Cross-Border Traders in Northern Laos

Cross-Border Traders in Northern Laos

Mastering Smallness

  • Autor: Rowedder, Simon; Harris, Tina; van Schendel, Willem
  • Editor: Amsterdam University Press
  • Colección: Asian Borderlands
  • eISBN Pdf: 9789048554409
  • Lugar de publicación:  Amsterdam , Holanda
  • Año de publicación digital: 2022
  • Mes: Julio
  • Páginas: 256
  • Idioma: Ingles
Northern Laos has become a prominent spot in large-scale, top-down mappings and studies of neoliberal globalisation and infrastructural development linking Thailand and China, and markets further beyond. Yet in the common narrative, in which Laos appears as a weak victim helplessly exposed to its larger neighbours, attention is seldom paid to local voices. This book fills this gap. Building on long-term multi-sited fieldwork, it accompanies northern Lao cross-border traders closely in their transnational worlds of mobilities, social relations, economic experimentation and aspiration. Cross-Border Traders in Northern Laos: Mastering Smallness demonstrates that these traders’ indispensable but often invisible role in the everyday workings of the China-Laos-Thailand borderland economy relies on their rhetoric and practices of ‘smallness’—of framing their transnational trade activities in a self-deprecating manner and stressing their economic inferiority. Decoding their discursive surface of insignificance, this ethnography of ‘smallness’ foregrounds remarkable transnational social and economic skills that are mostly invisible in Sino-Southeast Asian borderland scholarship.
  • Cover
  • Table of Contents
    • Acknowledgements
    • Notes on Language and Transliteration
    • Introduction
      • Towards an Ethnography of Smallness
      • Taking Issue with Worlds of Larger Representations
      • Cross-Border Traders in Laos: Unheard and Invisible in Scholarship
      • The Heavy Weight of “Zomian Baggage” in (Sino-)Southeast Asian Borderlands
      • Coming to Terms with my Research Motivation/Imagination
      • Journeying the Field
      • Outline of the Book
    • 1 “We Are All Tai Lue”
      • International Trade Fairs as Local Ethnic Affairs
      • Xishuangbanna’s Attempts at Resembling Southeast Asia
      • The Beginnings: Getting Invited to “Local Markets” in China
      • Dealing with “Chinese” Customers: Between Distancing and Antagonism
      • Reducing Chinese Customer Relations to the Economic Essentials
      • Dealing with Tai Lue Customers: Performing “Lue Localness”
      • Lao Traders’ Economic Rationale
      • “Local” Advantages of Lao Traders vis-à-vis “International” Thai Traders
      • Conclusion
    • 2 “Normal Fruits for Laos, Premium Fruits for China”
      • Transnational Flows of National Differences
      • The Tai Lue in Thailand: A Cultural Source for “Lanna Thai”
      • The Case of Ban Huay Meng: From Ethnic Frontier to National Fruit Frontier
      • Thai Fruits in Motion: “Normal Fruits for Laos, Premium Fruits for China”
      • Lao Cross-Border Traders as Mediators of Sino-Thai Frictions
      • Conclusion
    • 3 “Thailand: High Quality; China: Low Price”
      • “Banal Cosmopolitanism” in Local Marketplaces
      • “Moving with the Market”: Amnuay and Hiang
      • Tracing “Banal Cosmopolitanism” at Marketplaces
      • “Banal Cosmopolitanism” in Practice
      • Conclusion
    • 4 “I Didn’t Learn Any Occupation, so I Trade”
      • Narratives of Insignificance
      • Tracing Narratives of Entrepreneurial Smallness
      • Trading at the Marketplace: Between (Non-)Occupation, Professionalism and Amateurism
      • From muan to thammada: Pioneers and Newcomers
      • Stories of Success Beyond the Marketplace: From Experimentation Towards Cross-Border Entrepreneurship
      • Conclusion
    • 5 “No Matter What, We’ll Find a Way”
      • Uncertain (Chinese?) Futures
      • Uncertainty, Resilience, and the Shadow of the BRI
      • Contextualizing Local Engagement with China-Induced Changes
      • Dreaming the “Chinese Dream” in Northern Laos
      • Marketplaces in Luang Namtha: Material, Discursive, and Social Sites of Chinese Infrastructure and Modernity
      • Conclusion
    • Conclusion: Large Insights from Smallness
      • Entering and Exploring Transnational Worlds through Smallness
      • “Small” Productions of Transnational Connectivity
    • Bibliography
    • Index
  • List of Maps and Illustrations
    • 1 Regional overview with GMS North-South Economic Corridor
    • 2 Luang Namtha Province
    • 3 Signboard advertising a transvestite show at “Thailand Street” (泰国街) in Jinghong
    • 4 “The Great Pagoda Temple of Jinghong” (景洪市大金塔寺) at Gao Zhuang, Jinghong
    • 5 “Vientiane Town,” a shopping centre in Jinghong
    • 6 “Mekong Starlight Night Market” (湄公河星光夜市) at Gao Zhuang, Jinghong, resembling Walking Streets in northern Thailand
    • 7 Thai handicrafts sold at Gao Zhuang, Jinghong
    • 8 Luang Namtha traders’ stalls at the “GMS Six Countries Trade Fair in Xishuangbanna 2015” in Jinghong
    • 9 Luang Namtha traders staying in tents behind their stalls at a trade fair inJinghong during Chinese New Year, January/February 2017
    • 10 Cross-border routes of Luang Namtha traders attending Chinese trade fairs
    • 11 “Tai Lue Cultural Centre” on the premises of Ban Sri Donchai temple
    • 12 Transnational Thai fruit flows radiating out of Ban Huay Meng
    • 13 At the village port of Ban Huay Meng
    • 14 Trucks queueing up at Khonekeo Port
    • 15 Open fresh market area, Muang Sing market
    • 16 Small shop selling Thai and Chinese commodities at the edge of the freshmarket area, Muang Sing market
    • 17 Breakfast routine at khao soi stalls, Luang Namtha market
    • 18 Construction of the China-Laos Railway near Nateuy , Luang Namtha province
    • 19 New Chinese-funded marketplace in Nateuy, Luang Namtha province
    • 20 New conviviality: joint Chinese-Lao BBQ bar in Nateuy, Luang Namtha province

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