Seditious Histories: Contesting Thai and Southeast Asian Pasts

Front Cover
University of Washington Press, Dec 1, 2006 - History - 376 pages
This collection of eleven essays by senior Asianist Craig J. Reynolds features debates about meaning in Southeast Asian and Thai history. History is vital to collective memory, dynastic succession, and an individual's identification with place. Contemporary events can prick sensitivities about what a proper account of the ancient, premodern, or modern past should be. Craig Reynolds explores themes that have hitherto been treated superficially in Thai historical writing, including Siam's semi-colonialism in the late nineteenth century. The concepts of militarism and masculinity, the relationship of manual knowledge to ethnoscience, and the dialectics of globalization. Other more familiar topics under Reynolds' microscope, treated with new material and approaches, include cultural nationalism and religious history.

Other editions - View all

About the author (2006)

Craig J. REYNOLDS teaches in the Faculty of Asian Studies, Australian National University, Canberra. He is the author of Thai Radical Discourses and the editor of National Identity and Its Defenders: Thailand Today.

Bibliographic information