Reflections on the Ontology of Rice

Reflections on the Ontology of Rice Article by Jane R. Hanks from 1960 concerning a small rice-growing community in central Thailand, which has developed rituals associated with every step of growing the grain. Such rituals are monopolized by women, while the men do ordinary field work and rites, thus leaving women to assume such important roles. Thai people believe that living things contain a khwan, or spirit, which is indestructible. Initially sustained by breast milk from women, the khwan is then sustained by rice. Farmers believe that the whole of nature is protected by female guardian spirits.

4th International Conference on Thai Studies

The 4th International Conference on Thai Studies, 11-13 May, 1990. A schedule and list of participants. Papers on “Phii Miang: Black Thai Symbols of State and Leadership” by Dr. J.A. Placzek; “On Dynamic Ethnicity of the Sipsong Panna Dai during the Republican Period” by Shih-Chung Hsieh; “The Origin of Bo-Le --- On the Relations between the Kingdom of Sukhothai and the Ming Dynasty in the Early Fifteenth Century” by Sun Laichen; and “Milieu and Context: The Disappearance of the White Hmong” by Nicholas Tapp. Articles on “The Social Structure and the Role of the Indian Brahmana in Early Thailand” Amarjiva Lochan, and“Theatre in Thailand” by Surapone Virulrak. Curriculum Vitae of Amarjiva Lochan.

Cultural stability and Culture change

Proceedings of the 1957 annual spring meeting of the American Ethnological Society.

Louis Wolf (1966) (Laos), letter, 1966

31 December 1996 – Louis Wolf relates how Laos gained facilities from the USA for the construction of roads, schools, ponds and other projects. He expresses a wish to return to help this small country.

Ethnohistory.

An article by R. Carmack on Ethno history for the Annual Review of Anthropology.

Cammann, review, “Arts of the Japanese Sword”.

The Arts of the Japanese Sword by B.W. Robinson. Reviewed by Schuyler V.R. Cammann in “Reviews of Books”.

Structures and Strategies : Differential Ethnic Mobility in a small town, Thailand

Research (draft) by Cristina Blanc Szanton in 1981, Department of Anthropology, Columbia University. This paper examines some major trends in mobility patterns in a provincial town in post-World War II Thailand by focusing on families and their careers.

Object of Power : women of Prowess : material Culture in SE Asia

Research by Leedom Lefferts, Department of Anthropology, Drew University. A celebration of Jane R. Hanks’ contributions to Southeast Asian studies.