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Schooling, Identity, and Nationhood: Karen Mother-Tongue-Based Education in the Thai–Burmese Border Region

Author

Listed:
  • Hayso Thako

    (Department of Peace Studies, Payap University, Chiangmai 60000, Thailand
    Karen Education and Culture Department, Mae Sot 63110, Thailand)

  • Tony Waters

    (Institute of Sociology and Cultural Organization, Leuphana University, 21335 Lüneburg, Germany)

Abstract

Modern Karen education began in the early 1800s when introduced by British and American missionaries at roughly the time the British colonial powers arrived from India. After independence from Great Britain in 1948, Burma faced revolt from ethnic groups including the Karen, in large part, over issues of language and cultural self-rule. This led to the forcible closing of Karen-language schools by the military junta beginning in the 1960s and the re-establishment of Karen schooling by the Karen National Union (KNU) in independent self-rule territories, often near the Thai border. In this context, beginning in the 1980s, Karen-medium language spread into the highlands of Burma and into Thai refugee camps where Karen had been living for nearly four decades. Karen medium education is an important element establishing what Benedict Anderson called the “imagined community”. With mass Karen literacy, a national consciousness emerged, particularly in areas where schools were sustained. This separate consciousness is at the heart of the Karen of Kawthoolei. The Karen Education and Culture Department (KECD) was established in 1947 by the KNU. Karen schools provide mother-tongue-based education. Much of the development of the Karen medium curricula was undertaken by the KECD, and it is significantly different from that of the Burmese government’s curriculum, particularly in terms of language medium, literature, and history. Karen schooling reflects the Karen political consciousness, which will be at the heart of any peace agreements negotiated in the still-ongoing Burmese Civil War.

Suggested Citation

  • Hayso Thako & Tony Waters, 2023. "Schooling, Identity, and Nationhood: Karen Mother-Tongue-Based Education in the Thai–Burmese Border Region," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 12(3), pages 1-19, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jscscx:v:12:y:2023:i:3:p:163-:d:1092971
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    References listed on IDEAS

    as
    1. Tony Waters & David Philhour, 2019. "Cross-National Attunement to Popular Songs across Time and Place: A Sociology of Popular Music in the United States, Germany, Thailand, and Tanzania," Social Sciences, MDPI, vol. 8(11), pages 1-21, November.
    2. Su-Ann Oh & Melanie Walker & Hayso Thako, 2021. "Karen Education and Boundary-Making at the Thai-Burmese Borderland," Journal of Borderlands Studies, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 36(4), pages 637-652, August.
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