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Buddhism, Politics and Political Thought in Myanmar
Walton explains political dynamics in Myanmar through Buddhist thought, providing a conceptual framework for understanding Myanmar's ongoing political transition.
Matthew J. Walton (Author)
9781107155695, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 17 November 2016
244 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.4 cm, 0.49 kg
'Probably the most comprehensive introduction to Buddhist political thought in Myanmar, this book is likely to be a standard text for years to come. Author Matthew Walton rightly acknowledges Gustaaf Houtman's … groundbreaking work on Burmese Buddhist political culture. Yet this book makes such significant contributions that it helps establish Walton's position among the leading scholars of Myanmar's complex and contested politics. The book is particularly timely given the renewed prominence of Buddhism in Burmese politics.' Ashley South, Journal of Contemporary Asia
This is the first book to provide a broad overview of the ways in which Buddhist ideas have influenced political thinking and politics in Myanmar. Matthew J. Walton draws extensively on Burmese language sources from the last 150 years to describe the 'moral universe' of contemporary Theravada Buddhism that has anchored most political thought in Myanmar. In explaining multiple Burmese understandings of notions such as 'democracy' and 'political participation', the book provides readers with a conceptual framework for understanding some of the key dynamics of Myanmar's ongoing political transition. Some of these ideas help to shed light on restrictive or exclusionary political impulses, such as anti-Muslim Buddhist nationalism or scepticism towards the ability of the masses to participate in politics. Walton provides an analytical framework for understanding Buddhist influences on politics that will be accessible to a wide range of readers and will generate future research and debate.
Introduction
1. A brief political history and cast of characters
2. Building blocks of a moral universe
3. On human nature and the nature of politics
4. Order and freedom/liberation: purposes of politics
5. What is 'politics' and what constitutes 'participation'?
6. Discipline, rights, and morality: 'democracy' in contemporary Myanmar
Conclusion.
Subject Areas: Political ideologies [JPF], Politics & government [JP], Buddhism [HRE], Religion & politics [HRAM2], Religious ethics [HRAM1]
