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Dwelling in the highland areas of Northeast India, Bangladesh,
Southwest China, Taiwan, Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Cambodia,
Vietnam, Laos, and Peninsular Malaysia are hundreds of "peoples".
Together their population adds up to 100 million, more than most of
the countries they live in. Yet in each of these countries, they
are regarded as minorities. This second edition of Historical
Dictionary of the Peoples of the Southeast Asian Massif contains a
chronology, an introduction, and an extensive bibliography. The
dictionary section has over 700 cross-referenced entries on about
300 groups, the ten countries they live in, their historical
figures, and their salient political, economic, social, cultural
and religious aspects. This book is an excellent access point for
students, researchers, and anyone wanting to know more.
This book rethinks Northeast India as a lived space, a centre of
interconnections and unfolding histories, instead of an isolated
periphery. Questioning dominant tropes and assumptions around the
Northeast, it examines socio-political and historical processes,
border issues, the role of the state, displacement and development,
debates over natural resources, violence, notions of body and
belonging, movements, tensions and relations, and strategies,
struggles and narratives that frame discussions on the region.
Drawing on current and emerging research in Northeast India
studies, this work will be of great interest to scholars and
researchers of politics, human geography, sociology and social
anthropology, history, cultural studies, media studies and South
Asian studies.
This book rethinks Northeast India as a lived space, a centre of
interconnections and unfolding histories, instead of an isolated
periphery. Questioning dominant tropes and assumptions around the
Northeast, it examines socio-political and historical processes,
border issues, the role of the state, displacement and development,
debates over natural resources, violence, notions of body and
belonging, movements, tensions and relations, and strategies,
struggles and narratives that frame discussions on the region.
Drawing on current and emerging research in Northeast India
studies, this work will be of great interest to scholars and
researchers of politics, human geography, sociology and social
anthropology, history, cultural studies, media studies and South
Asian studies.
Can small indigenous communities survive, as distinct cultural
entities, in northeast India, an area of mindboggling ethnic,
linguistic and cultural diversity? What are the choices such
communities have, and what are some of the strategies such
communities use to resist marginalisation? In recent years, many
such small groups are participating in large state sponsored ethnic
festivals, and organising their own community festivals. But are
these signs of their increasing agency or simply proof of their
continued marginalisation? How do state policies and political
borders - inter-state as well as international - impact on a
community's need to perform their ethnicity? These are some of the
questions that will be addressed in this work, on the basis of
ethnographic field work conducted among the small Tangsa community
living in Assam in northeast India. The study also reveals the
asymmetry in the relations between the dominant power-wielding
Assamese and the Tangsa. In summary, this is a study about
marginality and its consequences, about performance of ethnicity at
festivals as sites for both resistance and capitulation, and about
the compulsions, imposed by the state and dominant neighbours, that
can force small ethnic groups to contribute to their own
marginalisation.
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