149x Filetype PDF File size 0.19 MB Source: read.dukeupress.edu
BOOK REVIEWS—SOUTHEAST ASIA 717 The Sociology of Secret Societies: A Study of Chinese Secret Societies in Singapore and Peninsular Malaysia. By MAK LAU FONG. Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 1981. ix, 178 pp. Tables, Maps, Diagrams, Ap- pendixes, Bibliography, Index. $29.95. This book is an interesting attempt to subject the history of Chinese secret societies in Singapore and western Malaysia to sociological analysis. Data were drawn both from documentary sources and from interviews with some 149 members of contemporary societies. Disconcertingly little use was made of interviews with older Downloaded from http://read.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-asian-studies/article-pdf/42/3/717/1733568/s0021911800074064.pdf by guest on 20 January 2023 people to reconstruct social arrangements in the immediate past. The overarching analytical framework, based on three "conditions" for the persistence of secret societies, is a total bore that serves only to obscure the considerable theoretical interest of the subject matter. In general terms, Mak Lau Fong's argument is that, despite their historical derivation from the anti-Manchu Triads in China, secret societies in the early Straits Settlements were essentially conformist organizations that helped the colonial govern- ment rule Chinese immigrants. Then, during the subsequent period of heavy Chinese immigration, from the second quarter of the nineteenth century on, secret societies served primarily to protect the occupational monopolies of their particularistically denned memberships. At some unspecified time after 1890, their primary function shifted once again, this time to the "protection" of businesses within territorially defined urban turfs. With regard to the emergence and function of secret societies in the early period, Fong takes issue with J. J. M. de Groot and Maurice Freedman, who suggested that secret societies appeared overseas only when Chinese were faced by a challenge to their control of their own affairs. Fong argues instead that, when government is unable to provide adequate legal protection to a minority, it necessarily has recourse to indirect rule, in this case the kapitan system, and that Chinese headmen (kapitans) needed the secret-society infrastructure to rule effectively wherever local Chinese society was ethnically heterogeneous. Unfortunately, the author does a poor job of mustering evidence for this plausible proposition. Instead of classifying overseas Chinese communities according to the degree of ethnic heterogeneity, Fong treats the variable as binary. The West Borneo case is pronounced homogeneous (largely Hakka), overlooking what may have been even in the nineteenth century a Teochiu majority in the city of Pontianak, whereas the Philippines is considered heterogeneous despite the overwhelming preponderance of Hokkiens. Nor is he able to show that kapitan leaders actually relied on secret societies in more than one or two of the Chinese communities that boasted both. As for the Straits Settlements, he asserts that, prior to the outbreak of intersocietal violence during the second quarter of the nineteenth century, the various secret-society lodges were all organizationally subordinate to the Ghee Hin, and that the symbols and ideology of brotherhood prevailed over ethnic divisiveness, but unfortunately there is no real evidence for either assertion. Why were secret societies helpful to kapitans in their efforts to control a heterogeneous community? Primarily, Fong maintains, because Triad gestures, passwords, and other arcane symbols enabled Chinese ethnics who spoke no common language to communicate. Quite apart from considerations of how much true communication these symbols afforded, this formulation overlooks a good deal of evidence that Hokkien was something of a lingua franca in the Straits Settlements during the nineteenth century. Fong is quite right in pointing to the important role of secret societies in helping 718 JOURNAL OF ASIAN STUDIES ethnic groups maintain a grip on their respective economic niches, but his under- standing of Chinese ethnicity is simplistic. His units of analysis are the usual speech groups of comparative overseas Chinese studies, which he takes to be essentially homogeneous, as did the colonial census takers. Recent research on native-place particularism in China, however, has made it clear that we are dealing here with a hierarchy of regionally based ethnicity and subethnicity. The relevant units for cumulating native-place ties ranged from subcounty townships-cum-marketing com- munities up to conventional groupings of provinces; how sojourners organized with Downloaded from http://read.dukeupress.edu/journal-of-asian-studies/article-pdf/42/3/717/1733568/s0021911800074064.pdf by guest on 20 January 2023 respect to native place was a function of the relative numbers from various local systems as well as of the competitive situation. In China proper as well as overseas, sojourners from local systems within a trading system or an administrative unit joined forces at whatever level in the hierarchy was necessary to claim a prize and deny it to other similar alliances. With respect to the heyday of secret societies during the later half of the nineteenth century, Fong writes: "It is quite apparent that during this period speech ties had been greatly weakened since . . . Hainanese gangs fought against other Hainanese gangs, and similarly Cantonese gangs fought against Cantonese gangs." This conclusion is dead wrong. Note, for instance, the violent strife during the same historical era between Chang-chou and Ch'iian-chou peoples (Hokkien subethnics) in Taiwan and between Sam Yap and Sze Yap (both "Cantonese") in California. The extent to which secret-society lodges were ethnically homogeneous is critical to a sociological understanding of secret-society conflict. Yet Fong's approach to the issue is haphazard and equivocal. Writing in I960, Freedman argued that "although there was violence enough, there might well have been more" if societies had lacked cross-cutting ties altogether. In the 1870s, a local observer in Penang asserted that in several riots the opposing parties were speech groups per se rather than secret societies: "The solemn obligations of the secret societies were cast to the winds. ..." But in fact at least some societies had an ethnically mixed membership. Thus, in Freedman's words, "overlapping ties were likely to reinforce the solidarity of the Chinese vis-a-vis the outer world even as they temporarily weakened a dialect group or secret society by distracting the loyalty of some of its members." Any serious sociological treatment of Chinese secret societies would have to follow up this insightful lead, but Fong ignores it altogether. The author avoids major gaffes in analyzing his interview data on the recent situation, but he asks quite simple questions of them. The most interesting part of the contemporary analysis shows that a corrupt police force provides much of the protection needed by businessmen, thereby precipitating the decline of the protection rackets on which contemporary secret societies rely for income. At several points, we are able to glimpse a promising sociological imagination at work, but the promise is not fulfilled in this book, which is essentially unfinished, unvetted, and unedited. Above all, it is an arrogant book that dismisses relevant scholarship, both sociological and Sinological. Simmel's work on conflict should have been the author's analytical bible, but the master is referred to only for his definition of secret societies. Lawrence Crissman, whose sociological model is a must for anyone setting out to analyze overseas Chinese social organization, is not even cited. And when not belittled, Freedman is ignored. Tant pis. G. WILLIAM SKINNER Stanford University
no reviews yet
Please Login to review.