earticle

논문검색

Constructing Southeast Asia and the Middle East : Two Corners of the “Victorian World”

원문정보

Stephen L. Keck

피인용수 : 0(자료제공 : 네이버학술정보)

초록

영어

How should we conceptualize regions? What is the context in which new approaches to regional study take place? What is the role of historical change in the reconceptualization of regions or areas? This article addresses this issue by using two case studies to shed light on the history of regional study by comparing some of the ways in which the Middle East and Southeast Asia have been conceptualized. Accordingly, the discussion traces the ways in which these areas were understood in the 19th century by highlighting the ideas of a number of influential Victorian thinkers. The Victorians are useful because not only did British thinkers play critical roles in the shaping of modern patterns of knowledge, but their empire was global in scope, encompassing parts of both Southeast Asia and the Middle East. However, the Victorians regarded these places quite differently: Southeast Asia was frequently described as “Further India” and the Middle East was the home of the Ottoman Empire. Both of these places were at least partly understood in relation to the needs of British policy-makers, who tended to focus most of their efforts according to the needs of India— which was their most important colonial possession. The article exhibits the connections between the “Eastern Question” and end of the Ottoman Empire (and the political developments which followed) led to the creation of the concept of “Middle East”. With respect to Southeast Asia, attention will be devoted to the works of Alfred Russell Wallace, Hugh Clifford, and others to see how “further India” was understood in the 19th century. In addition, it is clear that the successful deployment of the term “Southeast Asia” reflected the political needs of policy makers in wake of decolonization and the Cold War. Finally, by showing the constructive nature of regions, the article suggests one possible new path for students of Southeast Asia. If the characterization of the region is marked by arbitrary factors, it may actually point to a useful avenue of enquiry, a hermeneutic of expedience. Emphasis on the adaptive and integrative features of lived realities in Southeast Asia may well be a step beyond both the agendas of “colonial knowledge” and anti-colonial nationalism.

목차

Abstract
 Ⅰ. Introduction
 Ⅱ. Understanding the Ottoman East
  2.1. The Idea of the Middle East
 Ⅲ. Defining Southeast Asia and the Making of the Postimperial World
 Ⅵ. Reconceptualizing the Study of Southeast Asia
  4.1. The Myth of Autonomous History
  4.2. Reading Colonial Sources “Against the Grain”
  4.3. Imagining Communities: Creating Regions
  4.4. Making Regions Visible
 Ⅴ. Conclusion: Reconsidering the ‘Corners’ of Regional Study
 References

저자정보

  • Stephen L. Keck Academic Director, Professor of History, Emirates Diplomatic Academy

참고문헌

자료제공 : 네이버학술정보

    함께 이용한 논문

      ※ 원문제공기관과의 협약기간이 종료되어 열람이 제한될 수 있습니다.

      0개의 논문이 장바구니에 담겼습니다.