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(Re)presenting Brunei Darussalam

A Sociology of the Everyday

  • Book
  • Open Access
  • © 2023

You have full access to this open access Book

Overview

  • Presents a sociological investigation of everyday life in Brunei Darussalam
  • Offers Bruneian perspectives on religious life, gender issues, the space of place, and identity
  • Gives a composite and inside-out view of Brunei Darussalam
  • This book is open access, which means that you have free and unlimited access

Part of the book series: Asia in Transition (AT, volume 20)

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Table of contents (15 chapters)

  1. Everyday Social Organisation of Religious Life

  2. Negotiating Gender Expressions

  3. Interpreting Space and Place

  4. Contemporary Ethnic and Social Identity Formation

Keywords

About this book

This thoughtful and wide-ranging open access volume explores the forces and issues shaping and defining contemporary identities and everyday life in Brunei Darussalam. It is a subject that until now has received comparatively limited attention from mainstream social scientists working on Southeast Asian societies. The volume helps remedy that deficit by detailing the ways in which religion, gender, place, ethnicity, nation-state formation, migration and economic activity work their way into and reflect in the lives of ordinary Bruneians. In a first of its kind, all the lead authors of the chapter contributions are local Bruneian scholars, and the editors skilfully bring the study of Brunei into the fold of the sociology of everyday life from multiple disciplinary directions. By engaging local scholars to document everyday concerns that matter to them, the volume presents a collage of distinct but interrelated case studies that have been previously undocumented or relatively underappreciated. These interior portrayals render new angles of vision, scale and nuance to our understandings of Brunei often overlooked by mainstream inquiry. Each in its own way speaks to how structures and institutions express themselves through complex processes to influence the lives of inhabitants. Academic scholars, university students and others interested in the study of contemporary Brunei Darussalam will find this volume an invaluable resource for unravelling its diversity and textures. At the same time, it hopefully stimulates critical reflection on positionality, hierarchies of knowledge production, cultural diversity and the ways in which we approach the social science study of Brunei.  

 

‘I wish to commend the editors for bringing this volume to fruition. It is an important book in the context of Southeast Asian sociology and even more important for the development of our social, geographical, cultural and historical knowledge of Brunei.’ 

 â€”Victor T. King, University of Leeds


Editors and Affiliations

  • Institute of Asian Studies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Gadong, Brunei Darussalam

    Lian Kwen Fee, Paul J. Carnegie

  • Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Universiti Brunei Darussalam, Gadong, Brunei Darussalam

    Noor Hasharina Hassan

About the editors

Lian Kwen Fee is Professor of Sociology at the Institute of Asian Studies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam. His research interests are race and ethnicity, multiculturalism, migration, and the politics of identity. His most recent edited books are ‘Multiculturalism, Migration, and the Politics of Identity in Singapore’ (2016), ‘International Migration in Southeast Asia: Continuities and Discontinuities’ (2016), and ‘International Labour Migration in the Middle East and Asia; Issues of Inclusion and Exclusion’ (2019), all published by Springer.  

Paul J. Carnegie is Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations at the Institute of Asian Studies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam. His research specializes in comparative democratization and human security in Southeast Asia. His works include The Road from Authoritarianism to Democratization in Indonesia (Palgrave Macmillan) and Human Insecurities in Southeast Asia (Springer) alongside research output in leading international journals. He has lived and worked previously in Australia, Egypt, Fiji, and the United Arab Emirates. 

Dr. Noor Hasharina Hassan is Deputy Director for the Office of Assistant Vice Chancellor (Research), Head of the Borneo Studies Network Secretariat and Research Associate with the Institute of Asian Studies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam. She lectures in Geography, Environment and Development with research interests in sustainable city development, consumption culture and poverty studies in Brunei and Borneo. She has previously been Visiting Research Fellow at King’s College London and Visiting Scholar at the East West Centre, Hawaii.

Bibliographic Information

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