Ethnic Tourism and the Renegotiation of Tradition in Tana Toraja (Sulawesi, Indonesia)

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Abstract

This article examines some of the political and symbolic issues inherent in the touristic renegotiation of Torajan ritual and history, chronicling the strategies whereby Torajans attempt to refashion outsider imagery to enhance their own personal standing and position in the Indonesian ethnic hierarchy. The author suggests that the Toraja case challenges the popular assumption that tourism promotion brings a complete loss of agency to indigenous peoples: Torajans not only engage in ingenious political strategies to enhance their group's image, but vigorously contest perceived threats to their identity and power. The author argues that such processes of self-conscious cultural reformulation do not necessarily imply a collapse in meanxngor emotive power; rather, the Toraja case lends support to recent calls to rethink the discourse of "authenticity" and "staged authenticity."

Original languageAmerican English
JournalAnthropology: Faculty Publications and Other Works
Volume36
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 1 1997

Keywords

  • tourism
  • tradition
  • Indonesia
  • Tana Toraja
  • cultural construction
  • traditions

Disciplines

  • Anthropology

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