Khmer Ways of Seeing, Migration and Divinatory Improvisation in Phnom Penh
Loading...
Date
Authors
Jiaviriyaboonya, Poonnatree
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University
Abstract
Since the fall of the Khmer Rouge, local practices of divination,
magic and spirit veneration have increased in diversity and
popularity in Cambodia, including in the capital city of Phnom
Penh. Although modern urban Khmers embody a cosmopolitan
lifestyle, the way they see and make sense of the world, still
draws upon their religious traditions. The resurgence of various
occult technologies in Cambodian urban society supports the case
made by scholars who have argued that religious practices in
Southeast Asia continue to flourish and change in response to
modernity. Anthropologists, however, have yet to provide
sufficient in-depth analysis of the revival and reinvention of
such religious traditions in Cambodia’s modern cities.
Furthermore, little attention has been given to the religious
experience of urban people, especially domestic migrants, whose
reliance on their religious repertoire occurs within a context of
historical rupture, socio-spatial dislocation, uncertainty about
tradition, and processes of secularisation and globalisation.
This thesis is the first full-length ethnography on divination in
Cambodia and the first to embed the study of religion in the
lived experiences of Khmer urban people. It investigates the
multidimensional roles of divination, magic and spirit veneration
in the lives of rural-urban migrants in Phnom Penh. In a modern
context in which urbanisation and globalisation often foster
markedly secular alternatives to “traditional” practices,
this thesis examines how urban migrants use divination and
associated religious traditions to guide and manage their
experiences of mobility, security-seeking and place-making. The
ethnographic account presented in this thesis draws upon 14
months of field research in Phnom Penh from 2015 to 2016. I
undertook participant observation within the workplaces, homes
and social networks of fortune-tellers and clients; collected
life histories; and conducted semi-structured interviews with
research interlocutors on their religious practices and life
concerns. Examining the experiences of mobility of
fortune-tellers and their clients, the findings demonstrate that
rural-urban migrants creatively draw upon a diverse religious
repertoire in their endeavour to emplace themselves in a new
city. The thesis argues that divination, magic and spirit
veneration can be seen as forms of empowerment that assist
vulnerable people overcome their uncertainties, afflictions and
anxieties. It finds that elements of a traditional religious
repertoire are portable and are utilised by urban newcomers to
regain equilibrium in unfamiliar circumstances. Divination
services address the existential concerns of migrants and offer
an affective service—a form of therapeutic treatment — to
those who face a moral dilemma or encounter indecision.
Divination and magic are used to penetrate the mysteries of urban
social relationships, secure beneficial outcomes, and present
oneself as a desirable person. Magic and sorcery can be used as
“weapons” by people whose position is vulnerable and
threatened by unknown actors or forces. The ethnography sheds
light on the improvisation of divinatory authority within a
context of uncertainty about the past and present, contested
knowledge and unequal access to resources. This thesis considers
urban Cambodian practices of divination, magic and spirit worship
as experimental traditions that migrants assemble and improvise
upon to make an unpredictable and changing city home.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
License Rights
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description