Cover image for The life of the longhouse : an archaeology of ethnicity
Title:
The life of the longhouse : an archaeology of ethnicity
Personal Author:
Publication Information:
New York : Cambridge University Press, 2010
Physical Description:
xi, 345 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm.
ISBN:
9780521110983

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30000010244914 DS646.3 M48 2010 Open Access Book Book
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Summary

Summary

For two centuries, travellers were amazed at the massive buildings found along the rivers that flow from the mountainous interior of Borneo. They concentrated hundreds of people under one roof, in the middle of empty rainforests. There was no practical necessity for this arrangement, and it remains a mystery. Peter Metcalf provides an answer by showing the historical context, using both oral histories and colonial records. The key factor was a pre-modern trading system that funneled rare and exotic jungle products to China via the ancient coastal city of Brunei. Meanwhile the elite manufactured goods traded upriver shaped the political and religious institutions of longhouse society. However, the apparent permanence of longhouses was an illusion. In historical terms, longhouse communities were both mobile and labile, and the patterns of ethnicity they created more closely resemble the contemporary world than any stereotype of "tribal" societies.


Table of Contents

Introduction: the problem: ethnicity and community
Part I Longhouses
1 Longhouses
2 Longhouse communities
3 The coming of the Brooke Raj
Part II Longhouses and Leaders
4 Aban Jau's career
5 Aban Jau's successors
Part III Longhouses and Trade
6 The sultan's fence
7 Pre-modern upriver trade
Part IV Longhouse Populations
8 The linguistic data
9 Disease, slavery, assimilation, annihilation
Part V Longhouses and Ritual
10 The ritual consensus
11 The ritual operator
12 The impresarios of the ancestors
Part VI Longhouses and the State
13 Longhouses during the Raj
14 Longhouses after the Raj
Conclusion: the general and the particular