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Negara: The Theatre State in Nineteenth-Century Bali

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lived nearby, but had less status. The children of the core line also had more status than the children of the junior lines. Geertz refers to this as the principle of "sinking status." Each of these junior lines could potentially sever itself and form an independent dadia. This process of schism formed the internal politics within the royal houses, as distinct from political conflict between houses. The status differentials both within and between houses made patron-client relations the basic idiom of politics. These client relationships were especially important between castes, linking the priestly caste (
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regulation of water is thus a serious issue, and encounters regular bottlenecks where control of the supply for a whole subak can be seized. Controlling the complex flow of water within a subak was accomplished through a highly regimented series of rituals. Water temples placed at points of water division would coordinate the flow of water through carefully timed rituals. Geertz emphasizes that there is no central control of the timing of these rituals, and hence that the state is not an "oriental despotism" controlling the population through the control of water.
974:("inner", to whom one surrendered power in the ritual event thereby making them powerful) and jaba ("outer", a provider of services to those who are jero) between lords and their kawula. Every ritual performance reproduced jero-jaba relations as both symbolic ideal and pragmatic reality, thereby reinforcing social order. Thus, although the state was cross-cut by the conflicting jurisdictions of temples, hamlets, and irrigation societies, they all come together for mass state rituals in which the ideal social order of the state is made real. 1106:
of micro-upheaval." Despite his best effort, Geertz does not transcend the break between expressive and instrumental action, or between power as pomp and power as control of people and resources. He thus leaves himself open to Marxist critiques that view the state as a mystification, an "illusory representation of the unity of the village communities (as Marx put it in his sketch of 'oriental despotism'), and that the ceremonies of state are nothing but the spiritualizing of material interests and the covering up of material conflicts."
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what power was what kings were. Particular kings came and went, 'poor passing facts' anonymized in titles, immobilized in ritual, and annihilated in bonfires. But what they represented, the model-and-copy conception of order, remained unaltered, at least over the period we know much about. The driving aim of higher politics was to construct a state by constructing a king. The more consummate the king, the more exemplary the centre. The more exemplary the centre, the more actual the realm.
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thousands; some of these carried the bier forward, while others tried to stop it. The struggle could potentially prevent those who lacked the status and resources from making what others felt were false claims; the scene "was a bit like a playful riot - a deliberated, even studied, violence, designed to set off a no less deliberated and even more studied stillness, which the variously imperturbable priests, agnates, widows and tributary dead contrived to gather about the central tower."
891:." These models viewed the control of irrigation by lords as the major means of also controlling the population that depended on those irrigation works for their sustenance. Geertz views the subak as an autonomous organization separate from the state, much like the banjar. The system of dams, dikes and canals were the property of the subak, and hence controlled by the farmers themselves. Geertz thus dismisses any notion of "primitive communism" - and its spectre, "state capitalism." 911:) that all Balinese hold sacred, and descending into the plains and low-lying rice fields. Drawing on nineteenth century Balinese records, Brigitta Hauser-Schaublin has shown that regional lords and kings played a large role in managing irrigation, and that this role was lost only in the Dutch colonial period. She argues that Geertz's failure to see the larger state role in water management reflects this change in colonial practice, thereby weakening the "theatre state" model. 924:
words, membership in the village was cross-cut by obligations to different perbekels and their lords. Bali was thus not a feudal realm where lords controlled land and people within a fiefdom. Lords and kawulas owned their own land, and lords did not generally seek their kawulas as tenants on their land. Kawulas had only two obligations to their perbekels: ritual service and military support: "He was a stagehand, spear carrier, and
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tower itself symbolized the cosmic order the ritual sought to make real. At its base were the world of demons (winged serpents), above which stood a platform called the House, representing the world of man. Above that were the tiers of roofs symbolizing the world of the gods, to which the deceased was ascending; a commoner would ascend to the first heaven (1 tier), whereas a king to the eleventh.
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social action in which both men and gods are enclosed." The variety of small variations in adat defined the boundaries between pemaksan. The pemaksan thus stands as the moral community, next to the civil community embodied in the hamlet and the economic community in the irrigation society. The pemaksan will draw on one to ten villages for its members.
