Crossing The Rubicon? Maintenance and Change Among Today’s Iban in Sarawak

  • Peter Sercombe Independent researcher
Keywords: change, iban, maintenance

Abstract

Among communities reliant on subsistence agriculture as a means of production, transition to wage work may seem indicative of economic progress. In the 21st century, the Iban in East Malaysia utilise three production modes: subsistence rice farming; commerce; and, waged work, to support food requirements and satisfy consumer needs. Waged work is increasingly important, even replacing subsistence and commerce. This study considers perceptions of maintenance and change among the Iban in the Sri Aman Division of Sarawak. The purpose is to gain perspectives of heads of households about “maintenance” and “change”. Research was conducted qualitatively, via observation and interviews. Maintenance is reflected through ongoing use of the Iban language; the longhouse is seen as being of continuing importance for resident and non-resident relatives, even if no longer bound to ancestral longhouse territory. Changes include new technologies, the importance of money, reduced adherence to Iban traditions, and conversion to Catholicism, among the community studied here. Salience of these matters lies in Iban understanding of ways in which modernisation is occurring in their community, in a region known for its biological, cultural and linguistic diversity, providing a voice for community members, and their insights about the contemporary Iban world.

References

Abdollahian, M. A., Coan, T. G., Oh, H. and Yesilada, B.A. (2012). Dynamics of Cultural Change: The Human Development Perspective. International Studies Quarterly , 56(4): 827-842.

Abdullah, R. G. (2016). Accessibility and development in rural Sarawak. A case study of the Baleh River basin, Kapit District, Sarawak, Malaysia. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.

Appell, G. (2001). Iban studies: Their contributions to social theory and the ethnography of other Borneo societies. In: J Sutlive & V. Sutlive, eds., The Encyclopaedia of Iban Studies. Kuching: Tun Jugah Foundation & Borneo Research Council, Inc., Vol. 3, pp. 741-85.

Arenz, C., M. Haug, S. Seitz & Venz, O. (2017). Dayak societies in transition - Balancing continuity and change. In: C. Arenz, M. Haug, S. Seitz, & O. Venz. eds., Continuity under Change in Dayak Societies Singapore: Springer, pp. 13-43.

Austin, R. F. (1976). Some demographic characteristics of the Iban population of Brunei. Part 1: 1947-1960. Brunei Museum Journal: 64-69.

Boulanger, C. (2009). A Sleeping Tiger: Ethnicity, class, and new Dayak dreams in Sarawak. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.

Bourdieu, P. (1990). In other words. Cambridge: Polity Press.

Chambers, E. (2003). Applied ethnography. In: N.K. Denzin, & Y. Lincoln, eds., Collecting and Interpreting Qualitative Materials. New York: Sage, pp. 389-418.

Christensen, H. (2002). Ethnobotany of the Iban and the Kelabit. Forest department of Sarawak, NEPCon, Denmark & University of Aarhus, Denmark.

Chua, L. (2012). The Christianity of Culture: Conversion, ethnic citizenship, and the matter of religion in Malaysian Borneo. London: Macmillan.

Clastres, P. (1989). Society Against the State (2nd ed.). Princeton, USA: Zone Books.

Cramb, R. A. (2007). Land and Longhouse: Agrarian Transformation in the Uplands of Sarawak. Copenhagen: NIAS Press.

Cultural Survival (1986). Dam in Sarawak forces 3,000 Iban to resettle. Retrieved 25 June 2019, from https://www.culturalsurvival.org/publications/cultural-survival-quarterly/dam-sarawak-forces-3000-iban-resettle.

Davison, J. & Sutlive, V.H. (1991). The children of Nising: Images of headhunting and male sexuality in Iban ritual and oral literature. In: V.H. Sutlive, ed., Female and Male in Borneo: Contributions and Challenges to Gender Studies. Phillips: Borneo Research Council, pp. 153-230.

DeKoninck, R., S. Bernard, & Bissonnette, J-F. eds. (2011). Borneo transformed: Agricultural expansion on the Southeast Asian frontier. Singapore: Singapore University Press.

