BEING LUE: USES AND ABUSES OF ETHNIC IDENTIFICATION,

Abstract

The paper contends that much of what is called cultural anthropology consists of reporting the folk predicates of folk ethnic identification labels, of assuming that all predicates are properly ascribable to such labels, and of looking for human populations to which the labels can be applied. The contention is illustrated with data on the Lue of Chiengkham, Thailand. The paper suggests that participant observation is an inappropriate technique for ethnographers for discovering native categories that must be otained to analyze the underlying rules that natives use to ascribe events, things, and persons to these categories. Ethnic labeling appears to be motivated rather than self-explanatory, the motivated nature appearing to be associated with a retrospective rather than inductive use of traits. (Author)

Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 26, 1968
Accession Number
AD0677145

Entities

People

  • Michael Moerman

Organizations

  • University of California, Los Angeles

Tags

DTIC Thesaurus Topics

  • Acquisition
  • Anthropology
  • Asia
  • Continents
  • Data Acquisition
  • Eurasia
  • Geographic Regions
  • Human Population
  • Identification
  • Observation
  • Thailand

Readers

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