essay

A Cambodian village under the Khmer Rouge, 1975-1979

Genocide and democracy in Cambodia : the Khmer Rouge, the United Nations, and the international community, edited with an introduction by Ben Kiernan (41) • Published In 1993 • Pages: 51-63

By: Ebihara, May, Kiernan, Ben.

Abstract
In this document , anthropologist May Ebihara provides a detailed account of her 1989 and 1990 visit to the Cambodian village of Sobay which she studied in 1959-1960. The focus is on changes that have occurred in the village in the intervening three decades and especially because of the 1975-1979 civil war. She shows that the Khmer Rouge controlled Sobay only after their final capture of Phnom Pehn on April 17, 1975. For this reason, the residents of Sobay were politically labelled as "new people" which subjected them to even more harsh repression than people in formerly "liberated" areas. A majority of the villagers were killed, although some of Ebihara's former friends and neigbors also managed to survived.
Subjects
Community structure
Aftermath of combat
Warfare
Political parties
Ingroup antagonisms
Settlement patterns
Public works
Form and rules of government
Household
Extended families
Medical care
Peacemaking
Labor supply and employment
Research and development
culture
Cambodians
HRAF PubDate
2012
Region
Asia
Sub Region
Southeast Asia
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Anthropologist
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Teferi Abate Adem; 2012
Field Date
1959-1960, 1989-1991
Coverage Date
1959-1991
Coverage Place
Cambodia
Notes
May Ebihara
Includes bibliographical references
LCCN
93060073
LCSH
Khmers