To know or not to know? Practices of knowledge and ignorance among Bidayuhs in an 'impurely' Christian world

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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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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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