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JOURNEY IN SIAM (1863), A |
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Adolf Bastian's Travels in South-East Asia: Volume 2 |
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By : Bastian, Adolf |
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(Bangkok, 2005.) |
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273 pp., 150 x 210 mm, Pbk Weight 0.480 Kg |
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Code : E22436 Price : US$30.00
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| Bastian, Adolf ; A Journey in Siam (1863)
Adolf Bastian’s Travels in Southeast Asia: Volume 2
A Journey in Siam (1863), volume 2 of Adolf Bastian’s Travels in Southeast Asia,
contains the travelogue written by Dr Adolf Bastian during his travels in Thailand.
Bastian was a renowned ethnographer, who founded both Berlin’s Museum für
Völkerkunde (Ethnological Museum) and the Berlin Anthropological Society, and his
work contains valuable observations and interpretations by one of the pioneers of
ethnography.
He observes, describes and records the later period of King Mongkut’s reign, which
ended in 1868 and is not well covered by published sources—only Monsignor Jean
Baptiste Pallegoix’s writings deal extensively with the early years of that reign. While
staying in Bangkok, this thorough and tireless German scholar insisted on learning
Siamese and, in addition, covered almost every aspect of the spiritual life of the
various groups of people he met in the capital.
Bastian’s interests also extend to Siam’s administrative and legal systems as well as to
the particularities of the lives of the various types of slaves in the country. Celebrations,
games, gambling, diseases and medicine, taxes and their implications for economic
life all command his attention. Bastian furthermore takes interest in the theater and
literature of the time, in Siamese wit, and in the songs that people use to express their
feelings during various activities.
He provides details about the animals living alongside people either as pets, or in the
wild, or as working animals. Life is described here in its manifold expressions and
interactions with nature, analyzed by a profound mind that had studied law at the
University of Heidelberg and natural science as well as medicine in Berlin, Jena, and
Würzburg.
The book includes some rare descriptions not found anywhere else, not even in
Pallegoix’s largely complementary work, relating, for example, to the spirit world as
perceived by the Siamese. |
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