Temiar Religion, 1964-2012
Enchantment, Disenchantment and Re-enchantment in Malaysia’s Uplands
Distributed for National University of Singapore Press
Temiar Religion, 1964-2012
Enchantment, Disenchantment and Re-enchantment in Malaysia’s Uplands
When Benjamin first lived in the isolated villages of the Temiars between 1964 and 1965, he encountered a people who lived by swidden farming supplemented by hunting and fishing. They practised their own localised animistic religion in an area where the main religion was once Mahayana Buddhism and is now Islam. Half a century later, the Temiars have become much more deeply embedded in broader Malaysian society, while retaining their distinctive way of life and maintaining their complex animistic religious beliefs.
Benjamin’s ongoing fieldwork in the 1970s, 1990s and 2000s followed the Temiars through processes of religious disenchantment and re-enchantment, as they reacted in various ways to the advent of Baha’i, Islam and Christianity. Some Temiars even developed a new religion of their own. In addition to its rich ethnographic reportage, the book proposes a novel theory of religion, and in the process develops a deeply insightful account of the changing intellectual framework of anthropology over the past half-century.
472 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2014
Asian Studies: Southeast Asia and Australia
Religion: Religion and Society, South and East Asian Religions
Sociology: Urban and Rural Sociology

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