ABSTRACT

The study of the history of Southeast Asia is still growing, evolving, deepening and changing as an academic field. Over the past few decades historians have added nuance to traditional topics such as Islam and nationalism, and created new ones, such as gender, globalization and the politics of memory. The Routledge Handbook of Southeast Asian History looks at the major themes that have developed in the study of modern Southeast Asian history since the mid-18th century.

Contributions by experts in the field are clustered under three major headings - Political History, Economic History, and Social and Cultural History – and chapters challenge the boundaries between topics and regions. Alongside the rise and fall of colonialism, topics include conflict in Southeast Asia, tropical ecology, capitalism and its discontents, the major religions of the region, gender, and ethnicity.

The Handbook provides a stimulating introduction to the most important themes within the subject area, and is an invaluable reference work for any student and researcher on Southeast Asia and Asian and World history.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

In search of Southeast Asian history

part |117 pages

Political history

chapter |10 pages

Resources, Rituals, and Realms

The premodern polities

chapter |11 pages

The Colonial Intrusion

Boundaries and structures

chapter |9 pages

Colonizing Minds and Bodies

Schooling in colonial Southeast Asia

chapter |11 pages

Separatism, Civil War, and Genocide

Conflicts within nations

part |109 pages

Social and cultural history

chapter |11 pages

Chinese Economic Predominance in Southeast Asia

A long-term perspective

chapter |10 pages

Constructing Southeast Asian Pasts

A new retrospective