The Art of Not Being Governed Audiobook By James C. Scott cover art

The Art of Not Being Governed

An Anarchist History of Upland Southeast Asia (Yale Agrarian Studies Series)

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The Art of Not Being Governed

By: James C. Scott
Narrated by: Alex Boyles
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About this listen

From the acclaimed author and scholar James C. Scott comes the compelling account of Asian peoples who until recently have stemmed the vast tide of state-making to live at arm’s length from any organized state society.

For two thousand years, the disparate groups that now reside in Zomia—a mountainous region the size of Europe that consists of portions of seven Asian countries—have fled the projects of the organized state societies that surround them: slavery, conscription, taxes, corvée labor, epidemics, and warfare. This book, essentially an “anarchist history,” is the first-ever examination of the huge literature on state-making whose author evaluates why people would deliberately and reactively remain stateless.

Among the strategies employed by the people of Zomia to remain stateless are physical dispersion in rugged terrain, agricultural practices that enhance mobility, pliable ethnic identities, devotion to prophetic millenarian leaders, and maintenance of a largely oral culture that allows them to reinvent their histories and genealogies as they move between and around states.

James Scott, recognized worldwide as an eminent authority in Southeast Asian, peasant, and agrarian studies, tells in accessible language the story of the peoples of Zomia and their unlikely odyssey in search of self-determination. He redefines our views on Asian politics, history, demographics, and even our fundamental ideas about what constitutes civilization, and he challenges us with a radically different approach to history that presents events from the perspective of stateless peoples and redefines state-making as a form of “internal colonialism.”

This new perspective requires a radical reevaluation of the civilizational narratives of the lowland states.

Scott’s work on Zomia represents a new way to think of area studies that will be applicable to other runaway, fugitive, and marooned communities, be they Gypsies, Cossacks, tribes fleeing slave raiders, Marsh Arabs, or San-Bushmen.

©2009 Yale University (P)2025 Blackstone Publishing
Anthropology Asia History & Theory Ideologies & Doctrines Political Science Politics & Government Southeast Asia Imperialism Runaway Colonial Period
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Brilliant

So much to think about. Not only has it given me a clearer idea of this region which has a long perplexed me, but it has made me reevaluate the simplest frameworks of my understanding, and start to think differently about the distinction between civilization and barbarism, the cooked and the raw. I think this book will be with me for a long time. He is doing for barbarism, what was once done for the idea of democracy. Democracy was once a bad word in educated, civilized circles. Now barbarism will undergo a similar change, conceptually if in neither case yet in practice.

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