@article{oai:kanazawa-u.repo.nii.ac.jp:00055443, author = {NISHIMOTO, Yoichi and 西本, 陽一}, journal = {金沢大学人間科学系研究紀要, Bulletin of the Faculty of Human Sciences Kanazawa University}, month = {Mar}, note = {Recently, anthropologists have begun to encounter villagers in small-scale society often talking, with some objectification, about their ethnic group. This paper examines one of such cases, narratives about “the Lahu” by Lahu villagers in Northern Thailand and considers the theoretical implications that such narratives have for social-cultural anthropology. The paper argues that the “Lahu” narratives have not been formed in or due to the influences of recent global processes, yet by the Lahu’s historical experience of ethnic relations at the regional level, in which the Lahu have always faced overwhelmingly powerful ethnic neighbors. Furthermore, from the case study of the “Lahu” narratives, I suggest several hypotheses, including one that group members who share historical experience have a unique style of narratives.}, pages = {45--70}, title = {住民が自集団について語る現象について - 北タイ・ラフ族の「ラフ」の語りが示唆するもの-}, volume = {13}, year = {2021} }