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Laotian textiles in between markets and the politics of culture

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 May 2011

Abstract

The policies of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) related to heritage preservation and promotion have been spreading worldwide for the past few decades. This ethnographically focused paper examines two UNESCO devices, the Crafts Prize and the Awards of Excellence for Handicrafts, as they apply to the contemporary Laotian textiles scene. It questions in particular the uses and values locally assigned to these international certifications of excellence and their mobilisation in the commoditisation of fabrics. On a larger scale, it considers what those devices reveal and entail regarding a ‘traditional’ handicraft that is, from now on, entangled between trade and the ‘politics of culture’.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 2011

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References

1 I use pseudonyms for ethical reasons, and to prevent accusations of hidden advertising or any participation in regular controversies that occur in the world of Laotian textiles.

2 In this paper, when not referring to situated discourse, I use ‘Laotian’ to speak about textiles ‘made in Laos’. Unlike ‘Lao’ it cannot be unconsciously linked to an ethnic group reference. Indeed, the word ‘Lao’ as expressed by people conveys the evolving ideological idea of a ‘Lao’ national identity based upon the cultural reference imposed by the dominant Lao populations of the lowlands regardless of the great ethnic and cultural diversity in the country. In the same way, terms such as ‘culture’, ‘identity’ or ‘tradition’ are used solely when related to discourses of the agents.

3 The naga is an ophidian divinity very common in Southeast Asia.

4 Since there is no official transcription system for the Lao alphabet, I use the Aséanie transcription system based on the one used for the transcription of the Thai alphabet and in line with the official Lao orthography implemented in 1960 and modified in 1975. For the transcription of Thai words, I use the official system devised by the Royal Institute of Thailand.

5 Culture Division of the UNESCO's website: http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en (last accessed 1 May 2009), UNESCO Crafts Prize section.

6 Mayor, Federico, ‘Address by Mr Mayor, Director-General of the UNESCO’, in Textiles of Asia: A common heritage, ed. Prangwatthanakun, Songsak (Chiang Mai: Office of The National Culture Commission, Chiang Mai University, 1993)Google Scholar.

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11 Howard, ‘Identity and traditional and tradition-based T'ai textiles’, p. 25.

12 Peleggi, ‘Refashioning civilization’, pp. 78–9.

13 This craft definition had been adopted by the UNESCO/ITC Symposium, ‘Craft and international market: Trade and customs codification’, in Manila, 6–9 Oct. 1997. See http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en (last accessed 1 May 2009).

14 Annabel Vallard, ‘Following the thread: An ethnography of the textile industry in Vientiane (Lao P.D.R.)’, (Ph.D. diss., University of Paris X, Nanterre, 2009), pp. 249–54.

15 Ibid., pp. 113–25.

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20 Ibid., pp. 52–3.

21 The Institute of Research on Culture is the heir of the Institute on Artistic and Literary Research that was founded in 1983 under the patronage of the Ministry of Information and Culture. This Institute organised two major conferences in 1991 and 1992 to heighten Laotian public awareness of the problem of its cultural heritage's protection. See Ketavong, Khamphèng, ‘Some characteristics of Lao fabrics’, in Laos and ethnic minority cultures: Promoting heritage, ed. Goudineau, Yves (Paris: UNESCO, 2003), p. 125Google Scholar.

22 The Convention for the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage was adopted in 1972. The World Heritage Committee was established in 1976 and inscribed the first sites on the World Heritage List in 1978. But, it was the Nubia Campaign in Egypt in 1960 that launched UNESCO's worldwide policy of architectural protection. See http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en (last accessed 1 May 2009).

23 Goudineau, Resettlement and social characteristics of new villages.

24 See various articles in ibid. Among them, H. Leedom Lefferts (pp. 89–110), Bouabane Vorakhoun (pp. 247–50) and Khamphèng Ketavong (pp. 111–18).

25 Nanthavongdouangsy, Weave on our great grandmother's loom.

26 Viengkham Nanthavongdouangsy, ‘Lao weaving and natural dyeing techniques’, in Legends in the weaving, Bounyavong and Nanthavongdouangsy, pp. 29–51.

27 Kongthong Nanthavongdouangsy, ‘Terminology and local terms for predominant motifs in traditional Lao textiles’, in Legends in the weaving, Bounyavong and Nanthavongdouangsy, pp. 111–41.

28 Nanthavongdouangsy, Sinh and Lao women.

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31 Ibid.

32 ‘Beyond tradition’ is the title of an exhibition of Laotian textiles that was held in New York in 1995.

33 SEAL websites.

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36 Ibid.

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43 An intellectual property law including copyright and related rights was in preparation with promulgation expected in 2010. See WIPO website: http://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/details.jsp?id=5890 (last accessed 10 Apr. 2011).

44 On brand names, see, among others, Miller, Daniel, ‘Alienable gifts and inalienable commodities’, in The empire of things: Regime of value and material culture, ed. Myers, Fred R. (Santa Fe: School of American Research Press, 2001), pp. 91115Google Scholar.

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50 Ibid.

51 Ibid.

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