Reviews
An ethnographically rich and theoretically sophisticated book, offering a complex analysis of the forces underlying religious revival among the Tamil and more broadly 'Indian' population of Malaysia. Willford focuses on unstudied problem: the peculiar predicament faced by diasporic Indians in Southeast Asia. This imaginative study stands to make a substantial contribution to thinking across a range of scholarly fields. - Danilyn Rutherford, Department of Anthropology, University of Chicago ""Cage of Freedom is an exceptionally good, uncommonly rich ethnography of the Tamil community in Malaysia, among the best ever ethnographies of this area ever written, based in thorough field research and clearly informed by an attentive ear and an astute observational consciousness. We learn much about the lives and experiences, the hopes and fantasies of individual Tamils - from both lower and middle class locations - but this careful presentation of Tamil perspectives never degenerates into the naive valorization of indigenous authenticity; hence, it never becomes an excuse for turning away from the social and historical complexities of the situation in Malaysia. This book is an exemplary act of anthropological integrity; its insistence on reading, on interrogating the conclusions and perceptions that local people have about themselves is all too rare in anthropology today. Willford may perhaps teach students, once again, that the project of anthropology is a critical one, a relentlessly questioning one."" - Rosalind Morris, Professor of Anthropology and Associate Director for the Center for Comparative Literature and Society, Columbia University