828:). This range of duties led Geertz to conclude "In brief, perhaps the bulk (though as we shall see, far from the whole) of Balinese government, in the strict sense of authoritative regulation of social life, was carried out by the hamlet, leaving the state free to dramatize power rather than to administer it." 749:, outsiders). MacRae argues that this emphasis on the Indic heritage of Bali is overdrawn, and points out that Geertz himself admits that caste is a misnomer in Bali, and "that the Indic surface of Balinese political institutions has acted to inhibit a comparative reference eastwards... towards the Pacific." 666:, but rather, an organized spectacle. The noble rulers of the island were less interested in administering the lives of the Balinese than in dramatizing their rank and enhance political superiority through large public rituals and ceremonies. These cultural processes did not support the state, he argues, but 986:
While having an eleven-storey tower was iconic of regal status, accomplishing a cremation ritual was an accomplishment - a struggle - that justified that status. The first part of the ceremony, for example, involved transporting the tower in a procession to the cremation ground, a mob scene involving
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Tambiah notes that Geertz presents the Balinese kings as, at once, the focus of ritual theatre that creates the exemplary centre as a still point, "immobilized into passivity and reflective trances" yet at the same time "Rent by virtually continuous intrigue, dispute, violence and an enormous amount
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The cremation ceremony was the largest and most ostentatious of the state rituals, attended by all the political dependants of a lord. At the centre of the ritual was the cremation tower (badΓ©) on which the body of the deceased lord rested in state until the whole was consumed in fire. The cremation
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It is Geertz's characterization of the irrigation system as headless that has attracted critique. Stephen Lansing's examination of Balinese irrigation shows that the need for effective water management links thousands of farmers in clear hierarchies, beginning with the most sacred temples dedicated
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The basic unit of the triwangsa castes was the "noble house" or dadia. The commoners, for the most part, lacked these corporate kin groups. The dadia was a kinship group whose leadership passed through the line of the eldest male, from father to son. Younger sons remained identified with the group,
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It is perhaps most clear in what was, after all, the master image of political life: kingship. The whole of the negara - court life, the traditions that organized it, the extractions that supported it, the privileges that accompanied it - was essentially directed toward defining what power was; and
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made up 90% of the population. Kawulas were attached to a perbekel, a "political foreman" to whom they owed specific obligations and taxes. The perbekels were attached to punggawas, the lords of dadia. Unlike the village, none of these political roles was based upon territorial residence. In other
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A subak controls the water flowing from a single up-river dam. The water flows through its rice terraces to other subaks farther downstream. Once water flowed into a subak it was divided through a series of weirs so that each farmer would get the amount of water they needed at the right time. The
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The Balinese village has been falsely described in the colonial literature as a "village republic", bounded, self-contained and wholly autonomous. According to Geertz, an important part of this book was to disrupt colonial images of the closed corporate village. Geertz emphasizes that the village
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applicable to all the South East Asian Indic polities. To succinctly summarize his theory, "Power served pomp, not pomp power." Other anthropologists have contested the ahistorical, static nature of the model. They point out that he has depoliticized a political institution by emphasizing culture
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Besides these patron-client ties within dadia, alliances also formed between dadia in different kingdoms. These alliances were frequently codified in treaties, although the issues they covered seemed "designed more to codify the pretexts upon which alliances could be broken than to establish the
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The book is a consideration of many elements of Balinese life, such as cremation ceremonies, that many would not consider a part of a state apparatus. In order to understand why cremation ceremonies should be so key to the "Theatre state" Geertz provides a detailed description of Balinese social
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Although focused on religious rites, the pemaksan was a corporate public body that was also an agency of government because of the link between religion and custom, i.e. forms of worship and social behaviour in Bali. Such religious rites were considered "adat" (custom), "the entire framework of
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The Balinese ruling classes seemed fragmented, internally torn by intrigues within dadia, and weakly allied between kingdoms. This poor political integration was aggravated by the political independence of the villages under royal dadia rule. The Balinese state was composed of institutions that
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For most of the nineteenth century, there were seven principal kingdoms, of which Klungkung was considered the oldest and most sacred. The others were Tabanan, Badung, Gianyar, Karengasem, Bangli, and Mengwi. They were primarily located on the plain on the south side of the island. Each of the
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Geertz argues that state ceremonials in the Negara were "metaphysical theatre"; that is, theatre designed to express a vision of the ultimate nature of reality that at the same time tried to shape current conditions to match that reality. Ritual events all re-created social relations of jero
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By subordinating power to culture, the book ignores the material base of power. Since Geertz's book was published, several other historical studies of particular kingdoms have appeared which emphasize the more conventional political economic forms of power underlying the
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Geertz used this model to provide "an alternate conception of what politics is about"; to advance an approach to history as a succession of broad cultural schemata; and to contribute to the cultural dimension of the discussion on Southeast Asian polities.
