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Southeast Asian Perspectives on Power

Chua, L., Cook, J., Long, N & L. Wilson (2012). Southeast Asian Perspectives on Power. New York, London: Routledge.

Southeast Asia has undergone innumerable far-reaching changes and dramatic transformations over the last half-century. This book explores the concept of power in relation to these transformations, and examines its various social, cultural, religious, economic and political forms.

 

The book works from the ground up, portraying Southeast Asians’ own perspectives, conceptualizations and experiences of power through empirically rich case studies. Exploring concepts of power in diverse settings, from the stratagems of Indonesian politicians and the aspirations of marginal Lao bureaucrats, to mass ‘Prayer Power’ rallies in the Philippines, self-cultivation practices of Thai Buddhists and relations with the dead in Singapore, the book lays out a new framework for the analysis of power in Southeast Asia in which orientations towards or away from certain models, practices and configurations of power take centre stage in analysis. In doing so the book demonstrates how power cannot be pinned down to a single definition, but is woven into Southeast Asian lives in complex, subtle, and often surprising ways.

 

Integrating theoretical debates with empirical evidence drawn from the contributing authors’ own research, this book is of particular interest to scholars and students of Anthropology and Asian Studies.

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SOUTHEAST ASIAN PERSPECTIVES ON POWER

“Southeast Asian Perspectives on Power adds a modern anthropological approach to understanding the sources, origins, and peculiarities of power in Southeast Asia. It challenges the pre-laden assumptions of power residing solely on an abstract nation-state and attempts to relocate the literature to better decipher roles and meanings of cultural narratives, beliefs, symbolic but powerful artifacts or events, and deeply-rooted customs to local understandings of power. It can also help us better understand local resistance against central state and modernity, and work for inclusion rather than exclusion. Ultimately, it is the understanding of these local sensitivities and sources of power that will help nation-state reconcile the center-periphery dilemmas and build a more cohesive state of nations, rather than nation-states.” 

Olli Soursa

Journal of International Global Studies

"This ground-breaking volume upturns long-held and essentialized conceptions of power in Southeast Asia while modeling new ways of analyzing and understanding it. This text should be required reading in anthropology, political science, and cultural and area studies on power."

WK Cheong

TCA College, Singapore

© 2025 by Joanna Cook

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