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Buddhist Monk, Buddhist Layman
A Study of Urban Monastic Organization in Central Thailand

This is a systematic anthropological study of monastic organization and monk-layman interaction in a purely urban context in the countries where Theravada Buddhism is practised.

Jane Bunnag (Author)

9780521040648, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 17 September 2007

232 pages
22.9 x 15.3 x 1.5 cm, 0.353 kg

Most anthropological and sociological studies of Buddhism have concentrated on village and rural Buddhism. This is a systematic anthropological study of monastic organization and monk-layman interaction in a purely urban context in the countries where Theravada Buddhism is practised, namely, Burma, Cambodia, Ceylon, Laos and Thailand. The material presented is based on fieldwork carried out in Ayutthaya, Central Thailand. Dr Bunnag describes and analyses the socio-economic and ritual relations existing between the monk and the lay community, and she demonstrates the way in which the role of the monk is used by some men, wittingly or otherwise, as a social stepping-stone, in that for the son of a farmer a period in the monkhood can provide the education and contacts necessary to facilitate his assimilation into the urban lay community at a social and economic level which would otherwise have been impossible. Finally, Dr Bunnag places the material presented in a broader theoretical context by reviewing it in relation to anthropological discussions concerning the nature of Thai society as a whole.

List of tables
List of illustrations
Preface
Introduction: the Thai social system
1. 'The way of the monk'
2. The monk and the lay community
3. The wat community
4. The wat and its social matrix
5. The role of the Buddhist layman
6. The loosely structured social system: red herring or rara avis?
Appendixes
Bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: Anthropology [JHM]

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