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Rural male leadership, religion and the environment in Thailand's mid-south, 1920s–1960s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 January 2011
Abstract
By considering the historical significance of a southern Thai policeman, Khun Phantharakratchadet (1898–2006), I aim to shift historical writing away from the court, the aristocracy and the capital even though the social setting is not merely ‘local’ or ‘peripheral’ but an amalgam of elements found throughout the country. I also want to give credit to local historians often dismissed for being parochial, untheoretical and disposed to myth-making, and to show how tantric practices (saiyasat), the arts of self-defence, policing, banditry and masculinity intersect in the career of this policeman, a native of the unique environment in the Songkhla lakes district.
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References
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14 Chalong Soontravanich, ‘The regionalization of local Buddhist saints: Amulets and crime and violence in post-World War II Thai society’, unpublished paper, Nov. 2004; Wira, ‘The local wisdom of Khun Phan’, appendix 7, pp. 185–7, gives a detailed chronology of the bandits killed by Khun Phan and the officers in his posses.
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43 Ibid., pp. 27, 29.
44 Ibid., pp. 25–8, 36.
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49 Mana, ‘Bandit gangs’, p. 40.
50 Ibid., p. 132.
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52 Mana, ‘Bandit gangs’, p. 50.
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59 As George Quinn has shown, Indonesian thieves also made use of manuals of divination and spells in planning a heist; Reynolds, Craig J., ‘Thai manual knowledge: Theory and practice’, in Seditious histories: Contesting Thai and Southeast Asian pasts (Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2006), p. 217Google Scholar.
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61 Ibid., pp. 109–10. Jaophraya Yommarat's tenure in this position lasted from 1896–1906.
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68 Samphan, ‘Little raja’, p. 219.
69 Money and power, ed. McVey, p. 8.
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77 Khun Phan published this account in a magazine in August 1979, which is reproduced in Samphan, ‘Little raja’, pp. 62–73. Khun Phan states that he was over 20 years old, but the incident took place in July 1930, which would have made him aged 32 years. Here and elsewhere, Khun Phan tended to underestimate his age.
78 Dechathongkham, Akhom, Hua chuak wua chon [Tethered heads, fighting bulls] (Bangkok: Thailand Research Foundation, 2000)Google Scholar; Gilmore, David D., Manhood in the making: Cultural concepts of masculinity (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1990), p. 121Google Scholar, suggests that the expendability of men may help explain the constant emphasis on risk-taking as evidence of manliness.
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88 Homosocial is defined here as ‘the seeking, enjoyment, and/or preference for the company of the same sex’; Lipman-Blumen, Jean, ‘Toward a homosocial theory of sex roles: An explanation of the sex segregation of social institutions’, Signs, 1, 3 (1976): 16CrossRefGoogle Scholar, Special Issue, Women and the workplace: The implications of occupational segregation.
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