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Although Bali lies along major Indonesian trade roots in the north, its mountainous geography orients it to the south; its only navigable port was at Kuta, on a southern peninsula. The bulk of trade remained in foreign hands, including the Chinese,
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and Europeans. Foreigners were largely restricted to these insulated ports of trade. Trade within Bali occurred in rotating markets characterized by traditional fixed exchange rates. Goods and services were also circulated through large scale
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Geertz made it clear that his emphasis was a general model of the "theatre state" and not a specific Balinese kingdom by referring to the Balinese state with the Indic term Negara, whereas the Balinese refer to their pre-colonial state as a
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controlled only certain aspects of the everyday life of Balinese villagers, and that the tax and temple systems cross-cut village membership. That is, the members of a single village might pay taxes through several
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cross-cut villages. Villages were not independent, self-contained "village republics" but were cross-cut by membership in three separate locally based political institutions that organized local life: the hamlet (
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The village did have a constitution, which spelled out its members responsibilities for road making, upkeep of public facilities, night watch, and settlement of civil disputes. The village had its own leadership
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Although Geertz considered this the pinnacle of his thinking on politics and history, reactions to the book have been mixed, "combining admiration for its scope and ambition with scepticism about its claims."
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One source of the scepticism is that the book is clearly not a history of a specific polity, but a generalized ideal-type model intended to guide representations of the Southeast Asian Indic states found in
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which had just fallen to Muslim invaders. They, in turn, invaded in 1352 at Gelgel and established an Indic state based upon the caste system.
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Geertz, Clifford, Shweder, R. A., & Good, B. (2005). Clifford Geertz by his colleagues. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
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Geertz makes the ritual aspect of Balinese culture "more exotic, more extraordinary and more other than the evidence warrants."
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Hauser-Schaublin, Brigitta (2005). "Temple and King: Resource Management, Rituals and Redistribution in Early Bali".
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Hauser-Schaublin, Brigitta (2005). "Temple and King: Resource Management, Rituals and Redistribution in Early Bali".
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The caste system only loosely resembled the caste system in India. The three noble castes were referred to as "
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in the fifth to fifteenth centuries. As such, it is one of several models, such as that of O.W. Wolters "
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According to Geertz, one of the most important of state institutions in Bali is the irrigation society (
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The kingdoms of Bali were said to have been founded by Javanese refugees from the Hinduized kingdom of
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Clifford Geertz was an American anthropologist who is remembered for his influence on the practice of
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kingdoms controlled a riverine valley and hence the water supply required for rice irrigation.
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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MacRae, Graeme (2005). "Negara Ubud: The Theatre-state in Twenty-first-century Bali".
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Priests and Programmers: technologies of power in the engineered landscape of Bali
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As a culturalist approach to history, it is remarkably static and ahistorical.
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Howe, Leo (1991). "Rice, ideology and the legitimation of hierarchy in Bali".
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Howe, Leo (1991). "Rice, ideology and the legitimation of hierarchy in Bali".
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Howe, Leo (1991). "Rice, ideology and the legitimation of hierarchy in Bali".
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The organization of international trade was leased out by the king to a
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Culture, Thought, and Social Action: An Anthropological Perspective
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Culture, Thought, and Social Action: An Anthropological Perspective
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argued that it "depoliticized" a political institution as a result.
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Geertz used the Balinese case to develop an abstract model of the
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Critiques of the book have focused on the following points:
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Balinese rice terraces is part of Subak irrigation system.
