The Cambridge History of Southeast Asia
In these four volumes, published in paperback in 2000, twenty-two scholars of international reputation consider the whole of mainland and island Southeast Asia from Burma to Indonesia. Each volume has a new preface which points to the relationships with the other volumes. The prefaces also comment on some of the research into and thinking about the subject undertaken since the original contributions were completed for the first edition. Volume 2, Part 2 covers the period from World War II to the present and examines the end of European colonial empires, the emergence of political structures of the independent states, economic and social change, religious change in contemporary Southeast Asia, Southeast Asia's role and identity in decolonisation, and the ongoing weakening of links with the West.
- 4 paperback volumes make subject area more accessible
- each volume begins with a newly written historiographic essay
- considered definitive history of Southeast Asia
Reviews & endorsements
'… invaluable for historians wanting a broad picture of the region … should also be of more general interest.' Danny Yee's Book Reviews
Product details
March 2000Paperback
9780521663724
384 pages
229 × 152 × 22 mm
0.56kg
Available
Table of Contents
- 6. Southeast Asia in war and peace: the end of European colonial empires A. J. Stockwell
- 7. The political structures of the independent states Yong Mun Cheong
- 8. Economic and social change Norman G. Owen
- 9. Religious change in contemporary Southeast Asia Paul Stange
- 10. Regionalism and Nationalism C. M. Turnbull.