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Full Description
This reflective and provocative 1998 book outlines the emergence of the nation-states of modern Southeast Asia. It considers various ways of looking at Southeast Asian history, combining narrative, analysis, and discussion. The book focuses mainly on the period from the eighteenth century to the present. It is divided into three sections: the first gives a broad historical overview of Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei, the Philippines, Burma/Myanmar, Vietnam, and Siam/Thailand; the second reflects, in a comparative context, on significant problems in understanding Southeast Asia's past and present; the third explores the current state of writing Southeast Asian history. Underlying the discussion is an awareness of how ongoing tensions between East and West shape history and frame the present. This book reflects a lifetime's scholarship and will become a major interpretive synthesis of modern Southeast Asia.
Contents
Preface; Part I. Present and Past: 1. Indonesia; 2. Malaysia, Singapore, Brunei; 3. The Philippines; 4. Burma/Myanmar; 5. Vietnam; 6. Siam/Thailand; Part II. Problems and Policies: 7. Colonial and national frontiers; 8. Colonial authority; 9. The industrial revolution; 10. Parliamentary government and Southeast Asia; 11. Nationalism; 12. The Japanese; 13. Gaining independence; 14. Democratic institutions; 15. International factors in the winning of independence; 16. Armies; 17. Millenarianism; 18. Foreign policy; Part III. Period and Perspectives: 19. Time and place; 20. Septentrionalism.