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A Sleeping Tiger: Ethnicity, Class, and New Dayak Dreams in Urban Sarawak

Autor Clare L. Boulanger
en Limba Engleză Paperback – 21 oct 2008
A Sleeping Tiger is a rare book-length treatment of urbanization among Dayaks and also offers a fresh perspective on ethnicity, class, and the context in which they function to the benefit of some and the great detriment of others. Although readers may never have heard of Dayaks (the indigenous, largely non-Muslim peoples of Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo), they have surely witnessed the impact of ethnicity and class on the world today. Dayaks have hardly been spared this impact. Formerly forest dwellers in the main, Dayaks have been migrating en masse into Sarawak's towns and cities, but despite their better efforts to succeed in the urban environment, they feel demeaned and disadvantaged relative to the other ethnic groups of Malaysia.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780761843764
ISBN-10: 0761843760
Pagini: 173
Dimensiuni: 155 x 230 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.3 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția University Press of America
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Cuprins

Chapter 1 One. Introduction: Ethnicity, class, and dreams of dignity
Chapter 2 Two. The construction of ethnicity in Sarawak-from Brunei to Malaysia
Chapter 3 Three. Malaysia and the "race race" to modernity
Chapter 4 Four. Malaya and Sarawak-a long, slow pas de deux
Chapter 5 Five. Fieldwork in the urban jungles of Borneo
Chapter 6 Six. Dayaks-losing the "race race"?
Chapter 7 Seven. "Fighting in a different way": In defense of being Dayak
Chapter 8 Eight. Conclusion: The impossible dream?
Chapter 9 Postscript: The general elections of 2008

Recenzii

Clare Boulanger's A Sleeping Tiger is a theoretically sophisticated but concisely written account of how the Dayaks, a large ethnic minority in east Malaysia and adjacent parts of Borneo, are struggling to adapt the ethnic language in which Malaysians have argued political issues so that Dayaks too can benefit from the system, which favors the interests of Malays. Boulanger sensitively shows how modernization not only disrupts traditional communities but the sense of self-worth, which she refers to as "dignity," imbedded in the complex personal relationships traditional life requires. The enormous simplifications entailed in being moden, "modern," require recasting of the Dayak vision of themselves. The clarity of Boulanger's language and theoretical approach would make this book useful to upper-level courses on ethnicity, "development," and Southeast Asia, as well as to area specialists.