Journal of Southeast Asian Studies
Vol.24 No.2
Sept 1993
Pp.330-339
Copyrigth by Singapore University Press Pte. Ltd.
Interpreting Thai Religious Change Thai religion is changing. So is Thai society. To most scholars the connection is obvious: social and especially material changes drive religious ones. So a new middle class causes religious ferment(1) while a crisis in legitimacy explains a militant Buddhist movement(2) as well as the fervour for amulets and forest monks.(3) Such explanations are typical in using extra-religious current events to explain religious change. We need not dispute their specific interpretations to make a larger historical point: today's religious changes are, if only in part, the unintended consequences of a century and a half of Sangha reform that has undermined the local Buddhism of the temple or wat. In effect centralizing reforms took the wat away from locals and, by driving folk practices out of the temple, fostered today's religious "free market". This long-term institutional shift, changing the wat's place in Thai society, can be the context for understanding today's religious changes. My paper has three sections. The first considers the wat in traditional society, the second discusses how reforms undermined the wat as a local institution, and the third reflects on the implications of this change for interpreting contemporary religious change. I conclude by arguing that historically evident change in the wat, being endogenous, should take precedence over exogenous explanations of religious change. Wat in Traditional Society A wat unites monastery and shrine. Early Buddhism had no wat as the monks were wandering ascetics. Many centuries later, when Tai(4) became Buddhists, monks often lived in settled monastic communities, but the early inscriptions do not mention wat literally and, as they record endowments to support each element separately, they do not suggest a wat-like whole.(5) Apparently Buddhism was like its Burmese variant where monastery and shrine are distinct entities.(6) By the late fourteenth century wat appears as a word but usage is inconsistent and so this may still be just an assemblage of sacred elements.(7) Yet over centuries these elements solidified to make the wat into a discrete entity. When the Bangkok era (1782-present) began the wat was already taken for granted as the basic unit of the Thai Sangha and the centre of lay Buddhism. The wat is a Tai creation. Joining monastery and shrine creates a social whole that is a community in itself and often the centre of a lay community. Thai custom makes the wat the moral, social and symbolic centre of a community(8) and certainly farmers say a village needs a wat to be complete.(9) Ethnographic reports generally confirm the functional and symbolic centrality of the wat,(10) but exceptions exist and statistics collected by Jacques Nepote suggest complex regional variations in the actual wat/community relationship.(11) Such variety testifies to localism but apparently everywhere the wat weaves Buddhism into local life. Wat operate like other Thai institutions. Each houses one or many entourages that compete to take care of their own.(12) All wat need resources to survive. Few have endowments, the Sangha itself has no treasury, government stipends are meager, and monastic discipline prohibits earning a living. So the laity must support a wat or hunger drives its monks away, rot brings its buildings down, and thieves loot what is left. Many wat have died that way. Most vanish into paddy fields or jungle, but in one year, 1899, a census of provinces near Bangkok reported 23 deserted wat under the control of 167 active ones, while on the edge of the city land clearance for one new palace revealed the remains of three wat.(13) Even great wat fall. In the nineteenth century Chaophraya Sisuriyawong's patronage made Wat Prayurawong one of the capital's most opulent and prestigious temples, but when he died support collapsed and the wat fell apart. Some monks left, others went hungry, and vandals dared to pick gold from its doors.(14) But on the other extreme, then as well as today, charismatic monks can revitalize failing wat or start new ones.