Abstract
This article seeks to render ignorance analytically and ethnographically productive by exploring practices and tropes of knowing and not-knowing among young Christian Bidayuhs in Sarawak, Malaysian Borneo. It argues that these Bidayuhs' professed ignorance of the old 'religion', adat gawai, cannot be dismissed as a simple lack of knowledge or reflection of sheer indifference. Instead, their invocations of ignorance could be understood as a productive, empowering device for dealing with the dangers of living in a world in which religious conversion remains an ongoing, incomplete process. Through this ethnographic analysis, the article also offers a reflexive critique of the knowledge-centred impulses that often shape anthropology's epistemological and methodological projects. © 2009 Royal Anthropological Institute.
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CITATION STYLE
Chua, L. (2009). To know or not to know? Practices of knowledge and ignorance among Bidayuhs in an “impurely” Christian world. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 15(2), 332–348. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9655.2009.01556.x
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