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ID167224
Title ProperWorldly compromise in Thai Buddhist modernism
LanguageENG
AuthorSubrahmanyan, Arjun
Summary / Abstract (Note)Buddhist modernist movements transformed the religious practice and social engagement of one of the world's principal faiths in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. These movements produced diverse effects on Asian societies which, despite generic similarities, are best understood in particular socio-historical contexts. This article examines the work of a group of young Thai monks and laymen who had an ambitious aim to morally improve and empower people; and the practical adaptation of this impulse in a society in transition from absolute monarchy to constitutional democracy in the 1930s. Like many modernist movements, their work was innovative. But it also was an inheritance of religious and political history, and the Thai modernist case thus shows a contradiction between novelty and custom that was resolved in a way that blunted the movement's reformist energy.
`In' analytical NoteJournal of South East Asian Studies Vol. 50, No.2; May 2019: p.179-201
Journal SourceJournal of South East Asian Studies 2019-06 50, 2
Key WordsThai Buddhist Modernism ;  Buddhist Modernist Movements