(15) The rise and fall of wat shows competition. Wat compete with each other for followers, wealth and honour, but they also must compete with other religious interests and indeed the rest of Thai life. Wat Buddhism, being local and communal, competes with regional shrines as well as individualizing practices from amulets to meditation. Even in a one-wat village households have many other needs and to attract men into the monkhood the wat must compete locally with farming, courting and marriage just as these latter activities compete with what the outside world offers. This is not new. Competition shaped and perhaps even created the wat. Of course in traditional society the king looked after religion, but he did not have to favour wat and, in any case, Buddhism was not his only interest. Courts let religion languish to favour poets or dancers, to build palaces or make war. In the past, competition ensured wat pleased their supporters. A few wat had elite patron whose support let them ignore popular wants, but the vast majority had to accommodate local interests. That brought the monks into the very heart of the local community and fostered what we might call wat Buddhism. Of course this continuity ensured divergence. Localities differed greatly. Thus Buddhism underwent centuries of not just popularization but local diversification. Traditional Thai rulers knew and cared little about religious diversity in the countryside, but in the capital difference was integral to the ranking that ordered society. Wat were an arena of elite competition that pulled buddhism towards conspicuous rituals of display.(16) Of course all of this changed when, in the nineteenth century, Bangkok began to assert actual control over its realm, and a Siamese elite started to make a galactic polity(17) into a nation-state. Wat, being wedded to the traditional polity, also had to change; and Buddhism became salient because the West was non-Buddhist. Wat and Reform In the latter part of the nineteenth century Bangkok began to build a nation by centralizing what elements of traditional society it could and bypassing the rest. Where it faced entrenched provincial elites, the capital sent its own officials and left the old lords to wither. Where Bangkok's nobles resisted, the king governed through his brothers. Sangha reform went the same way. Regional monkhoods gave way to a national Sangha as recalcitrant monks were forgotten and progressive ones staffed the new administrative hierarchy.(18) Wat lost in many ways. When the old families fell their wat went with them or adjusted to fill a new social niche. No longer was the wat integral to the social hierarchy. Wat patronage was once essential to lay status. Now it was only an option as the new elite claimed position by ability and modern knowledge, not patronage and character. Naturally most wat had no elite clientele to lose, but this change still hit every wat. Cutting the tie between wat and the social hierarchy at the top of society let wat become symbolically peripheral everywhere. In decades it undid a wat-community intimacy evolved over centuries. Behind this sea change lay a sociological fact: Bangkok could centralize the Sangha quickly and cheaply but bringing the wat along too was slow, costly and self-defeating. Monks could be transferred, trained and manipulated by rewards but wat entailed lay and monastic communities that could and sometimes did resist outside rule. Inevitably then the modernizing centre moved towards what worked. No policy abandoned wat -- indeed the king tried valiantly to keep Sangha and wat hierarchies aligned(19) -- but what the centre could not control it had to forget and thus subtly devalue. So the wat lost out just as many old families did. Left behind, the wat was not left alone. Reformers asserted central control to improve Buddhism and root out corrupt practices. Of course many of these "corruptions" accommodated popular needs and thereby made the wat the centre of lay Buddhism. In effect, integrating monks into a national Sangha pulled them away from the lay community and its local needs. Resistance could be strong but two powerful mechanisms supported the centralizing tendency: rewards pulled monks toward the centre while regulations reached out into the countryside. Rewards encouraged reform. Who got what title, honour, position, gift or invitation let rulers control monks and wat. Such rewards were old but Bangkok's reach was new. Upcountry local elites or villagers once decided honours. Lao villagers even gave revered monks "royal" titles.(20) No one asked the king. But now Bangkok "owned" the great honours, and these outshone and often precluded local ones. Thus locals lost social controls and localism thereby lost power. Of course as donors they still had a say, but using its prestige and authority Bangkok got locals to pay for wat that, increasingly, they did not run. Early on Bangkok encouraged Pali scholarship but ignored meditation.