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The pemaksan will maintain the "Three Great Temples" (
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Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 1137: 766:bases upon which they could be built." 582:Political and Legal Anthropology Review 42: 238:Societies without hierarchical leaders 7: 741:," (three peoples), the "insiders" ( 16:1980 book written by Clifford Geertz 1064:'s model of the "Galactic polity." 991:Reception and critique of the book 978:The role of the cremation ceremony 684:while ignoring its material base. 14: 556:Political economy in anthropology 2113:10.1111/j.1467-9655.2005.00260.x 1639:10.1111/j.1467-9655.2005.00260.x 928:in an endless political opera." 799:), and the temple congregation ( 745:) as opposed to the commoners ( 418:Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges 1: 961:Spectacle and political power 589:Journal of Legal Anthropology 257:The Art of Not Being Governed 778:Diagram of a Balinese temple 795:), the irrigation society ( 2219: 999:Notable mandala states in 889:Asiatic mode of production 651:is a 1980 book written by 595:Journal of Law and Society 315:Colonialism and resistance 2163:10.1080/02757200500344616 2086:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 2059:Tambiah, Stanley (1985). 2044:Tambiah, Stanley (1985). 1988:10.1080/02757200500344616 1885:10.1080/02757200500344616 1827:10.1080/02757200500344616 1790:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1767:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1744:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1721:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1698:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1675:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1652:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1606:Lansing, Stephen (1991). 1583:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1557:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1534:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1511:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1488:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1465:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1442:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1419:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1396:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1375:10.1080/02757200500344616 1338:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1312:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1289:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1268:10.1080/02757200500344616 1224:10.1080/02757200500344616 1187:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1164:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 1145:Geertz, Clifford (1980). 848:): 1) the Origin Temple ( 832:The temple congregation ( 786:Pura Dalem Sidan (temple) 770:The Village and the State 711:in its own cultural terms 269:Non-western state systems 245:African Political Systems 2151:History and Anthropology 1976:History and Anthropology 1873:History and Anthropology 1815:History and Anthropology 1363:History and Anthropology 1256:History and Anthropology 1212:History and Anthropology 969:Balinese Cremation tower 2077:Barth, Fredrik (1993). 