Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world
Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay World both derive in large measure from the emergence of certain structural features – relative-age, unifiliative bias, preferential marriage patterns, and so on – all serving to maintain mutually distinctive societal regimes (the Semang, Senoi and Malayic) wi...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-940822019-12-06T18:50:24Z Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world Benjamin, Geoffrey School of Humanities and Social Sciences Meeting of the American Association for Asian Studies (2009 : Chicago, USA) DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Malaysia Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay World both derive in large measure from the emergence of certain structural features – relative-age, unifiliative bias, preferential marriage patterns, and so on – all serving to maintain mutually distinctive societal regimes (the Semang, Senoi and Malayic) within the broader regional framework. These emerged mostly indigenously through a series of deliberate mutual adjustments, both assimilatory and dissimilatory, between populations that were each seeking complementary advantages vis-à-vis each other. The paper discusses the mechanisms by which the distinctive societal regimes of the Malay World – variously, segmentary ('tribal') or centralised ('state'), and egalitarian, ranked or stratified – were institutionalised. Special attention is paid to the emergence of ranking, and ultimately the state, within the Malayic tradition. Accepted version 2011-10-10T07:29:24Z 2019-12-06T18:50:24Z 2011-10-10T07:29:24Z 2019-12-06T18:50:24Z 2009 2009 Conference Paper Benjamin, G. (2009). Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay World. Meeting of the American Association for Asian Studies. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94082 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7197 144893 en © 2009 Meeting of the American Association for Asian Studies. 22 p. |
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DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Malaysia Benjamin, Geoffrey Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
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Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay World both derive in large measure from the emergence of certain structural features – relative-age, unifiliative bias, preferential marriage patterns, and so on – all serving to maintain mutually distinctive societal regimes (the Semang, Senoi and Malayic) within the broader regional framework. These emerged mostly indigenously through a series of deliberate mutual adjustments, both assimilatory and dissimilatory, between populations that were each seeking complementary advantages vis-à-vis each other. The paper discusses the mechanisms by which the distinctive societal regimes of the Malay World – variously, segmentary ('tribal') or centralised ('state'), and egalitarian, ranked or stratified – were institutionalised. Special attention is paid to the emergence of ranking, and ultimately the state, within the Malayic tradition. |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences |
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School of Humanities and Social Sciences Benjamin, Geoffrey |
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Conference or Workshop Item |
author |
Benjamin, Geoffrey |
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Benjamin, Geoffrey |
title |
Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
title_short |
Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
title_full |
Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
title_fullStr |
Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
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Egalitarianism and ranking in the Malay world |
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egalitarianism and ranking in the malay world |
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2011 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/94082 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/7197 |
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