THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF SOUTHEAST ASIA
- Academic year
- 2023/2024 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ANTROPOLOGIA DEL SUD-EST ASIATICO
- Course code
- LM2490 (AF:456120 AR:248764)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- L-OR/23
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Course year
- 1
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
- identify and understand key themes and debates in the anthropology of Southeast Asia
- gain awareness of ethnographic research methods in the anthropological study of South-East Asia
Ability to apply knowledge and understanding:
- Ability to read and discuss critically ethnographic studies of Southeast Asia
- Develop analytical tools to discuss, interpret, and contextualise ethnographic data gathered in two or more of the region's countries
- Analyse the contribution of Southeast Asia-focused ethnographic studies to the broader development of anthropological theory
Pre-requirements
Contents
This course will examine selected ethnographic studies of Southeast Asia's peoples in a range of national and ecological contexts and cultural niches, focusing on a number of "cultural characters", including: slum squatters, pro-democracy youth activists, and businessmen in Bangkok; street vendors in Ho Chi Minh City; environmental and/or revolutionary Buddhist monks in Myanmar, Laos and Thailand; ethnic minority highlanders in northern Cambodia; fishermen communities scattered across the Indonesian archipelago. Key anthropological issues will be theoretically re-addressed though these ethnographic incursions in Southeast Asia's multiple ways of life. This ethnographical analysis of Southeast Asia will serve to comparatively assess the alleged regional specificity of the following anthropological fields of investigation:
- Hierarchy and equality
- Politics and kinship
- Childhood, parenting, and the self
- Religion, development and humanitarianism
- Capitalism, magic, and modernity
Referral texts
Bolotta, G. (2020). Belittled Citizens: The Cultural Politics of Childhood on Bangkok’s Margins. Copenhagen: NIAS Press.
Barker, J., Harms, E. and Lindquist, J. (Eds.). (2013). Figures of Southeast Asian Modernity. Honolulu: Hawaii University Press (selected chapters).
Adams, K. M, and Gillogly, K. A (Eds.) (2011). Everyday Life in Southeast Asia. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. Following chapters:
- Ch. 1, Lorraine Aragon, 'Living in Indonesia without a Please or Thanks: Cultural Translations of Reciprocity and Respect"
- Ch.. 4, Judith Nagata, ' A Question of Identity: Different Ways of Being Malay and Muslim in Malaysia"
- Ch. 6, Kathleen Gillogly, 'Marriage and Opium in a Lisu Village in Northern Thailand'
- Ch. 7, Lucien Hanks jr., ' Merit and Power in the Thai Social Order',
- Ch. 10, Christina Schwenkel, 'Youth Culture and Fading Memories of War in Hanoi, Vietnam'
- Ch. 11, Susan Darlington, 'The Ordination of a Tree: The Buddhist Ecology Movement in Thailand'
- Ch. 12, Nancy Smith-Hefner, ' Javanese Women and the Veil'
- Ch. 15, Pattana Kittiarsa, ' The Fall of Thai Rocky'
- Ch. 22, R. Dentan, A. Williams-Hunt, and J. Edo, 'They do not like to be confined and told what to do: Schooling Malaysian Indigenes'
- Ch. 23, M. Ford and L. Lyons, 'Narratives of Agency: Sex Work in Indonesia's Borderlands'.
Additional required readings will be announced in class and provided through Moodle
Background readings (recommended but not compulsory):
Osborne, M. (2021) Southeast Asia: An Introductory History, 13th edition. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin.
Scott, J. C. (2020). L’arte di non essere governati. Storia anarchica degli altipiani del Sud-est asiatico. Einaudi: Torino.
Assessment methods
a. The assessment of the student's ability to articulate a theoretical and critical analysis, with a comparative scope, of two or more ethnographies of Southeast Asia discussed during the course.
b. The assessment of the student's general assimilation of the course's key contents, especially in reference to the monograph listed in the bibliography.
Regarding the grading system (method through which grades will be assigned), regardless of attendance or non-attendance:
A. Scores in the range 18-22 will be attributed in the presence of:
- Sufficient knowledge of the program's contents;
- Limited ability to interpret the contents, formulating independent judgments;
- Adequate communicative skills, especially concerning the use of specific language related to the anthropological-ethnographic analysis of Southeast Asia;
B. Scores in the range 23-26 will be attributed in the presence of:
- Fair knowledge of the program's contents;
- Fair ability to interpret the contents, formulating independent judgments;
- Fair communicative skills, especially concerning the use of specific language related to the anthropological-ethnographic analysis of Southeast Asia;
C. Scores in the range 27-30 will be attributed in the presence of:
- Good knowledge of the program's contents;
- Good ability to interpret the contents, formulating independent judgments;
- Fully appropriate communicative skills, especially concerning the use of specific language related to the anthropological-ethnographic analysis of Southeast Asia;
D. Honors (30 cum laude) will be attributed in the presence of excellent knowledge and understanding, critical analysis skills of the program's contents, judgment abilities, and communicative skills.
Teaching methods
Teaching language
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Poverty and inequalities" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development