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Society in Contemporary Laos - Capitalism, Habitus and Belief (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R4,560
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Society in Contemporary Laos - Capitalism, Habitus and Belief (Hardcover)
Series: Routledge Contemporary Southeast Asia Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Over the past decade, Laos' exposure to global capitalism has
resulted in extensive economic and social transformations.
Precapitalist social structures both persist and are transformed
into a particular configuration of classes. This entails increasing
social inequality, a widening range of habitus and new forms of
ethos. This book pursues the theoretical aim of shedding light on
the old question raised by Max Weber about the relation between
capitalism, ethos and society. The empirical study consists of a
description of the social structures, their embodiment in the
habitus and world-views in Laos against the background of a
critical revision of Pierre Bourdieu's sociology. To achieve these
aims, the author develops a qualitative methodology as neither
Weber nor Bourdieu explained how to empirically study habitus and
ethos. The empirical material for the book was gathered over a
period of more than five years and comprises several hundred
life-course interviews in all sections of Lao society as well as a
representative quantitative survey. The author argues that
precapitalist social structures persist and continue to shape the
social fabric of contemporary Laos. At the same time, they are
transformed by global and local capitalism. The book shows how the
hierarchies contained in each structure shape the habitus of the
Lao population and how these in turn influence the development of a
capitalist and a religious ethos. The argument makes use of Pierre
Bourdieu's sociology and adapts it to the setting of Laos by
introducing new as well as indigenous concepts. While social
structure, habitus and beliefs are subject to a capitalist
transformation and unification, the newly emerging classes and
milieus are not copies of Western forms but retain their local
history. Filling a gap in the literature on Laos and offering new
perspectives on core concepts such as habitus, class, lifestyle,
work ethic and its religious underpinnings, this book will be of
interest to academics in the fields of Sociology, Religious
Studies, and Southeast Asian Studies.
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