TY - CHAP
T1 - Entanglements of Politics and Education in Sri Lanka
AU - Sørensen, Birgitte Refslund
PY - 2011/1/1
Y1 - 2011/1/1
N2 - Introduction: Why Politics and Education? The ethnographer's research agenda is always susceptible to the interests and priorities of the people she studies. In my own research into developmentand conflict-related displacements, community-building and identity formation in Sri Lanka over the past two decades, education has been one such issue, which has kept reappearing in interesting and unpredictable ways because it is utterly important to people. In 2005 I decided to pursue the matter and explore the conditions, meanings and relevance of education in Muslim, Tamil and Sinhalese schools through ethnographic field research in and around schools. This simultaneously became a window into popular perceptions of the Sri Lankan state, national and local politicians and the state of contemporary politics. In an introduction to anthropological approaches to democracy, Julia Paley asserts that democracy is most often identified by its most conspicuous features, namely ‘free and fair elections, a multi-party system, and freedoms of expression and the press’, but democracy, she suggests, is far more complex (Paley 2008, 3). Paley consequently urges us to adopt a more open-ended approach to democracy, paying attention to how democracy is perceived, practiced and produced over time by different actors in specific settings (Paley 2008, 19). Paley here follows a general anthropological inclination in the study of politics and the political, which is to critique and challenge theoretical conceptualisations that are based on Western historical experiences, but made to appear universal and generally applicable (Kabeer 2005).
AB - Introduction: Why Politics and Education? The ethnographer's research agenda is always susceptible to the interests and priorities of the people she studies. In my own research into developmentand conflict-related displacements, community-building and identity formation in Sri Lanka over the past two decades, education has been one such issue, which has kept reappearing in interesting and unpredictable ways because it is utterly important to people. In 2005 I decided to pursue the matter and explore the conditions, meanings and relevance of education in Muslim, Tamil and Sinhalese schools through ethnographic field research in and around schools. This simultaneously became a window into popular perceptions of the Sri Lankan state, national and local politicians and the state of contemporary politics. In an introduction to anthropological approaches to democracy, Julia Paley asserts that democracy is most often identified by its most conspicuous features, namely ‘free and fair elections, a multi-party system, and freedoms of expression and the press’, but democracy, she suggests, is far more complex (Paley 2008, 3). Paley consequently urges us to adopt a more open-ended approach to democracy, paying attention to how democracy is perceived, practiced and produced over time by different actors in specific settings (Paley 2008, 19). Paley here follows a general anthropological inclination in the study of politics and the political, which is to critique and challenge theoretical conceptualisations that are based on Western historical experiences, but made to appear universal and generally applicable (Kabeer 2005).
M3 - Book chapter
SN - 9780857287731
T3 - Anthem South Asian Studies
SP - 215
EP - 237
BT - Trysts with Democracy
A2 - Madsen, Stig Toft
A2 - NIelsen, Kenneth Bo
A2 - Skoda, Uwe
PB - Anthem Press
CY - London
ER -