About the Book
This is the first visual ethnography of the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia, covering the period from 1993 to 2023. To the general public, the people are Orang Asli (“original people”), indigenous ethnic minorities of Peninsular Malaysia. To missionaries, they are heathens who should be Christian or Muslim. To government administrators, they are among the country’s so-called hardcore poor, despised nomads who should be settled for their own good. To anthropologists, they are ethnic minorities, but they are also forest collectors and traders, egalitarian peoples, and one of the last remaining hunter-gatherer societies left in the world. In their own view, they are Batek—batɛk həp, the “people of the forest.”
This book sets out to portray the Batek through photographs, selected from the 15,300 or so images in my collection.
This book sets out to portray the Batek through photographs, selected from the 15,300 or so images in my collection.
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Features & Details
- Primary Category: Arts & Photography Books
- Additional Categories Social Science, Malaysia
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Project Option: US Letter, 8.5×11 in, 22×28 cm
# of Pages: 28 - Publish Date: Apr 01, 2025
- Language English
- Keywords photography, ethnography, hunter-gatherers
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About the Creator
Tuck-Po Lye
Penang, Malaysia
Lye Tuck-Po is a Senior Lecturer at Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Malaysia. Her primary research interests are in environmental knowledge and perceptions, hunter-gatherer and other mobilities, visual anthropology, and the anthropology of Malaysian indigenous peoples, especially Batek and other Orang Asli. She is currently interested in human-animal relations and ethnoprimatology and is working on the Batek's cultural and acoustic knowledge of gibbons. She is the author of Changing pathways: Forest degradation and the Batek of Pahang, Malaysia (Lexington Books, 2004). She has also worked with Penan peoples of Sarawak, Khmer and Kuay farmers in Cambodia, and a range of diverse groups in Sabah.