Abstract
The bronze drum is a living specimen of Southeast Asian culture and a testimony to the development of Southeast Asian societies for more than 2,000 years. The bronze drum has been inherited dynamically hitherto, and the Thai royal and national ceremonies still adopt it. However, current scholarship on bronze drums is confined chiefly to static studies, which caused the omission of the essence of glocalization. This paper takes the theory of glocalization; namely, the bronze drum is the interpenetration of the global and the local results in unique outcomes in a specific geographic occupancy, subsequently, through an interdisciplinary research method that draws on multiple lenses from Western, Chinese, and Thai sources, this study devotes to answering the question: why are the bronze drums used in Siamese state ceremonies? Eventually, while answering the question, there is a theoretical vista for glocalization in broader Southeast Asian Studies.
Author Information
Taixing Li, Graduate School Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Haosheng Duan, Chulalongkorn University, Thailand
Paper Information
Conference: IICAH2023
Stream: History/Historiography
This paper is part of the IICAH2023 Conference Proceedings (View)
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To cite this article:
Li T., Duan H., & A. (2023) The Glocalization of Bronze Drums in the Siamese State Ceremonies ISSN: 2432-4604 – The IAFOR International Conference on Arts & Humanities – Hawaii 2023 Official Conference Proceedings (pp. 317-329) https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2432-4604.2023.26
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.22492/issn.2432-4604.2023.26
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