When Words Will Not Do:
Sinhala Buddhist Monks, and the
Emergence of Violence
By
Pradeep Jeganathan
Shiv Nadar University
ABSTRACT: This paper is an attempt to re-visit an old chestnut in anthropology, most famously addressed by the renowned S.J. Tambiah: “If Buddhism preaches nonviolence, why is there so much political violence in Sri Lanka today?” My attempt is to think the emergence of violence, in relation to Sinhala Buddhist practice; I do not address the question of ‘quantity.’ I do so by marking a dispersed set of objects which form an archive of the practice of a particular set of Sinhala Buddhist monks. I excavate sites in this archive, thinking the imbrication of perlocutionary utterance and gesture, in each instance. It is my contention, that this mode of analysis, taken as a whole, will illuminate the emergence of violence, in relation to particular configurations of Theravada Buddhism, in Sri Lanka.
Pradeep Jeganathan is Professor in the Department of Sociology, School of Humanities and Social Sciences at SNU. His research interests focus on the perpetration of violence, survival and bad death. Simultaneously he also has begun research on familial and romantic love. He also has continuing interests in colonial forms of knowledge, post-colonial nationalism and subalterneity and Theravada Buddhism. Cyber-cociality and cyber-subjectivity is another interest. While in Sri Lanka he took an active role in public intellectual life, writing a regular Oped column in a major Sunday newspaper, and appearing occasionally on TV shows, and blogging. His publications include ‘Living with Death: Human Narratives in the wake of Sri Lanka’s Civil Wars’ and ‘Unmaking the Nation: The politics of identity and history in modern Sri Lanka’ (edited with Qadri Ismail). His novel ‘At the Water’s Edge’, was short listed for the Gratiaen Prize in 2004.
Date:
1st April 2015, Wednesday
Time: 02.30 PM
Venue:
FSI HALL
South Asian University
Akbar Bhawan
Chanakyapuri
New Delhi 110021
ALL ARE CORDIALLY INVITED