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Thailand - Ku Daeng — Thirty Years Later: A Village Study in Northern Thailand, 1954–1984. By Konrad Kingshill. DeKalb (Illinois): Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Northern Illinois University, Special Report No. 26, 1991. Pp. ix, 314. Maps, Appendices, Glossary, Bibliography, Index.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 August 2009
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- Copyright © The National University of Singapore 1993
References
1 Chiang Mai: The Prince Royal's College, 310 pp. Maps, Photographic plates, Appendices, Glossary, Index.
2 Opler, Morris E., “Themes as Dynamic Forces in Culture”, American Journal of Sociology 51, 3 (1945): 198–206CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
3 Two previous revisions have been published in Thailand, (1) Ku Daeng — The Red Tomb, A Village Study in Northern Thailand, A.D. 1954–1964 (Bangkok: Bangkok Christian College), and (2) Ku Daeng — The Red Tomb, A Village Study in Northern Thailand, A.D. 1954–1974 (Bangkok: Suriyaban Publishers). I do not have these two editions in front of me while reviewing the present volume.
4 Barfield, Thomas J., The Nomadic Alternative [Englewood, Cliffs (NJ): Prentice Hall, 1993], p. ixGoogle Scholar.
5 E.g. Keyes, Charles F., “Ethnography and Anthropological Interpretation in the Study of Thailand”, in The Study of Thailand: Analyses of Knowledge, Approaches, and Prospects in Anthropology, Art History, Economics, History, and Political Science [Athens (Ohio): Center for International Studies, Southeast Asia Series, No. 54, 1978], pp. 1–66Google Scholar; p. 8, fn 3. Also Walker, Anthony R., “Northern Thailand as Geo-ethnic Mosaic”, in his (edited) The Highland Heritage: Collected Essays on Upland North Thailand (Singapore: Suvarnabhumi Books, 1992), pp. 1–93Google Scholar; p. 9, fn 4.