1906:Barth, Fredrik (1993). 1001:Southeast Asian history 294:and the State in Africa 25:Topographic map of Bali 1028: 970: 919:The free, land-owning 903: 880: 787: 779: 677: 536:Circumscription theory 323:Europe and the People 292:Technology, Tradition, 26: 2193:Books about Indonesia 998: 968: 901: 875: 785: 777: 694:symbolic anthropology 672: 660:hydraulic bureaucracy 610:cultural anthropology 398:E. E. Evans-Pritchard 251:Papuan Big man system 24: 403:Wolfgang Fikentscher 378:Henri J. M. Claessen 133:Pantribal sodalities 915:The Perbekel system 864:Irrigation system ( 546:Left–right paradigm 2203:Political theories 2188:Anthropology books 1848:Day, Tony (2002). 1029: 971: 904: 881: 788: 780: 664:oriental despotism 541:Legal anthropology 443:Thomas Blom Hansen 373:Robert L. Carneiro 162:Segmentary lineage 99:Leveling mechanism 49:legal anthropology 27: 879:irrigation system 644: 643: 368:Jeremy Boissevain 353:Georges Balandier 348:E. Adamson Hoebel 2210: 2174: 2145: 2116: 2095: 2093: 2082: 2065: 2064: 2056: 2050: 2049: 2041: 2035: 2034: 2006: 2000: 1999: 1971: 1965: 1964: 1936: 1930: 1929: 1913: 1903: 1897: 1896: 1868: 1862: 1861: 1855: 1845: 1839: 1838: 1810: 1804: 1803: 1797: 1787: 1781: 1780: 1774: 1764: 1758: 1757: 1751: 1741: 1735: 1734: 1728: 1718: 1712: 1711: 1705: 1695: 1689: 1688: 1682: 1672: 1666: 1665: 1659: 1649: 1643: 1642: 1622: 1616: 1615: 1613: 1603: 1597: 1596: 1590: 1580: 1571: 1570: 1564: 1554: 1548: 1547: 1541: 1531: 1525: 1524: 1518: 1508: 1502: 1501: 1495: 1485: 1479: 1478: 1472: 1462: 1456: 1455: 1449: 1439: 1433: 1432: 1426: 1416: 1410: 1409: 1403: 1393: 1387: 1386: 1358: 1352: 1351: 1345: 1335: 1326: 1325: 1319: 1309: 1303: 1302: 1296: 1286: 1280: 1279: 1251: 1245: 1242: 1236: 1235: 1207: 1201: 1200: 1194: 1184: 1178: 1177: 1171: 1161: 1155: 1154: 1152: 1142: 858:Pura Balai Agung 733:The caste system 717:The Ruling Class 636: 629: 622: 530:Related articles 513:Douglas R. White 503:Jonathan Spencer 483:Marshall Sahlins 473:Sally Falk Moore 29: 2218: 2217: 2213: 2212: 2211: 2209: 2208: 2207: 2198:History of Bali 2178: 2177: 2148: 2134:10.2307/2803877 2119: 2098: 2085: 2079:Balinese worlds 2076: 2073: 2068: 2058: 2057: 2053: 2043: 2042: 2038: 2023:10.2307/2803877 2008: 2007: 2003: 1973: 1972: 1968: 1953:10.2307/2803877 1938: 1937: 1933: 1926: 1910:Balinese worlds 1905: 1904: 1900: 1870: 1869: 1865: 1847: 1846: 1842: 1812: 1811: 1807: 1789: 1788: 1784: 1766: 1765: 1761: 1743: 1742: 1738: 1720: 1719: 1715: 1697: 1696: 1692: 1674: 1673: 1669: 1651: 1650: 1646: 1624: 1623: 1619: 1605: 1604: 1600: 1582: 1581: 1574: 1556: 1555: 1551: 1533: 1532: 1528: 1510: 1509: 1505: 1487: 1486: 1482: 1464: 1463: 1459: 1441: 1440: 1436: 1418: 1417: 1413: 1395: 1394: 1390: 1360: 1359: 1355: 1337: 1336: 1329: 1311: 1310: 1306: 1288: 1287: 1283: 1253: 1252: 1248: 1243: 1239: 1209: 1208: 1204: 1186: 1185: 1181: 1163: 1162: 1158: 1144: 1143: 1139: 1135: 1113: 1062:Stanley Tambiah 993: 980: 963: 934: 917: 870: 838: 813: 772: 755: 735: 719: 706: 690: 656:Clifford Geertz 640: 600: 599: 576: 568: 567: 551:State formation 531: 523: 522: 508:Bjorn Thomassen 463:Elizabeth Mertz 448:Ted C. Lewellen 393:Pierre Clastres 343: 342:Major theorists 335: 334: 325:Without History 324: 293: 229: 221: 220: 143:Paramount chief 75:Achieved status 70:Ascribed status 62:Status and rank 58: 47: 17: 12: 11: 5: 2216: 2214: 2206: 2205: 2200: 2195: 2190: 2180: 2179: 2176: 2175: 2157:(4): 393–413. 