Powerful learning

Powerful learning

By Michael W. Charney

Subjects: Intellectual life, Buddhism, literature, Buddhists, culture, colonial rule, intellectual history, Konbaung Dynasty, British, Buddhism and state, monasticism, History

Description: Powerful Learning is the first intellectual history of one of the great Buddhist empires of Southeast Asia, Konbaung Burma, before the British conquest. The book challenges the notion of the court and the monastic order as static institutions by examining how competition within and between them prompted major rethinking about the intellectual foundations of indigenous society and culture. The catalyst for this reformation of indigenous thought was the rise of a small clique of Buddhist monks and lay people from the frontier to commanding positions in the state and monastic order over the course of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. This clique had a major influence on the creation of state myths, the ways in which the throne ruled and presented itself, and, ultimately, the relationship between the throne and the state. The new state and monastic orthodoxy, however, was challenged by other Burmese literati, who, over the course of the nineteenth century, sought in Western science, technology, and political theory other ways in which to shape Burmese perspectives on state and society. In the process, the Burmese underwent a difficult transition from premodern to modern intellectual thought, one that helped usher in British rule. "A sophisticated, deeply original book that will shift the paradigms of precolonial Southeast Asian history. It breaks new ground in four major areas: It is the first intellectual history of any mainland Southeast Asian country prior to the colonial onslaught; it is the first study for any Southeast Asian country of the intersection between cultural change and politics; it is the first study of regionalism in national/imperial politics; and it is the first detailed study of the development of protonationalist thought in precolonial Southeast Asia. In sum, this is a major scholarly achievement." --Victor B. Lieberman (The Marvin B. Becker Professor of Southeast Asian History, University of Michigan, author of *Strange Parallels*)

Comments

You must log in to leave comments.

Ratings

Latest ratings