(21) Administrative monks won titles. Such monks encouraged well kept temples and so wat prospered physically. Honours went to monks who built new wat or restored old ones. Such deeds required great resources and yet the catch was officials cut off many of the old routes of wat support. Temple fairs illustrate this. These celebrations united wat and community in fun and charity. But reformers found the frivolity unseemly. So today the "best" wat do not have fairs and holding one requires elaborate approval from civil as well as ecclesiastical authorities.(22) Or take the great preaching monks (nakthet) whose sermons made the Dhamma so entertaining that crowds and offerings flooded the wat.(23) To early reformers a pure Sangha had no place for undignified sermons and undisciplined preachers, and King Mongut himself inveighed against this practice.(24) Not fun but purity alone would have to draw people to the wat. While rewards encouraged reform, regulations compelled change. Edicts forbade curing and magical arts,(25) denying the benevolent protective powers that brought people to the wat. Ordinations once joined the generations, making the locality into a community.(26) But then reforms restricted what wat qualified as ordination sites and who could be an ordainer or get ordained.(27) No longer were the local abbot and village wat at the heart of every ceremony. Now ordainers had to meet educational standards and ordination sites needed royal approval.(28) Such rules protected the Sangha's integrity at the expense of local Buddhism. Rules also tried to protect wat. Officials would not approve starting a new wat near an old one lest one or both starve.(29) Their fears were realistic but it was precisely such competition that had kept wat close to local wants. Of course a monopoly lets a wat follow official orders and forces locals to go along or give up wat Buddhism altogether.(30) Similarly, abbots once redistributed wat resources to build followings, but such "generousity" was not always proper and here too reforms clamped down. Regulations protected the wat as a public institution against the private interests of its patrons and abbot.(31) At major wat officials scrutinized the books and even began to collect wat rents and hold them in trust. That protected the wat's assets but it also precluded leadership. Entourages grow by giving. Dry up redistribution and the wat's community dies as people seek more benevolent leaders and institutions. Such reforms continue. Even in a remote village Moerman notes "the tension between the temple as an agent of village solidarity and the temple as an agent of the national state".(32) On the other extreme, in Bangkok, the village is long gone but its religious legacy -- popular Buddhism -- remains an issue. After over a century of reforms, the results are complex and contradictory. What Olson aptly calls "Phra Rajavaramuni's 'middle path' between Thai tradition and the texts ..." faces more radical reformers.(33) Both sides accept wat and their debate centres on correct practice, not the unintended consequences of reform. So the wat is not even an issue. Yet while the Sangha centralizes and turns monks towards the centre, the wat remains inextricably local. Wat arose by joining lay and monastic communities. Where these two diverge, the wat dies. That happened often in the past but today the split is structural. True, wat live on as property that can be protected or even gilded, but reforms have made today's wat less local and more national, less Thai and more Buddhist. Once a centre and often the centre of local life, the wat is now an increasingly specialized institution cut off by the rents and regulations aimed to protect it. Is this all modernization? The label fits but such global externals cannot replace specific internal causes. Here we see religion changing religion in two ways Kirsch would call Buddhaization.(34) One change, Buddhist reform, sought purity but sacrificed the wat's popularity. True, Buddhist texts assume a pure monk is popular, but then that says nothing about the wat. Indeed, the Pali texts never mention wat, and so it is hardly surprising that text-based reform is wiping away this Tai creation. The other impetus, centralizing Sangha reforms, countered the wat's localism but failed to win control of religion. What it did was turn the laity out of the wat, breaking them out of communities and making them into religious free agents. That created a clientele for today's religious entrepreneurs, lay and monastic alike. Interpreting Contemporary Change Thai religion is changing. Amulets proliferate as shamen prosper and Christianity grows. A new monkhood arises (Santi Asok) while in the old one an eco-monk ordains trees.