The Discursive Construction of Southeast Asia in 19th Century Colonial-Capitalist Discourse /
The nations of Southeast Asia today are rapidly integrating economically and politically, but that integration is also counterbalanced by forces ranging from hypernationalism to disputes over cultural ownership throughout the region. Those forces, Farish A. Noor argues in this book, have their roots...
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Amsterdam :
Amsterdam University Press,
2016.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover; Table of Contents; A Note on the Language, Spelling and Pagination of Quotations; 1. Introduction; Booking Southeast Asia: The History of an Idea; 1.a Book about Books, and Where to Find Southeast Asia; 2. Booking Southeast Asia: And So It Begins, with a Nightmare; 2.a Thomas de Quincey and the Malay from an Antique Land; 2.b From Boemus to Theodorus de Bry and Sir Walter Raleigh: The East Indies in the Kingdom of God; 2.c According to the Logic of the Modern Company: The Ordering of the East Indies by Johan Nieuhof; 2.d From Nightmare to Knowledge: Coming to Know Southeast Asia
- 3. The New Language-Game of Modern Colonial Capitalism3.a Racialised Colonial-Capitalism as the New Language-Game of the Nineteenth Century; 3.b Headhunters, Cannibals and Pirates: Othering Southeast Asia; 4. Raffles' Java as Museum; 4.a Knowing Java and Preserving Java: Thomas Stamford Raffles' Great Venture; 4.b True after the fact: Raffles' History of Java as a Justification for British Expansionism; 4.c Raffles' History as a Catalogue of Dutch Errors; 4.d From Conqueror to Curator: Raffles' Java as a Museum of the Javanese
- 4.e You've Been Mapped: Raffles' Map of Java as the Victory of Modernity4.f The Conquest of Java's Land and History: Raffles' History as a Work of Epistemic Arrest; 4.g Southeast Asia as the Stage for Self-Reinvention: The Legacy of Raffles' History of Java; 5. Dressing the Cannibal: John Anderson's Sumatra as Market; 5.a Pleasing the Company: John Anderson's Search for Sumatran Clients; 5.b A-Data-Mining We Will Go: John Anderson Embarks on His Fact-Finding Mission to Sumatra; 5.c Carefully Does It: Anderson's Careful Research on Sumatra
- 5.d Sumatra Surveyed: The Perceptible Gaze of the Invisible John Anderson5.e John Anderson and the Reconfiguration of Sumatra as a Market; 6. Brooke, Keppel, Mundy and Marryat's Borneo as 'The Den of Pirates'; 6.a Colonialism and the Necessity of the Pirate; 6.b Enter the Privateer: James Brooke Goes A-Hunting for a Kingdom to Call His Own; 6.c Enter the Pirate: The Native Pirate as the Constitutive Other to Western Colonialism; 6.d The 'Pirate Menace' Realised: The Instrumentalisation of the Borneo Pirate in the Writings of Captains Keppel, Mundy and Marryat
- 6.f Knowing Borneo, Knowing the Pirate: Confirmation Bias and Closing the Argument in the Writings of Keppel, Mundy and Marryat7. Crawfurd's Burma as the Torpid 'Land of Tyranny'; 7.a Meddling with Burma: John Crawfurd and the East India Company's 'War on Tyranny'; 7.b Snodgrass Sets the Tone: Framing Burma as Both a Threat and a Prize; 7.c Weighed Down by the Maudlin Tyrant: Crawfurd's Static Burma; 7.d Now on to the Real Intelligence: Crawfurd's Data-Gathering Mission; 7.e Locating Tyranny: Crawfurd's Mapping of Burma; 7.f From Land of Tyranny to Theatre of the Grotesque