Ember, C.R. & Ember, M. R. (2011). Cultural anthropology (13th ed.). London: Pearson.

Freeman, J.D. (1953). Family and Kinship among the Iban of Sarawak. Unpublished PhD thesis, Cambridge: University of Cambridge.

Freeman, J.D.(1992). The Iban of Borneo (2nd ed.). Kuala Lumpur: S. Abdul Majeed & Co.

Freeman, J.D. (1956). ‘Utrolateral’ and ‘utrolocal,’ Man, 56: 87-88.

Girard, N. & Hindstrom, H. (2015). Southeast Asia. In: P. Grant, ed., State of the world’s minorities and indigenous peoples Minority Rights Group International, pp. 148-167.

Graham, P. (1983). The power of transcendence: An analysis of the literature on Iban shamanism. Unpublished MA thesis, Australian National University, Canberra.

Greenfield, P.M. (2016). Social change, cultural evolution and human development. Current Opinion in Psychology. 8: 84-92.

Griffin K. (1978). International inequality and national poverty. London: Palgrave Macmillan.

Hall, S., & du Gay, P. eds. (1996). Questions of cultural identity. New York: Sage.

Hansen, T.S., & Mertz, O. (2006). Extinction or adaptation? Three decades of change in shifting cultivation in Sarawak, Malaysia. Land Degradation and Development, 17: 135-48.

Hasegawa, G. (2018). Iban Gawai rituals in their twilight in Kapit, Malaysia, Indonesia and the Malay World. 46(135): 198-217.

Heyzer, N. (1995). Gender, population and environment in the context of deforestation: A Malaysian case study. Institute of Development Studies: Gender Relations and Environmental Change, 26(1): 40-46.

Hopper, P. (2007). Understanding cultural globalization. Cambridge: Polity.

Inglehart, R., & Baker, W.E. (2000). Modernization, cultural change, and the persistence of traditional values. American Sociological Review. 65(1):19-51.

Iskandar, J. & Ellen, R. (1999). In situ conservation of landraces among the Baduy of West Java. Journal of Ethnobiology, 19(1): 97-125.

Janowski, M. (2005). Rice as a bridge between two symbolic economies: Migration within and out of the Kelabit Highlands, Sarawak. In: Wadley, R. ed., Environmental Change in Native and Colonial Histories of Borneo: Lessons from the Past, Prospects for the Future. Leiden: KITLV Press, pp. 245–269.

Jawan, J.A. (1994). Iban politics and economic development: Their patterns of change. Bangi: Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia.

Jensen, E. (1966). The Sarawak Iban. Sarawak Museum Journal, 13: 1-31.

Jensen, E. (1974). The Iban and their religion. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Kedit, P. (1991). ‘Meanwhile back home …’ Bejalai and their effects on men and women. In: V.H. Sutlive, ed., Female and male in Borneo: Contributions and challenges to gender studies Phillips: Borneo Research Council, pp. 295-316.

Klüver, J. (2008). The socio-cultural evolution of our species: The history and possible future of human societies and civilizations. European Molecular Biology Organization, 9: 55-58.

Lévi-Strauss, C. (1952). Race and History. New York: UNESCO.

Lévi-Strauss, C. (1966). The Savage Mind. London: Weidenfeld & Nicholson.

McDaniel, D. (2002). Electronic tigers of Southeast Asia: The politics of media, technology, and national development. Ames: Iowa State University Press.

Macionis, J.J. (1987). Sociology. New York: Prentice Hall.

Mashman, V. (1991). Warriors and weavers: A study of gender relations among the Iban of Sarawak. In: V.H. Sutlive, ed., Female and Male in Borneo: Contributions and challenges to gender studies. Phillips: Borneo Research Council, pp. 231-271.

Mortimer, I. (2014). Centuries of Change: Which century saw the most change and why it matters to us. London: Bodley Head.

Ngidang, D. (1995). The politics of development in longhouse communities in Sarawak, East Malaysia. Development in Practice. 5(4): 305-312.

Norberg-Hodge, H. (2000). Ancient Futures: Learning from Ladakh. New York: Random House.

Padoch, C. (1982). Migration and its alternatives among the Iban of Sarawak. Leiden: Brill.

