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ID150559
Title ProperDreaming about the neighbours
Other Title Information magic, orientalism, and entrepreneurship in the consumption of thai religious goods in Singapore
LanguageENG
AuthorJohnson, Andrew Alan
Summary / Abstract (Note)For Marcel Mauss (2001 [1902]), magic involves border-crossing, with powers founded upon the potentiality presented by the exotic and the unknown. In a similar vein, Webb Keane (2003) points to the movement of religious objects that, via their very materiality, acquire new meanings as they move between one “representational economy” and another. Here, I look at the consumption of Thai necromantic objects by Chinese Singaporean Buddhists. These are, in some cases, Thai body parts, ritually processed and sold via the international marketplace via Chinese Singaporean entrepreneurs and used for local business competition. I argue that, through this process, these objects become fused with Chinese religious notions of potency, Orientalist exoticization, and a fetishization of the entrepreneur. In doing so, these dreams about the neighbours complicate our understandings of cosmopolitanism, masculinity, and the vicissitudes of capitalism.
`In' analytical NoteSouth East Asia Research Vol. 24, No.4; Dec 2016: p.445-461
Journal SourceSouth East Asia Research 2016-12 24, 4
Key WordsCapitalism ;  Singapore ;  Thailand ;  Cosmopolitanism ;  Masculinity ;  Magic