Customary renewal and the pursuit of power and prosperity in post-occupation East Timor: a case-study from Babulo, Uato-Lari
thesis
posted on 2017-02-13, 00:39authored bySusanna Barnes
This
thesis is an ethnographic study of post-occupation sociality in East Timor.
Based on fieldwork conducted during prolonged periods between 2006 and 2015,
this ethnography focuses on the experiences of the people of Babulo, a
predominantly Naueti-speaking community located in Uato-Lari subdistrict on the
south-eastern coast of East Timor. The Naueti language belongs to the
Austronesian family group and Naueti-speakers are among the least well-known
ethno-linguistic groups of East Timor. As such, this thesis makes a
contribution to the burgeoning field of East Timor anthropology as well as the
field of comparative Austronesian studies.
In this thesis I describe and analyse how, since the violent
withdrawal of the Indonesian military and civilian administration in 1999, the
people of Babulo have been engaged in a process of recovery and renewal characterised by the revitalisation of customary beliefs and practices. I
demonstrate that underpinning this resurgence of custom is a renewed commitment
to a vision of society in which social and spiritual relations are constructed
around the idea that life is continually given, received, reciprocated and
renewed. I argue that this vision of society provides a cultural schema where
the logic of precedence operates as a key structuring principle that shapes and
gives meaning to social interactions and is the basis of social distinctions
and inequalities. Focusing on the role of key social actors in Babulo, the
ritual authority known as the Source of the Land, I describe how the customary
economy of Babulo has become a site of struggle over symbolic and material
resources where status and political influence is affirmed, contested,
negotiated and re-calibrated. Nevertheless, I suggest that such struggles are
undertaken not solely in pursuit of power within a framework of domination/subordination,
but also as a means of securing social cohesion and prosperity.
To conclude, I discuss the significance of this case study in
the context of the wider ethnography of East Timor and the field of
Austronesian studies, as well as noting the limitations of the present study
and identifying directions for future research.