal about their identity as non-Muslim, non-Malay citizens. They have built some of the world’s largest Buddhist statues in their tiny villages, in a state that has traditionally been a seat of Islamic governance. At the same time, the Thai grapple with feelings of social and political powerlessness, being neither Thai citizens nor Muslim Malaysians. This thoughtful study offers new perspectives and challenges the classical definition of boundaries and borders as spaces that enforce separation and distance.

What others are saying

“Johnson offers a distinctive take on border peoples and places. The son of a Malaysian Thai mother and an American father, he is at once the observer and himself and example of a trans border person. It is the outsider/ insider tension that makes the work particularly compelling.”—Charles Keyes, University of Washington

“This book represents in-depth, qualitative research into the daily lives of the Thai peasants in Kelantan and the dilemma of identity that they face. One of its strengths is the author’s privileged access to the social field; he makes no secret that he is part of this village universe because of his family background, and he consequently makes a very original contribution to the literature.”—Alexander Horstmann, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity

Highlights

  • Rich, original vignettes of life in a border community
  • Politics of social and collective identification
  • In-depth ethnographic research on identity politics
  • Author is both participant and observer 

About the Author

IRVING CHAN JOHNSON is assistant professor of Southeast Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore.

Keywords

Malaysia-Thai border | Kelantan | border community | Thai Buddhist minority | ethnography | identity politics | Thainess | social life and customs

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