Abstract
Zomia, in the sense exulted by James C. Scott (2009) as an abode of purposeful political anarchy and anti-stateism, is not an emic conceptualization, not a particular place or an incantation of a collective identity referred to or professed by particular populations of humans. As a spatial and social reality, or as a word-concept, Zomia, then appears an exercise in scholarly magical realism (evidence is ‘thin’, ‘limited’, and ‘ambiguous’, as Victor Lieberman (2010: 339) puts it more discreetly). It is a form of geographical and historical imagination that nevertheless has begun to ‘escape’ the narrow corridors of the academy and into public discourse where it now lives a life of its own. It is an original imagination no doubt – an optic that stimulates fresh scholarship – but one simultaneously cannot escape that Zomia-disciples are letting their imagination run away with them.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Wouters, J. J. P. (2019). Highland Asia as a field of anthropological study. The Highlander: Journal of Highland Asia, 1(1), 31–36. https://doi.org/10.2218/thj.v1.2019.4188
Register to see more suggestions
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.