Michael Aung-Thwin
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
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Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | 1985
Michael Aung-Thwin
One of the most frequently made remarks concerning British colonialism, both in print and in informal settings, has been the British role in bringing “law and order” to the colonies. Although serious scholarship has successfully questioned this assertion for some areas of the world, particularly India, for Burma, very little has been done. The reasons for proposing that Britain brought law, and especially order to Burma seem to stem from at least two factors. First, the study of Burmese law in the West is at best in its infancy, despite recent efforts by Burmese historians. Second, and more importantly, historians by and large have tended to ignore Burmese criteria for defining order, and have therefore misinterpreted as simple lawlessness what were on many important occasions traditional forms of expressing dissent and symptoms of social dysfunction, as well as cultural and psychological ambivalence of identity, especially amongst certain new classes created by colonialism itself. Thus what often appeared on the surface as order after so-called “pacification” and in general throughout the colonial period is an incomplete picture, for it was almost certainly as well, if not more so, the political, military, and psychological inability of the Burmese to present a united front against a technologically superior power. But because the entire colonial period cannot be dealt with here—although I suspect it would only further support the major thesis of this essay—and because the British concept of “pacification” (and as a result the literature on the subject) had established the intellectual framework and parameters for evaluating the subsequent colonial and post-independence periods, I feel it is adequate to have centered my arguments around the so-called period of “pacification” only. I intend to approach this topic by first describing briefly what we might call indigenous methods of pacification, contrast it to the general pacification policies and methods pursued by the British, observe the significance of the differences, and then conclude by showing how the coup of 1962 could be interpreted more as a resurrection than a true revolution.
Journal of Interdisciplinary History | 1991
Michael Aung-Thwin
Spirals in Early Southeast Asian and Burmese History The study of early Southeast Asia as an academic discipline in the United States began only about thirty years ago. Indeed, some history departments still do not recognize Southeast Asia as a legitimate field. Nonetheless, most of its leading historians today are products of an American, historiographical tradition, and our approach has therefore been primarily western. We have not been totally oblivious to such cultural centricity-not to mention disciplinary, regional, and period biases-and, for the past twenty years at least, have been addressing these concerns regularly.l
Pacific Affairs | 1987
Victor Lieberman; Michael Aung-Thwin
Pacific Affairs | 1978
Michael Aung-Thwin; Josef Silverstein
Archive | 2005
Michael Aung-Thwin
Pacific Affairs | 2001
Michael Aung-Thwin
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | 1995
Michael Aung-Thwin
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | 2008
Michael Aung-Thwin
The Journal of Asian Studies | 1996
Michael Aung-Thwin
Journal of Southeast Asian Studies | 1984
Michael Aung-Thwin