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2024 | Book

Buddhist Public Advocacy and Activism in Thailand

A Rhetoric of Dignity and Duty

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About this book

This book studies Buddhist public advocacy and activism in Thailand—a movement often broadly called socially engaged Buddhism—from the perspective of rhetorical studies, specifically, on humanizing and dehumanizing communication practices. In modern Thailand and historical Siam, Buddhism has been integral to the social change processes shaping civil society and an emerging democracy. This study examined two problems: How do contemporary Buddhists in Thailand use rhetorical practice to influence the way the issues they work on are understood, and how do these Buddhists justify their advocacy and activism in rhetorical practice? To the first, a rhetoric of dignity, or humanization, was the central answer. To the second, a rhetoric of duty was the central answer. For researchers in Southeast Asian Studies, Thai Studies, and Buddhist Studies, this book offers a fresh perspective on socially engaged Buddhism through the lens of the communication discipline. For researchers in Psychologyand Communication, it sheds light on the understudied practices of humanizing communication. The bulk of the current research is focused on its opposite—dehumanization—and most of this literature is in the field of psychology even though humanization and dehumanization are fundamentally and ontologically communication phenomena. For researchers within the field of Communication and Rhetorical Studies, this book advances innovations in the emerging practices of rhetorical field methods by applying rhetorical criticism to interview data in a new way and provides a non-western perspective on communication and rhetorical theory for which there has been continual calls.

Table of Contents

Frontmatter
Chapter 1. Introduction
Abstract
This chapter introduces the research problem and research questions, provides a rationale for the study, describes the research method used, and overviews the chapters.
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 2. Buddhist Advocacy and Activism Research
Abstract
This chapter reviews the literature on “socially engaged Buddhism.” It identifies issues and themes in the literature and problematizes the construct “engaged Buddhism.” I eschew the term in my own writing for reasons established here, but much of the research on Buddhist public advocacy and activism has gone under the heading “socially engaged Buddhism” or simply “engaged Buddhism.”
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 3. History of Buddhist Advocacy and Activism in Thailand
Abstract
This chapter provides a succinct overview of defining moments and the socio-cultural and political conditions in Siamese and Thai history that have brought about Buddhist public advocacy and activism as it appears today (Siam became Thailand in 1939). I trace the historical antecedents for Buddhist advocacy and activism from King Mongkut’s reformations in the mid-1800s up to the present day. This chapter makes important contributions to the context of this study because the character of modern Buddhist public advocacy and activism in Thailand has not always appeared as it does today.
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 4. Identification and Humanizing and Dehumanizing Rhetoric
Abstract
A central theme that emerged in the analysis of this study was the use of humanizing rhetoric, and the fundamental rhetorical concept underlying humanizing rhetoric was identification. Identification is a concept theorized by the influential rhetorician Kenneth Burke. In this chapter, I explicate Burke’s theory of identification and review the literature on humanizing and dehumanizing rhetoric. This chapter lays the conceptual groundwork for understanding the analyses in Chaps. 5 and 6.
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 5. A Buddhist Rhetoric of Dignity and Degradation
Abstract
This chapter is the first of two analysis chapters. In this chapter, I answer this question: What rhetorical practices do Buddhists in Thailand use to humanize (dignify) or dehumanize (degrade) subjects of their discourse in their efforts to resist or promote social change?
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 6. A Buddhist Rhetoric of Duty: Justifying Advocacy and Activism
Abstract
This chapter is the second of two analysis chapters. In this chapter, I answer this question: How do Buddhists in Thailand justify their advocacy and activism in rhetorical practice?
Craig M. Pinkerton
Chapter 7. Discussion and Conclusion
Abstract
In this chapter, I summarize the main ideas of the analyses in Chaps. 5 and 6 and discuss the implications of these analyses. I discuss three main ideas: (1) I contrast a rhetoric of duties with a rhetoric of rights and engage in a cross-cultural comparison and its implications. (2) I discuss the concept of identification in relation to the implications of rhetorical ethics that emerged out of this study. (3) I discuss the implications of the study for civil society and conflict communication, particularly the practices of humanizing and dehumanizing rhetoric.
Craig M. Pinkerton
Backmatter
Metadata
Title
Buddhist Public Advocacy and Activism in Thailand
Author
Craig M. Pinkerton
Copyright Year
2024
Electronic ISBN
978-3-031-50923-0
Print ISBN
978-3-031-50922-3
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-50923-0