(35) Such events are odd, and yet few doubt they tell us how Thai religion is changing. It is like the news: what everyone knows, the "obvious", goes unsaid to let odd events show what is happening. In effect we see where we are going by first assuming we know where we are. In this case what everyone "knows" is the traditional religion. Of course this is not how religion actually was. It is an imagined religion, a past already "corrected" by Sangha reforms. This has two direct implications. First, by denying the past's actual diversity it magnifies the present's apparent disintegration. Second, the historical source of change, Sangha reforms, turns into an agent of continuity and thus something else must explain the quite obvious fact of change. Of course today none need look far, but once we leave the historically evident institutional shift, it is all too easy simply to pair up religious changes with social or material ones and assume the latter cause the former. In this situation it helps to begin with the wat where, at least in principle, we can track some historical changes that put the present's changes in perspective. Let's work outward from the wat to Thai Buddhism and then Thai religion. The wat has changed. As Sangha reform pulled one way, society went another. Now, as wat and society stand further apart, the wat becomes peripheral. Ironically we could call this gap secularization or Buddhaization. Both apply. Moving the wat away from society brought the Sangha closer to its texts. If as Keyes says, "cultural life ... traditionally centered on the wat ..." and, as we have argued, the wat joined Buddhism and society, then changing the wat reconfigures society and culture.(36) Thai Buddhism has also changed. Buddhaization has made it "purer" but as Kirsch argues the lost folk elements served functions that Buddhism must now meet unmediated.(37) Here the wat is just one folk element but its decline poses the issue of how to represent community. Institutionally we can say Buddhism is moving from a wat-localized to a Sangha-centred religion. Lay religiosity is moving the same way. Look at amulets and meditation. Neither is new but their popularity is growing.(38) Both dote on monks as personalities, not wat as institutions. Each individualizes what the wat made communal. So sanctity follows the institutional shift. What leaves the wat goes to a monk who, as a leader, is a centre. Amulets epitomize this shift. Once a wat's image or relic protected a whole community. It still can but now the most coveted protecting power goes from a monk to his follower. In effect sanctity shifts from a societal container to an entourage, from Georges Condominas' model of Thai society to that of Lucien Hanks.(39) Indeed breaking down containers is how Bangkok's centralizing reshaped Thai society.(40) In this instance officials did just what they set out to do -- they got control of the Sangha -- but the ironic result has favoured religious entrepreneurs of a sort officials disdain. Thai religion is also changing. Three facts stand out. First, narrowing "acceptable" Buddhism widened Thai religion. Practices and people driven out of the well-controlled wat now flourish on an uncontrolled religious market. Second, religion has a new clientele: a middle class whose tastes and money already back reform Buddhism and some new movements.(41) Where old money approached wat as patrons wanting honour, this new wealth comes to religion as consumers expecting results. Third, Bangkok overwhelmed localism to make a nation whose variety now threatens to remake religion. Centralizing brought the countryside under the capital, and now the country's ways come into Bangkok and onto a mass market. Localism's religious practices, evolved over centuries, are now free from place and available to any Thai. So is every new concoction. Such choice is new. Once every religious form belonged to a social or physical niche, to an ethnic or occupational group. Today, however, anyone can try anything -- and a lot do. Ritual practices still define identity, but the person remains Thai amid the shifts. That lets people choose as never before. Are people "shopping" for new religious forms because the old ones failed? Not entirely. Few chose to give up local wat, curing monks or great preachers. Sangha reform took them away. Surely we need to know this before we impute angst or infer Buddhism cannot meet modern religious needs. Urbanization is the same. Religious ferment does centre in cities, but then so do the wat-crippling reforms as well as the new middle class. Are more opting out of religion, "buying" none? The issue arises because religion itself is changing from practices conditioned by social place to beliefs freely chosen. So far the result has been religious enthusiasm, not estrangement. Of course, on the one hand, choice stimulates enthusiasm while on the other skepticism was already so well developed that it is hard to see how it could spread.