The Spirits are Crying: Dispossessing Land and Possessing Bodies in Rural Cambodia

TitleThe Spirits are Crying: Dispossessing Land and Possessing Bodies in Rural Cambodia
Annotated RecordNot Annotated
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsBeban A, Work C
Secondary TitleAntipode
Volume46
Issue3
Pagination593-610
Key themesDispossession-grabbing
Abstract

In 2009, a land spirit disrupted plantation development within a contested Economic Land Concession in Cambodia. The spirit, along with efforts of a monk and NGO, ultimately persuaded state officials to return 5 ha of land to the local temple. In this paper, we bring together literature on the anthropology of religion, political economy of land possession, and critical development studies; we demonstrate that land spirits continue as members of political patronage chains at both the state and the local level, and show how the non-capitalist logics of spirit negotiations both challenged and legitimized large-scale land acquisition projects. The spirit was not subsumed by, but rather shaped, contemporary capitalist expansion in ways that call for a critical examination of the ontological certainty that all land is designed for human production and consumption. © 2014 Antipode Foundation Ltd.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1111/anti.12073
Availability

Copyrighted journal article

Countries

Cambodia

Document Type

Journal Article