Fishers, Monks and Cadres: Navigating State, Religion and the South China Sea in Central Vietnam

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Product Details
Price
$32.20
Publisher
University of Hawaii Press
Publish Date
Pages
284
Dimensions
5.9 X 8.9 X 0.8 inches | 1.1 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780824890551

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About the Author
Edyta Roszko is a social anthropologist and senior researcher at Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI) in Norway. For over fifteenth years, she has undertaken ethnographic research on Chinese and Vietnamese fisheries and militia in the common maritime space of the South China Sea. Connectivity of fishers compelled her to historicize fishing communities and to work beyond the nation-state and area studies framework. Her newly awarded European Research Council (ERC) Starting Grant project TransOcean at CMI expands her geographic field beyond Vietnam and China to include other global regions in Oceania and in West and East Africa.
Reviews
As geopolitical tensions rise in and around Vietnam's Eastern Sea (known elsewhere as the South China Sea), too little is known about the richly variegated and complex social life along Vietnam's coastline. This detailed and painstakingly researched ethnography from coastal central Vietnam places the disputes over oceanic sovereignty within a longer history of social life in this fascinating but curiously understudied part of Vietnam. Revealing how entangled Vietnamese economic and spiritual life is with the sea, we learn how ritual, religion, economy and politics all course through the heart of changing relations among state and society. Everyday actors navigate the categories of state, society and religion like they sail the seas with the stars; the categories are both fixed and in motion, guiding life at the interface of sea and shore, even as everyday actors constantly shift their position among them.--Erik Harms, Yale University
Roszko's excellent analysis of state-society dynamics in contemporary Vietnam reflects her many years of living in, and studying, these communities. Her discoveries about personal, political and religious life are perceptive and fascinating. This book will be a significant contribution to studies of local political power in Vietnam and throws new light on the ways the state and communities have engaged with aspects of the disputes in the South China Sea.--Bill Hayton, author of The South China Sea: The Struggle for Power in Modern Asia