(42) What we do see, however. is an intense and engaging world of entourages that includes religion and presumes religious forces just as volatile and diverse as this social life is. Here today's cults compete as wat once did. Is Thai Buddhism fragmenting into cults? A movement like Thammakai differs from the official Sangha, but these two are closer than the Siamese and regional Sanghas were a century ago.(43) Of course differences once dispersed across the land and often embedded in wat are now options everywhere. That changes diversity from a reflex of place to a consequence of choice. Obviously the latter is more volatile and, as Thai society modernizes to imagine itself as the sum of individual choices, diversity starts to look like disintegration. This is ironic. Historically this is still an era of religious homogenization. Indeed it is this new coherence that makes movements like Santi Asok and Thammakai so threatening. Conclusion To interpret religious change we must connect religion and society. In principle these two abstractions allow a multitude of connections, but in practice we look for what we already expect to see. That can hide the unexpected such as the consequences of reform we have discussed. Whatever its intrinsic value this case also lets us reflect on our expectations. Every society and era prefers some explanations over others. Long ago Alexis de Tocqueville suggested how aristocratic and democratic eras differ in their preferred explanations. In aristocratic ages, he observed, thinkers "are inclined to refer all occurrences to ... certain individuals; and ... attribute the most important revolutions to slight accidents". We may smile at their elitism, but Tocqueville goes on to say our age is prone to the opposite prejudice. We "assign great general causes at all petty incidents" and imagine society moves "by the free and voluntary action of all".(44) In Thailand today "aristocratic" and "democratic" explanations of religious change abound. The former see personalities and assign credit or blame, while the latter -- including social science -- do indeed "assign great general causes" to every cult and fad. Time will tell who is right, but here our interest is simply to identify their presumptions. A further presumption is that modernity remakes the world. Once this was an active West changing a passive East, but now modern ways claim to carry their own irresistible force. Thus the past is dead, religion must die or change, and society is no more than the sum of its individuals. Accepting this, social science studies religious change to see the old die and the new arise.(45) Take some "real" force like capitalism or modernization, pair it up with a religious change, and the former appears to cause the latter. In fact that may be true, but the presumption replaces proof and further investigation. In Thailand many argue over why religion is changing but most agree on what the changes are. Such agreement is remarkable in light of the religious diversity of just a century ago. It shows people of differing pasts are becoming one. As they acquire a common past, they learn to identify a religious "change" by whatever deviates from the "traditional" religion, even if this fixed point was not their tradition. Scholars who take this perception as historical fact are likely to treat cults as seriously as officials do. Here Tocqueville's aristocrat and democrat meet, although the one is stopping troublemakers while the other is reading symptoms. In this sweep of events the common wat and Sangha reform hardly seem to matter. On the one hand, our stress on unintended consequences offends the "aristocratic" intuition that powerful individuals get what they want. On the other hand our focus on specific institutional changes amid massive social change ignores the "democratic" insight that revolutions sweep all along. Yet there are methodological grounds for preferring our modest explanation to grander ones. All else being equal, internal explanations take precedence over external ones because the endogenous is necessarily related to the change while the exogenous need not be. Thus the wat takes precedence over extra-religious explanations because, first, the wat's connection to religion is never in doubt and, second, any extra-religious source of change must work through religious phenomena such as the wat or it will not have changed religion. The opposite need not be true (i.e., the wat could change and have no extra-religious consequences). This is not a special case. After all why do we prefer capitalism to global warming as an explanation of religious change? Here capitalism is endogenous, being in the society that includes religion, while global warming is exogenous. Capitalism has an obvious impact on religion and thus exploring it comes before invoking global warming where the more distant connection multiplies the chances for error. This methodological rule merely tells us how to proceed. It does not preclude global warming as an explanation, but it does discourage letting a distant cause replace an immediate one. In this sense our argument for the wat's importance need not deny more distant causes, but it may prove useful in tempering more sweeping conclusions. 