Putting Democracy Under An Ethnographic-lens: Understanding of 'Democracy' and Popular Politics of JHU in Sri Lanka

https://doi.org/10.22146/pcd.25705

Premakumara De Silva(1*)

(1) University of Colombo
(*) Corresponding Author

Abstract


My main premise is that for anthropologists of post-colonial societies (but not only), 'democracy' should be regarded as one of many traditional ethnographic topics (such as kinship, religion, Caste, etc.) which ethnographers study to unpack the socio-cultural institutions and practices of the societies under investigation. The hypothesis behind this approach is that the moment democracy enters a particular historical and socio-cultural setting it becomes what Michelutti calls "vernacularized", and through vernacularisation it produces new social relations and values which in turn shape political rhetoric and political culture (2007). The process of vernacularisation of democratic politics, she means the ways in which values and practices of democracy become embedded in particular cultural and social practices, and in the process become entrenched in the consciousness of ordinary people (2007: 639-40).

 

Democratic practices associated with popular politics often base their strength and legitimacy on the principle of popular sovereignty versus the more conventional notions of liberal democracy. These popular forms of political participation are often accompanied by a polarisation of opinions and political practices between the so-called 'ordinary people' and the elites. Looking at democratisation processes through the prism of vernacularisation will therefore help to understand how and why democracy grounds itself in everyday life and becomes part of conceptual worlds that are often far removed from theories of liberal democracy.


Full Text:

PDF


References

Abeysekara, A 2002, Colors of the robe: religion, identity and difference, University of South Carolina Press, Colombia

Amunugama, S 1991 , ‘Buddhaputra and bhumiputra? Dilemmas of modern Sinhala Buddhist monks in relation to ethnic and political confl ict’, Religion, vol. 21, pp. 115-139.

Bartholomeuz, T 2002, In defense of Dharma: just-war ideology in Buddhist Sri Lanka, Routledge Curzon, New York.

Brow, J 1995, Demons and development: the struggle for community in a Sri Lankan village, University of Arizona Press, Tucson.

Chatterjee, P 2004, The politics of the governed: considerations on political society in most of the world, Columbia University Press, New York.

Comaroff & Comaroff (eds.)1999, Civil society and the political imagination in Africa: critical perspective, problems, paradoxes, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Das Veena and Poole, D 2004, Anthropology in the margins of the state, School of American Research Press, Oxford.

Deegalle, M 2006 (ed.), Buddhism, confl ict and violence in modern Sri Lanka, Routledge, London.

De Silva, P 2007, Review on abiding by Sri Lanka by Qadri Ismail, Polity, vol. 4, no. 3. Geetz, C 1963, Peddlers and princes: social development and economic change in two Indonesian towns, Chicago University Press, Chicago.

Ismail, Q 2005, Abiding by Sri Lanka; on peace, place, and post-coloniality, University of Minnesota Press, Minnesota.

Paley, J 2001, Marketing democracy: power and social movements in postdictatorship Chile, University of California Press, Berkley.

Paley, J 2002, ‘Towards anthropology of democracy’, Annual Review of Anthropology, vol. 31. 469-96.

Michelutti, L 2007, ‘The vernacularisation of democracy: popular politics and political participation in North India’, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, vol. 13, pp. 639-656.

Robinson, M 1975, Political structure in a changing Sinhalese village, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Scott, D 1999, Refashioning futures: criticism after postcoloniality, Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.

Sharma, A and Gupta. A 2006, (eds.), The anthropology of the state: a reader, Blackwell Press.

Seneviratne, H.L 1999, The work of kings: the new Buddhism in Sri Lanka, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Spencer, J 1990, A Sinhala village in a time of trouble: politics and change in rural Sri Lanka, Oxford University Press, Delhi.

Spencer, J 2007, Anthropology, politics, and the state: democracy and violence in South Asia, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Tambiah, S.J 1986, Sri Lanka: ethnic fratricide and the dismantaling of democracy, University of Chicago Press, Chicago.

Tambiah, S.J 1992, Buddhism betrayed: religion, politics and violence in Sri Lanka, University of Chicago Press, Chicago and London.

Tambiah, S.J 1997, Leveling crowds : ethnonationalist confl icts and collective violence in South Asia,University of California Press, Berkeley.

Verdery, K 1996, What was socialism, and what comes next?, Princeton University Press, Princeton.

Woost, M 1993, ‘Nationalizing the local past in Sri Lanka: histories of nation and development in a Sinhalese village’, American Ethnologist, vol. 20, no. 3, pp. 502-521.



DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/pcd.25705

Article Metrics

Abstract views : 1614 | views : 1369

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2017 Power, Conflict and Democracy Journal

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

web
analytics View My Stats

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

       

 

 

                                © Faculty of Social and Political Sciences Gadjah Mada University Jl. Sosio-Yustisia Bulaksumur Yogyakarta 55281
                                                     Telp (0274) 563362 Ext. 150; +62 811 2515 863 - email: pcd@ugm.ac.id