2146: 2117: 2096: 2083: 2072: 2069: 2067: 2066: 2051: 2036: 2001: 1966: 1931: 1924: 1898: 1879:(4): 398–403. 1863: 1840: 1805: 1782: 1759: 1736: 1713: 1690: 1667: 1644: 1617: 1598: 1572: 1549: 1526: 1503: 1480: 1457: 1434: 1411: 1388: 1353: 1327: 1304: 1281: 1246: 1237: 1218:(4): 393–413. 1202: 1179: 1156: 1136: 1134: 1131: 1130: 1129: 1127:Palace economy 1124: 1119: 1112: 1109: 1108: 1107: 1103: 1100: 1096: 992: 989: 979: 976: 962: 959: 948:redistributive 933: 930: 916: 913: 869: 862: 846:Kahyangan Tiga 837: 830: 812: 805: 771: 768: 754: 751: 734: 731: 718: 715: 705: 702: 689: 686: 653:anthropologist 642: 641: 639: 638: 631: 624: 616: 613: 612: 602: 601: 598: 597: 592: 585: 577: 574: 573: 570: 569: 566: 565: 558: 553: 548: 543: 538: 532: 529: 528: 525: 524: 521: 520: 515: 510: 505: 500: 498:Aidan Southall 495: 490: 488:James C. Scott 485: 480: 478:Rodney Needham 475: 470: 465: 460: 455: 450: 445: 440: 435: 430: 425: 423:Ernest Gellner 420: 415: 410: 405: 400: 395: 390: 385: 380: 375: 370: 365: 360: 355: 350: 344: 341: 340: 337: 336: 333: 332: 327: 319: 318: 316: 312: 311: 305: 304: 302: 298: 297: 287: 286: 283: 282: 277: 271: 270: 267: 265: 261: 260: 253: 248: 240: 239: 236: 234: 230: 227: 226: 223: 222: 219: 218: 216:Ritual warfare 213: 208: 202: 201: 199: 198:Law and custom 195: 194: 189: 184: 179: 174: 169: 164: 159: 153: 152: 150: 146: 145: 140: 135: 130: 125: 120: 115: 109: 108: 106: 102: 101: 96: 87: 82: 77: 72: 66: 65: 63: 59: 57:Basic concepts 56: 55: 52: 51: 40: 39: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 2215: 2204: 2201: 2199: 2196: 2194: 2191: 2189: 2186: 2185: 2183: 2172: 2168: 2164: 2160: 2156: 2152: 2147: 2143: 2139: 2135: 2131: 2128:(4): 445–67. 2127: 2123: 2118: 2114: 2110: 2107:(4): 747–71. 2106: 2102: 2097: 2092: 2091: 2084: 2080: 2075: 2074: 2070: 2062: 2055: 2052: 2047: 2040: 2037: 2032: 2028: 2024: 2020: 2016: 2012: 2005: 2002: 1997: 1993: 1989: 1985: 1981: 1977: 1970: 1967: 1962: 1958: 1954: 1950: 1947:(4): 445–67. 1946: 1942: 1935: 1932: 1927: 1925:9780226038339 1921: 1917: 1912: 1911: 1902: 1899: 1894: 1890: 1886: 1882: 1878: 1874: 1867: 1864: 1859: 1854: 1853: 1844: 1841: 1836: 1832: 1828: 1824: 1820: 1816: 1809: 1806: 1801: 1796: 1795: 1786: 1783: 1778: 1773: 1772: 1763: 1760: 1755: 1750: 1749: 1740: 1737: 1732: 1727: 1726: 1717: 1714: 1709: 1704: 1703: 1694: 1691: 1686: 1681: 1680: 1671: 1668: 1663: 1658: 1657: 1648: 1645: 1640: 1636: 1633:(4): 747–71. 