Cultural life

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Also known as: État du Cambodge, Democratic Kampuchea, Khmer Republic, Kingdom of Cambodia, People’s Republic of Kampuchea, Preahreacheanachakr Kampuchea, Roat Kampuchea, Royaume de Cambodge, State of Cambodia

Before 1970, Cambodian culture and artistic expression were informed by the greatness of the past. The Khmer empire owed much to Indian influence, but its achievements also represented original contributions to Asian civilization. The magnificent architecture and sculpture of the Angkor period (802–1432), as seen in the temple complexes at Angkor Wat and Angkor Thom, marked a high point of Khmer creativity. Following the capture of Angkor by the Tai (15th century) and the crumbling of the empire, the region underwent four centuries of foreign invasions, civil war, and widespread depopulation. It was not until the establishment of the French protectorate in 1863 that internal security was restored, the country’s borders stabilized, and efforts undertaken to revive traditional Khmer art forms. After Cambodia gained independence from France in 1953, the government placed particular emphasis on accelerating that revival. This coincided with the rapid expansion of primary and secondary school facilities and the emergence of education as the most important factor of social mobility.

The leadership of Democratic Kampuchea, inspired in large part by the People’s Republic of China, subordinated culture to its own interpretations of Marxist-Leninist doctrines. The government in Phnom Penh after 1979, however, made serious efforts to restore such traditional forms of artistic expression as Cambodian classical music, ballet, and popular theatre. Foreign aid from India and Poland was used to clean and maintain some of the temples at Angkor, which had suffered from years of vandalism and neglect. Those aspects of high culture have had to compete for people’s attention with popular music and videotapes imported from Hong Kong, Thailand, and elsewhere.

Daily life and social customs

The sharp contrasts that have long existed between urban and rural Cambodians have broken down to some extent. That process began in the 1970s with the displacement of more than two million Cambodians from their urban homes, and it continued with the reoccupation of urban areas after 1979 by many who originally had lived in rural regions. After 1990 those changes were accelerated by the near ubiquity of television sets in rural areas—albeit in villages, rather than in individual homes—and by the penetration of globalization into the countryside. The pace of life, however, continues to be much faster in Cambodia’s larger cities than elsewhere in the country. Although Cambodia is impoverished, urban people tend to be better off than farmers. Salaried employment in government, industry, and Cambodia’s rapidly expanding service sector allows many city dwellers to own cars and motorcycles, eat fast food, and enjoy a vibrant nightlife. Outside Phnom Penh, however, rural Cambodians largely rely on bicycles, oxcarts, and sporadic public transportation, and organized evening entertainment is infrequent.

Food shortages, a part of daily life in the past, have become less common with political stability and international aid. The Cambodian rural diet, however, tends to be rather monotonous, based almost solely on rice and fish. Variation comes with the garnishes used: hot peppers, mint, lemongrass, ginger, prahoc (a spiced fish paste), and red curry paste. A popular dish is ka tieu, a soup usually made with pork and rice noodles. Cambodian cuisine makes use of mangoes, papayas, bananas, durians, and other locally grown fruits.

Cambodians both rural and urban celebrate distinctive festivals and holidays such as January 7 (victory over Pol Pot), Bonn Chaul Chhnam (Khmer New Year; mid-April), Paris Peace Agreement Day (October 23), and Bonn Om Touk (Water and Moon Festival; early November), which marks the annual flow reversal of the Tonle Sap.

The arts

Music and dance forms

Music occupied a dominant place in traditional Cambodian culture. It was sung and played everywhere—by children at play, by adults at work, by young men and women while courting—and invariably was part of the many celebrations and festivals that took place throughout the year at Buddhist temples in the countryside. Traditional music ensembles, distinguished in part by their instrumentation, included various combinations of wooden flutes and reed instruments, bowed and plucked lutes, struck zithers, xylophones and metallophones, kong vong gong circles, and drums of different sizes. The players followed the lead of one instrument, often the xylophone, and improvised their own parts building from a pool of conventional melodic and rhythmic formulae.

Dancing and drama were also important forms of artistic expression. The Royal Ballet in Phnom Penh specialized in the classical, highly stylized apsara dances as well as dance-dramas recounting the Reamker (Ramayana) epic and other tales. Those forms were adapted over the centuries by both the Khmer and the Thai from the ancient dances of Angkor. In the countryside other dramatic genres and folk dances were performed at festivals and weddings by wandering troupes. The national classical ballet, reconstituted in the early 1980s by a handful of surviving dancers, has become highly professional and has toured successfully abroad. King Norodom Sihanouk’s daughter, Princess Bopha Devi, a former star performer in the royal troupe, vigorously supported the revival of classical dance during her tenure as minister of culture at the beginning of the 21st century. The Royal University of Fine Arts has been integral to the resurrection of Cambodian classical music and dance following their virtual extermination in the 1970s. Cambodian communities abroad have also established schools and cultural institutions to help perpetuate those traditions.

Although broadly valued as symbols of national and ethnic identity, Cambodian classical performing arts have little practical appeal for the younger population. Cambodian, Thai, and other Asian popular songs have a much wider audience, as do locally made digital video discs (DVDs)—the typical medium through which movies are now produced and distributed in Cambodia. Among urban Cambodian males, karaoke bars are a major source of entertainment.