1 J.L. Taylor, "New Buddhist Movements in Thailand: An 'Individualistic Revolution', Reform and Political Dissonance", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 21, 1 (1990): 153. 2 Charles F. Keyes, "Political Crisis and Militant Buddhism in Contemporary Thailand", in Religion and Legitimation of Power in Thailand, Laos, and Burma, ed. B.L. Smith (Chambersburg: ANIMA, 1978), pp. 147-64. 3 S.J. Tambiah, The Buddhist Saints of the Forest and the Cult of Amulets: A Study in Charisma, Hagiography, Sectarianism, and Millennial Buddhism (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984), pp. 344-46. 4 Tai refers to an ethnolinguistic family of related peoples who are scattered from South China westward to Assam and southward to the Malay peninsula. Within Thailand Tai peoples include Siamese, Yuan (Northern Thai), Lu and Lao who are all now Thai. 5 Richard A. O'Connor, "Centers and Sanctity, Regions and Religion: Varieties of Tai Buddhism" (Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association Meetings, Washington, D.C., 5 Dec. 1985). 6 A.W. Sadler, "Pagoda and Monastery: Reflections on the Social Morphology of Burmese Buddhism", Journal of Asian and African Studies 5, 4 (1970): 282-93. 7 Wat first appears in the Vat Traban Jan Phoak Inscription but later inscriptions (XCV, XIV, IX and XV) either do not use wat or use it erratically with older forms (awat, aram, awatthammaram). See A.B. Griswold and Prasert na Nagara, "The Inscription of Vat Traban Jan Phoak: Epigraphic and Historical Studies No. 7" (henceforth EHS), Journal of the Siam Society (henceforth JSS) 59, 1 (1971): 157-88; "EHS No. 22: An Inscription from Vat Hin Tan, Sukhodaya", JSS 67, 1 (1979): 68-73; "The Inscription of Vat Khema: EHS No. 15", JSS 63, 1 (1975): 127-42; "EHS No. 12: Inscription 9", JSS 62, 1 (1974): 89-121; and "The Inscription of Vat Brah Stec, near Sukhodaya: EHS No. 16", JSS 63, 1 (1975): 143-60. 8 See for example Anuman Rajadhon, Life and Ritual in Old Siam: Three Studies of Thai Life and Customs, trans. and ed. W.J. Gedney (New Haven: HRAF Press, 1961). 9 Lucien M. Hanks, Rice and Man: Agricultural Ecology in Southeast Asia (Arlington Heights, Ill: AHM Publishing, 1972), pp. 103-110; Georges Condominas, "Pour une definition anthropologique du concept d'espace social", Asie du sud-est et monde insulindien 7, 2 (1977): 5-54, p. 43; Jack M. Potter, Thai Peasant Social Structure (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976), p. 150. 10 Potter, Thai Peasant, pp. 222-23. 11 Michael Moerman, "Ban Ping's Temple: The Center of a 'Loosely Structured' Society", in Anthropological Studies in Theravada Buddhism, ed. Manning Nash (New Haven: Yale University Southeast Asia Studies, 1966), p. 138; Brian L. Foster, Social Organization of Four Mon and Thai Villages (New Haven: HRAF, 1977), p. 108; Jacques Nepote, "Pour une approche socio-historique du monachisme Theravada", Peninsule 1 (1980): 94-135, 2-3 (1981): 119-84, 4-5 (1982): 135-88, 8-9 (1984): 137-96. 12 Hanks, Rice and Man, p. 108, and "The Thai Social Order as Entourage and Circle", in Change and Persistence in Thai Society: Essays in Honor of Lauriston Sharp, ed. G. William Skinner and A. Thomas Kirsch (Ithaca, Cornell University Press, 1975), p. 215. 13 Report of Phra Thammatrailokkachan on organizing education, Monthon Krungthep", 1899/1900, National Archives Bangkok !henceforth NAB^ R5 S12/23; "Wat land of four wat in the area of Suan Dusit !Palace^", 28 Sept. 1899, NAB R5 Kh4.5/4. 14 Letters from Chaophraya Phatsakorawong to Phraya Siharat, 3 Nov. 1900; and to Prince Sommot Amoraphan !letters no. 168 and 169^, 6 Nov. 1900, NAB R5 S10 Kh/1. 15 Richard A. O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion: Community, Hierarchy and Sanctity in Urban Thai Buddhist Temples" (Ph.D. diss., Cornell University, 1978), pp. 128-51. 16 Richard A. O'Connor, "Cultural Notes on Trade and the Tai", in Ritual, Power and Economy: Upland-Lowland Contrasts in Mainland Southeast Asia, ed. Susan D. Russell (DeKalb: Northern Illinois University Center for Southeast Asian Studies 1989), pp. 27-65. 