1632: 1628: 1621: 1618: 1612: 1611: 1602: 1599: 1594: 1589: 1588: 1579: 1577: 1573: 1568: 1563: 1562: 1553: 1550: 1545: 1540: 1539: 1530: 1527: 1522: 1517: 1516: 1507: 1504: 1499: 1494: 1493: 1484: 1481: 1476: 1471: 1470: 1461: 1458: 1453: 1448: 1447: 1438: 1435: 1430: 1425: 1424: 1415: 1412: 1407: 1402: 1401: 1392: 1389: 1384: 1380: 1376: 1372: 1368: 1364: 1357: 1354: 1349: 1344: 1343: 1334: 1332: 1328: 1323: 1318: 1317: 1308: 1305: 1300: 1295: 1294: 1285: 1282: 1277: 1273: 1269: 1265: 1261: 1257: 1250: 1247: 1241: 1238: 1233: 1229: 1225: 1221: 1217: 1213: 1206: 1203: 1198: 1193: 1192: 1183: 1180: 1175: 1170: 1169: 1160: 1157: 1151: 1150: 1141: 1138: 1132: 1128: 1125: 1123: 1120: 1118: 1115: 1114: 1110: 1104: 1101: 1097: 1094: 1093:Fredrik Barth 1090: 1089: 1088: 1085: 1083: 1079: 1075: 1071: 1065: 1063: 1059: 1055: 1051: 1047: 1043: 1039: 1033: 1026: 1022: 1018: 1014: 1010: 1006: 1002: 997: 990: 988: 984: 977: 975: 967: 960: 958: 956: 951: 949: 944: 940: 931: 929: 927: 922: 914: 912: 910: 900: 896: 892: 890: 886: 878: 874: 867: 863: 861: 859: 855: 851: 847: 842: 835: 831: 829: 827: 821: 819: 810: 807:The village ( 806: 804: 802: 798: 794: 784: 776: 769: 767: 763: 761: 752: 750: 748: 744: 740: 732: 730: 728: 723: 716: 714: 712: 709:organization 703: 701: 697: 695: 687: 685: 682: 681:Theatre state 676: 671: 669: 665: 661: 657: 654: 650: 649: 637: 632: 630: 625: 623: 618: 617: 615: 614: 611: 607: 604: 603: 596: 593: 591: 590: 586: 584: 583: 579: 578: 572: 571: 564: 563: 559: 557: 554: 552: 549: 547: 544: 542: 539: 537: 534: 533: 527: 526: 519: 516: 514: 511: 509: 506: 504: 501: 499: 496: 494: 493:Elman Service 491: 489: 486: 484: 481: 479: 476: 474: 471: 469: 466: 464: 461: 459: 456: 454: 451: 449: 446: 444: 441: 439: 436: 434: 431: 429: 428:David Graeber 426: 424: 421: 419: 416: 414: 411: 409: 406: 404: 401: 399: 396: 394: 391: 389: 388:John Comaroff 386: 384: 383:Jean Comaroff 381: 379: 376: 374: 371: 369: 366: 364: 363:Fredrik Barth 361: 359: 356: 354: 351: 349: 346: 345: 339: 338: 331: 328: 326: 321: 320: 317: 314: 313: 310: 307: 306: 303: 301:Legal systems 300: 299: 296: 295: 289: 288: 285: 284: 281: 278: 276: 273: 272: 268: 266: 263: 262: 259: 258: 254: 252: 249: 247: 246: 242: 241: 237: 235: 232: 231: 225: 224: 217: 214: 212: 211:Legal culture 209: 207: 206:Customary law 204: 203: 200: 197: 196: 193: 192:Theatre state 190: 188: 185: 183: 182:House society 180: 178: 177:Petty kingdom 175: 173: 170: 168: 165: 163: 160: 158: 155: 154: 151: 148: 147: 144: 141: 139: 136: 134: 131: 129: 126: 124: 121: 119: 116: 114: 111: 110: 107: 104: 103: 100: 97: 95: 91: 88: 86: 83: 81: 80:Social status 78: 76: 73: 71: 68: 67: 64: 61: 60: 54: 53: 50: 45: 41: 38: 36: 31: 30: 23: 19: 2154: 2150: 2125: 2121: 2104: 2100: 2089: 2078: 2060: 2054: 2045: 2039: 2014: 2010: 2004: 1979: 1975: 1969: 1944: 1940: 1934: 1909: 1901: 1876: 1872: 1866: 1851: 1843: 1818: 1814: 1808: 1793: 1785: 1770: 1762: 1747: 1739: 1724: 1716: 1701: 1693: 1678: 1670: 1655: 1647: 1630: 1626: 1620: 1609: 1601: 1586: 1560: 1552: 1537: 1529: 1514: 1506: 1491: 1483: 1468: 1460: 1445: 1437: 1422: 1414: 1399: 1391: 1366: 1362: 1356: 1341: 1315: 1307: 1292: 1284: 1259: 1255: 1249: 1240: 1215: 1211: 1205: 1190: 1182: 1167: 1159: 1148: 1140: 1086: 1069: 1066: 1060:" model, or 1034: 1030: 985: 981: 972: 954: 952: 950:ceremonies. 