Animist Cosmology and Socio-cultural Practices among the Thái in Vietnam

Beyond Superstition

Authors

  • Hoàng Cầm Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences

Abstract

This paper examines the main features of the animist cosmology of the Thái, an ethnic group of wet-rice cultivators in valleys in northwestern Vietnam and explores how this ontological stance influences their current socio-cultural practices. The Thái, like many other ethnic groups in Southeast Asia, conceive their surrounding as populated by a variety of spirits, including the spirits of mountains and forests (phii puu, phii paa), ancestors (đẳm pang), the spirit of the house (phii hươn), the spirit of rice (khoăn khảu), and the spirit of the rice terrace (khoăn naa). All spirits are thought of as having person-like features or personhood with full capacity of will, intention and agency. The relation between human being and these person-like sprits is divided but intersubjective. Unlike the classical understanding of animism, however, the spirits in the Thái cosmos, including ancestors and natural spirits, are not equal but are ranked along a hierarchical scale of power and agency. Although Thái animist practices were previously considered as “superstitious” and “backward’, this animist ontology continues to shape socio-cultural practices among the Thái, and is now considered part of heritage

References

Århem, Kaj. 2016. “Southeast Asian Animism in Context”, in Animism in Southeast Asia, Kaj Århem and Guido Sprenger eds. London and New York: Routledge.

Århem, Kaj and Guido Sprenger, eds. 2016. Animism in Southeast Asia. London and New York: Routledge.

Århem, Nikolas. 2016. “Wrestling with spirits, escaping the state: Animist ecology and settlement policy in the Central Annamite Cordillera.” In Kai Århem and Guido Sprenger, eds, Animism in Southeast Asia, London and New York: Routledge.

Bird-David. N. 1999. “’Animism’ Revisited. Personhood, Environment, and Relational Epistemology.” Current Anthropology, 40 (supplement): 67–91.

Cầm Trọng. 1978. Người Thái ở Tây Bắc Việt Nam [The Thái People of Northwestern Vietnam]. Hanoi: Nhà xuất bản Khoa học Xã hội.

Cầm Trọng and Hà Hữu Ưng. 1973. “Chế độ ruộng công và hình thái xã hội của người Thái Tây Bắc” [communal paddy tenure system and social organization of Thái people in the Northwest in the Past]. Nghiên cứu Lịch sử, 155: 50-57.

Condominas, Georges. 1990. From Lawa to Mon, From Saa’ to Thái: Historical and Anthropological Aspects of Southeast Asia Social Spaces, tr. Stephanie Anderson, Maria Magannon, and Gehan Wijeywardene. Canberra: The Australian National University, Research School of Pacific Studies, Occasional Paper of the Department of Anthropology.

Descola, P. 2013. Beyond Nature and Culture. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

Descola, P. 1996. “Constructing natures: symbolic ecology and social practice.” In P. Descola and G. Pálsson, eds, Nature and Society: Anthropological Perspectives, London: Routledge.

Đỗ Thị Thu Hà. 2019. “Ma thuật trong đời sống văn hoá của người Thái Việt Nam” [Magic in the cultural life of Thái people in Vietnam]. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Vietnam Academy of Social Sciences.

Endres, K. 2002. “Beautiful Customs, Worthy Traditions: Changing State Discourse on the Role of Vietnamese Culture.” Internationales Asienforum 33, 3–4: 303–322.

Evans, Grant. 1991. “Reform or revolution in heaven? Funerals among upland Tai,” Taja, 2: 81-97.

Harvey, G., ed. 2013. The Handbook of Contemporary Animism. Durham UK: Acumen.

Helkkula, Anu and Eric Arnould. 2022. “Using neo-animism to revisit actors for Sustainable Development in S-D logic.” Journal of Business Research, 149, 1: 860–868.

Hoàng Cầm. 2023. “‘We know only our Po Then Luang’: Heritagization, religious inculturation and resistance in post-Đổi mới Vietnam.” Journal of Magic, Ritual, and Witchcraft, 18, 2.

Hoàng Cầm and Phạm Quỳnh Phương. 2015. Diễn ngôn, chính sách và sự biến đổi sinh kế, văn hóa tộc người [Discourse, policies and changes in livelihood and cultures of ethnic groups]. Hà Nội: NXB. Thế Giới.

Hoàng Cầm and Thomas Sikor. 2019. “Bất đồng đất đai và tính chính trị của công lý ở một làng người Thái Việt Nam” [Conflicts over Land and Politics of Justice among the Thái in Vietnam]. Nghiên cứu văn hóa Việt Nam. No. 4.

Hoàng Cầm. 1999. “Rituals and Natural Resource Management: A Case Study of the Tai in Mai Chau District, Hoa Binh Province.” Tai Culture, 4, 3.

Hoàng Cầm. 2011. “Forest Thieves: State Policies, Market Forces, Struggles over Livelihood and Meanings of Nature in a Northwestern Valley of Vietnam, in Upland Transformations in Vietnam, Thomas Sikor et el eds. Singapore: National University of Singapore Press.

Hoàng Cầm. 2019. “Vũ trụ quan Thái Mường Tấc quá mo đám ma” [Thái Cosmology through Funeral Chants]. Văn hóa dân gian, No.2.

Ingold, T. 2000. The Perception of the Environment: Essays on Livelihood, Dwelling, and Skill. London: Routledge.

Latour, Bruno. 1993. We Have Never Been Modern. Tr. Catherine Porter. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Salemink, Oscar. 1997. “The King of Fire and Vietnamese Ethnic Policy in the Central Higlands”, in Development or Domestication? Indigenous Peoples of Southeast Asia, Don McCaskill and Ken Kampe, eds, Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books.

Salemink, Oscar. 2016. “Described, inscribed, written off: Heritagization as (dis)connection.” In Connected and Disconnected in Vietnam, ed. Philip Taylor, Canberra: Australian National University Press, 2016.

Scott, James. 1990. Dominance and the Arts of Resistance: Hidden Transcripts. New Haven: Yale University Press.

Sikor, Thomas. 2004. “Conflicting Concepts: Contested Land Relations in Northwestern Vietnam”. Conservations and Society, 2, No.1: 59-79.

Smith, Laurajane. 2006. Uses of Heritage. London and New York: Routledge.

Sprenger, Guido. 2016. “Graded personhood: Human and non-human actors in the Southeast Asian uplands”, in Animism in Southeast Asia, Århem, Kaj and Guido Sprenger, eds. London and New York: Routledge.

Sprenger, Guido. 2021. “Can Animism Save the World? Reflections on Personhood and Complexity in the Ecological Crisis.” Sociologus 71(1): 73-92.

Tylor, E. B. 1903. Primitive Culture. London: John Murray.

Viveiros de Castro. 1992. From the Enemy’s Point of View: Humanity and Divinity in an Amazonian Society. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.

Viveiros de Castro. 1998. “Cosmological deixis and Amerindian perspectivism.” Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute, 4.

Yang, Mayfair. 2020. Re-enchanting modernity: Ritual Economy and Society in Wenshou, China. Durham: Duke University Press.

Downloads

Published

2023-09-09