A history of manners and civility in Thailand

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Bibliographic Information

A history of manners and civility in Thailand

Patrick Jory

Cambridge University Press, 2021

  • : hbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 248-262) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Manners have long been a central concern of Thai society. Kings, aristocrats, prime ministers, monks, army generals, politicians, poets, novelists, journalists and teachers have produced a large corpus of literature that sets out models of appropriate behaviour. These include such things as how to stand, walk, sit, pay homage, prostrate oneself in the presence of high-status people, sleep, eat, manage bodily functions, dress, pay respect to superiors, deal with inferiors, socialize, and play. These modes of conduct have been taught or enforced by families, monasteries, court society, and, in the twentieth century, the state, through the education system, the bureaucracy, and the mass media. In this innovative new social history, based on Thai manners and etiquette manuals dating from the early nineteenth century to the late twentieth century, Patrick Jory presents the first ever history of manners in Thailand and challenges the idea of Western influence as the determinant of change in ideals of conduct.

Table of Contents

  • Introduction. Manners and the Thai habitus
  • 1. Buddhist ethics of conduct and self control
  • 2. Manners and the monarchy: prostration and civilization
  • 3. The making of the gentleperson
  • 4. Manners in a time of revolution
  • 5. From courtiers to ladies
  • 6. Royalist reaction: Thai manners as submission
  • 7. The passing of the gentleperson
  • 8. Manners in Thailand's civilizing process.

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