935: 920: 918: 905: 893: 884: 882: 865: 857: 853: 849: 845: 843: 839: 833: 826:klian banjar 825: 822: 817: 814: 808: 800: 796: 792: 789: 764: 759: 756: 746: 742: 738: 736: 724: 720: 707: 698: 691: 678: 673: 667: 647: 646: 645: 594: 587: 580: 560: 468:Sidney Mintz 458:Ralph Linton 453:Edmund Leach 413:Morton Fried 408:Meyer Fortes 358:F. G. Bailey 290: 274: 255: 243: 228:Case studies 187:Ethnic group 157:Band society 32: 18: 1122:Rajamandala 909:Mount Agung 670:the state. 438:Ulf Hannerz 433:Lesley Gill 2182:Categories 2071:References 2017:(4): 451. 1982:(4): 395. 1821:(4): 394. 1369:(4): 398. 1262:(4): 398. 854:Pura Dalem 850:Pura Puseh 688:Background 330:Cargo cult 233:Acephelous 123:Matriarchy 118:Patriarchy 105:Leadership 2171:143808513 1996:143808513 1893:143808513 1835:143808513 1383:143808513 1276:143808513 1232:143808513 1133:Footnotes 1025:Majapahit 1021:Srivijaya 1009:Ayutthaya 753:The dadia 747:wong jaba 743:wong jero 739:triwangsa 727:Majapahit 662:" nor an 518:Eric Wolf 90:Age grade 44:Political 1176:–17, 21. 1111:See also 1070:kerajaan 1050:Thailand 1046:Malaysia 955:subandar 943:Buginese 939:Javanese 926:claqueur 834:pemaksan 818:perbekel 801:pemaksan 704:Synopsis 575:Journals 172:Chiefdom 149:Polities 35:a series 33:Part of 2142:2803877 2031:2803877 1961:2803877 1058:mandala 921:kawulas 760:padanda 280:Mandala 113:Big man 94:Age set 2169:  2140:  2029:  1994:  1959:  1922:  1891:  1833:  1381:  1274:  1230:  1099:state. 1082:Hawaii 1074:Tahiti 1017:Angkor 1013:Champa 809:banjar 793:banjar 606:Social 275:Negara 2167:S2CID 2138:JSTOR 2027:JSTOR 1992:S2CID 1957:JSTOR 1889:S2CID 1831:S2CID 1498:48–49 1475:45–47 1429:34–37 1406:27–31 1379:S2CID 1322:14–17 1272:S2CID 1228:S2CID 1078:Samoa 1054:Burma 1005:Bagan 932:Trade 885:subak 877:Subak 866:Subak 797:subak 264:State 167:Tribe 138:Chief 128:Elder 85:Caste 1920:ISBN 1860:–10. 1802:–19. 1687:–66. 1348:26–7 1080:and 1052:and 1042:Java 1038:Bali 1023:and 668:were 608:and 309:Kapu 2159:doi 2130:doi 2122:Man 2109:doi 2019:doi 2011:Man 1984:doi 1949:doi 1941:Man 1916:222 1881:doi 1823:doi 1800:118 1777:119 1754:104 1635:doi 1371:doi 1264:doi 1220:doi 1197:124 46:and 2184:: 2165:. 2155:16 2153:. 2136:. 2126:26 2124:. 2105:11 2103:. 2025:. 2015:26 2013:. 1990:. 1980:16 1978:. 1955:. 1945:26 1943:. 1918:. 1887:. 1877:16 1875:. 1829:. 1819:16 1817:. 1731:95 1708:87 1685:65 1662:63 1631:11 1629:. 1593:69 1575:^ 1567:52 1544:51 1521:48 1452:43 1377:. 1367:16 1365:. 1330:^ 1299:11 1270:. 1260:16 1258:. 1226:. 1216:16 1214:. 1174:13 1084:. 1076:, 1048:, 1044:, 1040:, 1019:, 1015:, 1011:, 1007:, 941:, 37:on 2173:. 2161:: 2144:. 2132:: 2115:. 2111:: 2033:. 2021:: 1998:. 1986:: 1963:. 1951:: 1928:. 1895:. 1883:: 1858:8 1837:. 1825:: 1779:. 1756:. 1733:. 1710:. 1664:. 1641:. 1637:: 1595:. 1569:. 1546:. 1523:. 1500:. 1477:. 1454:. 1431:. 1408:. 1385:. 1373:: 1350:. 1324:. 1301:. 1278:. 1266:: 1234:. 1222:: 1199:. 1027:. 868:) 836:) 824:( 811:) 635:e 628:t 621:v 92:/

Index


a series
Political
legal anthropology
Ascribed status
Achieved status
Social status
Caste
Age grade
Age set
Leveling mechanism
Big man
Patriarchy
Matriarchy
Elder
Pantribal sodalities
Chief
Paramount chief
Band society
Segmentary lineage
Tribe
Chiefdom
Petty kingdom
House society
Ethnic group
Theatre state
Customary law
Legal culture
Ritual warfare
African Political Systems

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