Publication

From Island to Nation-state Formations and Developmentalism: Penan Story-telling as Narratives of ‘territorialising space’ and Reclaiming Stewardship

dc.contributor.authorZawawi Ibrahim
dc.contributor.editorDr. Paul J. Carnegie
dc.contributor.editorProfessor Lian Kwen Fee
dc.date.accessioned2025-11-17T07:39:52Z
dc.date.available2025-11-17T07:39:52Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.description.abstractThis paper is an attempt to position Penan story-telling in the context of the evolution of Borneo from an island to that of a nation-state formation, defined ultimately by the grand narratives of Malaysian developmentalism. The paper initially addresses the historical picture of this transformation. It also critically interrogates the question of epistemology in relation to the anthropology of ‘the Other’, specifically the methodology of research on indigenous society. Against the dominant state-capital narrations of development, the paper moves towards a postmodernist/storytelling ethnography of Penan de territorialisation. It is argued that indigenous counter-narratives are equally capable of generating their own legitimate forms of knowledge and discourse on development. By adding to the Penan ethnographic base that has been paved by scholars such as Langub and Brosius, I foreground my analysis of Penan de-territorialisation based on my fieldwork in the Ulu Baram area of Sarawak, where I present an overview of the impact of the state-sponsored modernisation process (read: developmentalism) on the Penan traditional landscape and communitas. My argument on Penan de-territorialsiation is further empowered by the storytelling of Penghulu James, which is a representation of an indigenous notion of place, space and territory. This may also be seen as a defence of Penan claims to 'stewardship' over the land despite their traditional status as non cultivators, to contest the current bureaucratic 'rational legal' and official discourse which governs the present Penan landscape. The paper calls for the role of a de-colonising anthropology in mediating knowledge from the margins through the postmodernist texts and storytelling ethnography, to narrate not only the realities of de-territorialisation, but more importantly, the‘re-territorializing’ imaginings of indigenous society.
dc.format.extent33
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.ubd.edu.bn/handle/123456789/3666
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherInstitute of Asian Studies, Universiti Brunei Darussalam
dc.relation.ispartofseries15
dc.subject.lcshPenan (Bornean people)—Territorial rights
dc.subject.lcshIndigenous peoples—Malaysia—Sarawak—Land tenure
dc.subject.lcshStorytelling—Social aspects—Malaysia—Sarawak
dc.subject.lcshDeveloping countries—Economic development—Social aspects
dc.subject.lcshEthnology—Malaysia—Sarawak.
dc.titleFrom Island to Nation-state Formations and Developmentalism: Penan Story-telling as Narratives of ‘territorialising space’ and Reclaiming Stewardship
dc.typeWorking Paper
dspace.entity.typePublication