Padoch, C., & Peluso, N. L. eds. (1996). Borneo in Transition: People, forest, conservation and development. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Peletz, M. (2015). A tale of two courts: Judicial transformation and the rise of a corporate Islamic governmentality in Malaysia. American Ethnologist, 42(1): 144–160.

Postill, J. (2000). Borneo again: media, social life and nation-building among the Iban of Malaysian Borneo. Unpublished PhD, University College, London.

Postill, J. (2003). Knowledge, literacy and media among the Iban of Sarawak. A reply to Maurice Bloch. Social Anthropology, 11(1): 79-99.

Postill, J. (2008). Media and nation building: How the Iban became Malaysian. New York: Berghahn Books.

Richards, A. (1981). An Iban-English Dictionary. New York: Oxford University Press.

Rostow, W.W. (1960). The stages of economic growth: A non-Communist manifesto. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Rousseau, J. (1990). Central Borneo: Ethnic identity and social life in a stratified society. Oxford: Clarendon Press.

Sahlins, M. D., & Service, E. R. eds. (1960). Evolution and Culture. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Sandin, B. (1967). The Sea Dayaks of Borneo before White Rajah Rule. London: Macmillan.

Sather, C. (1993). Posts, hearths and thresholds: The Iban longhouse as a ritual structure. In: J.J. Fox, ed. Inside Austronesian houses: Perspectives on domestic designs for living. Canberra: Australian National University Press, pp. 67-117.

Sather, C. (1996). “All threads are white”: Iban egalitarianism reconsidered. In: J.J. Fox & C. Sather, eds., Origins, alliance and ancestry: Explorations in Austronesian ethnography. Canberra: Australian National University, pp. 73-112.

Sather, C. (2004). Iban. In: K.G. Ooi, ed., Southeast Asia: A Historical Encyclopedia from Angkor Wat to East Timor, Santa Barbara: ABS-CLIO, Vol. 2, pp. 623-626.

Sellato, B. (2002). Innermost Borneo: Studies in Dayak cultures. Singapore: Singapore University Press.

Sercombe, J.S. (2008). To what extent has the development of Malaysia impacted on the development of the Iban of Sarawak? Unpublished BA dissertation, University of Bradford, UK.

Sercombe, P.G. (1999). Adjacent cross-border Iban communities: A comparison with reference to language. Bijdragen Tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, 155(4): 596-616.

Soda, R. (2001). Rural-urban migration of the Iban of Sarawak and changes in long-house communities. Geographical Review of Japan, 74(1): 92-112.

Steward, J.H. (1972). Theory of culture change: The methodology of multilinear evolution. Urbana, USA: University of Illinois Press.

Sutlive, V. H. (1992). The Iban of Sarawak: Chronicle of a vanishing world. Kuala Lumpur: S. Abdul Majeed & Co.

Ting, J. (2005). The egalitarian architecture of the Iban longhouse. In: A. Leach & G. Matthewson, eds., Celebration – Proceedings of the 22nd annual conference of the Society of Architectural Historians, Australia and New Zealand (n.p.).

Tönnies, F. (2001). Community and Civil Society. In: J. Harris, ed. & M. Hollis, trans., Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp.1-2.

Trigger, B. (1998). Sociocultural Evolution: New perspectives on the past. Oxford: Blackwell.

Tsing, A. (1993). In the Realm of the Diamond Queen: Marginality in an out-of-the-way place. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Uchibori, M. (1978). The leaving of this transient world: A study of Iban eschatological and mortuary practices. Unpublished PhD Thesis, Australian National University, Canberra.

Williams, R. (1980). Culture and Materialism: Selected essays. London: Verso.

Zharkevich, I. (2019). Money and blood: Remittances as a substance of relatedness in transnational families in Nepal. American Anthropologist, 121(4): 884-896.
Published
2023-12-28
How to Cite
Sercombe, P. (2023). Crossing The Rubicon? Maintenance and Change Among Today’s Iban in Sarawak. Journal of Borneo-Kalimantan, 9(2), 43 - 56. https://doi.org/10.33736/jbk.6211.2023