17 S.J. Tambiah, World Conqueror and World Renouncer (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1976). 18 Charles F. Keyes, "Buddhism and National Integration in Thailand", Journal of Asian Studies 30, 3 (1971): 551-67; Craig J. Reynolds, "The Buddhist Monkhood in Nineteenth Century Thailand" (Ph.D. diss., Cornell University, 1973); Tambiah, World Conqueror. 19 O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", pp. 172-88. 20 S.J. Tambiah, Buddhism and the Spirit Cults in North-east Thailand (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970), pp. 109-115. 21 O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", pp. 150-51. 22 O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", p. 228; Thalaeng Kan Khanasong 55, 9 (1967). 23 O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", pp. 149 fn 4, 228, 241-42. 24 G.E. Gerini, Chulakantamangala: The Tonsure Ceremony as Performed in Siam (Bangkok: Siam Society, 2nd ed, 1976), pp. 57-58. 25 Thalaeng Kan Khanasong 44, 9 (1956): 265; 41, 1 (1952): 15. 26 Tambiah, Spirit Cults, p. 107. 27 Tambiah, World Conqueror, pp. 233-41, 387. 28 Burmese kings readily used their own royal ordainers and ordination sites to control the Sangha, but the current Thai practice goes back to King Mongkut whose insistence on a correct site and proper ordainer created the Thammayut sect. Such distinctions are intrinsically political and remain highly controversial. 29 Wachirayan Warorot, Kankhanasong (Bangkok: Mahamakut Ratchawithayalai, 1971), pp, 34-36; O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", pp. 276-77. 30 Laos avoided these changes until recently, but now Taillard observes that Lao villagers lose interest in festivals as officials increase outside control. See Christian Taillard, "Le village lao de la region de Vientiane: Un pouvoir local face au pouvoir etatique", L'Homme 17, 2-3 (1977): 87. 31 O'Connor, "Urbanism and Religion", pp. 207-214; Craig J. Reynolds "Monastery Lands and Labour Endowments in Thailand: Some Effects of Social and Economic Change, 1868-1910", Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 22,2 (1979): 190-227. 32 Moerman, "Ban Ping's Temple", p. 165. 33 Grant A. Olson, "Cries over Spilled Holy Water: 'Complex' Responses to a Traditional Thai Religious Practice", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 22, 1 (1991): 85. 34 A. Thomas Kirsch, "Complexity in the Thai Religious System", Journal of Asian Studies 36, 2 (1977): 241-66. 35 Susan M. Darlington, "The Ordination of a Tree: The Buddhist Ecology Movement in Thailand" (Paper presented at the American Anthropological Association Meetings, Chicago, 21 Nov. 1991). 36 Charles F. Keyes, Thailand: Buddhist Kingdom as Modern Nation-State (Bangkok: Editions Duang Kamol, 1989), p. 178. 37 Kirsch, "Complexity", pp. 265-66. 38 Tambiah, The Buddhist Saints. 39 Georges Condominas, L'espace social a propos de l'asie de sud-est (Paris: Flammarion, 1980); Hanks, "The Thai Social Order". 40 Richard A. O'Connor, "Siamese Tai in Tai Context: The Impact of a Ruling Center", Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 5, 1 (1990): 1-21. 41 Charles F. Keyes, "Ethnography and Anthropological Interpretation in the Study of Thailand", in The Study of Thailand, ed. E.B. Ayal (Athens, Ohio: Ohio University Center for International Studies, Southeast Asia Program, 1978), p. 36; Taylor, "New Buddhist Movements"; Edwin Zehner, "Reform Symbolism of a Thai Middle-Class Sect: The Growth and Appeal of the Thammakai Movement", Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 21, 2 (1990): 402-426. 42 On everyday skepticism see Richard A. O'Connor, "Merit and the Market: Thai Symbolizations of Self-interest", Journal of the Siam Society 74 (1986): 62-82. 43 Much of this diversity went unrecorded and is ignored by "official" histories. Reynolds ("The Buddhist Monkhood") notes some critical archival sources and Kamala Tiyavanich supplements archival evidence with interviews and biographies to trace variant traditions. See her paper "Center and Periphery in the Thai Sangha since 1902", presented at the 43rd Annual Meeting of the Association for Asian Studies, New Orleans, 13 Apr. 1991. 44 Alexis de Tocqueville, Democracy in America (New York: Vintage Books, 1945), v. 2. p. 90. 45 Where social science imagines society as a collectivity of choice-making individuals, it has a strong methodological bias towards studying change to confirm its model of society. The reason is change reveals choice as continuity cannot. Continuity makes it impossible to differentiate between a person who agrees with his or her choice, and another who has not thought to choose. Thus the immense historical continuity of social life disappears behind myriad studies of change.