Strange Parallels: Volume 1, Integration on the Mainland: Southeast Asia in Global Context, c.800–1830

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Cambridge University Press, 26 thg 5, 2003 - 484 trang
This ambitious work has two novel goals: to overcome the extreme fragmentation of early Southeast Asian historiography, and to connect Southeast Asian to world history. Combining careful local research with wide-ranging theory Lieberman argues that over a thousand years, each of mainland Southeast Asia's great lowland corridors experienced a pattern of accelerating integration punctuated by recurrent collapse. These trajectories were synchronized not only between corridors, but most curiously, between the mainland as a whole, much of Europe, and other sectors of Eurasia. He describes in detail the nature of mainland consolidation - which was simultaneously territorial, religious, ethnic, and commercial - and dissects the mix of endogenous and external factors responsible. Here, then, is a fundamentally original analysis not only of Southeast Asia, but of the pre-modern world.
 

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CHAPTER 1 Introduction
1
CHAPTER 2 One Basin Two Poles
85
CHAPTER 3 A Stable Maritime Consolidation
212
CHAPTER 4 The Least Coherent Territory in the World
338
Conclusion and Prologue
457
Index
461
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