Synthesis Through Fieldwork Method From Highland Mae Hong Son To Urban Bang Yi Khan

Main Article Content

นุชนภางค์ ชุมดี
สิริวรรณ สิรวณิชย์

บทคัดย่อ

Sociology explains stories in the endeavour to grasp social and cultural context from the past, which it explores differently from perspectives of other science in concepts and methodologies for finding the answer. This article aspires to find a concept to cross the boundary of local history study methods to other shades. The researcher describes the local history method in three aspects follows: 1) the meanings and importance of cross-disciplines, 2) examining case study as interdisciplinary fieldwork in cultural tourism in Mae Song Son, and 3) the trial concept between local history and applied ethnomusicology methods through the activity entitled. "Sound-Story-Local History in Bang Yi Khan", an integrated course between Local History Fieldwork, Silpakorn University and Music for Society, Princess Galyani Vadhana Institute of Music. The finding shows that cross-discipline can more deeply understand local people with other approaches and, secondly, melt the frontier of knowledge that expanded fieldwork method from creativity and imagination.

Article Details

บท
Articles
Author Biographies

นุชนภางค์ ชุมดี, สาขาวิชาประวัติศาสตร์ท้องถิ่น คณะโบราณคดี มหาวิทยาลัยศิลปากร

Nootnapang Chumdee holds a Master’s Degree in Humanities from Chiang Mai University. She is a lecturer in the local history major, and the faculty of Archaeology at Silpakorn University. Past research experience includes Co-Researcher in “The Synthesis of TRF Research in Mae Hong Son Province within the Framework of Sustainable Development Supported” by TRF Research Projects (2019), Presented paper “Border in Transitions: The Dynamic of Mae Hong Son Highlands,” Session 24, The 22nd Congress of the Indo-Pacific Prehistory Association.

สิริวรรณ สิรวณิชย์, สาขาวิชาประวัติศาสตร์ท้องถิ่น คณะโบราณคดี มหาวิทยาลัยศิลปากร

Siriwan Sirivanich holds a Master’s Degree in Humanities from Chiang Mai University. She is a lecturer in the local history major, and the faculty of Archaeology at Silpakorn University. Her works expect the subject of Oral History, Western Local History in Thailand, and so on Past projects include “Development of a Capitalist Economy in Pai, Mae Hong Son Province” (2019), “Phantai Norasingh: Memory and History in Samut Sakhon” (2020), and recently, the textbook “Concepts and Methods of Local History” (2022).