Year published :January 2019

Pages :502 pp.

Size :15 x 23 cm., paperback

Color illustrations :27

Maps :4

Rights :Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam only

ISBN: 9788776942540

Engaging Asia: Essays on Laos and Beyond in Honour of Martin Stuart-Fox

by NIAS Press

Edited by Desley Goldston

Long regarded as a peripheral state in mainland Southeast Asia, Laos has attracted far less scholarly attention than richer and more powerful neighbours like Thailand and Vietnam. This has meant, however, that in Lao studies there is a greater potential for individual scholars to make significant contributions to their field. One such scholar is Australia’s Martin Stuart-Fox, in honour of whom this festschrift has been produced with contributions from colleagues, former doctoral students and friends. The volume is more than a hagiography, however. Its chapters on Laos all make significant contributions to Lao studies. These range from the writing of Lao prehistory in Laos, to early Lao–Thai relations, from French colonial archaeology to medical practices and gun-boat diplomacy, from the ‘invention’ of Laos as a modern state to its revolutionary transformation and present politics. Though the main focus is on the history, politics and national identity of Laos, essays also point ‘beyond’ Laos, both geographically and metaphorically. In the first instance, the volume provides a welcome comparative perspective, from precolonial relations between Southeast Asian polities and European courts to colonial policies within French Indochina, to the structure of communist power in Vietnam. Three concluding essays point beyond Laos in a metaphorical sense in directions indicated by Professor Stuart-Fox’s wider intellectual interests – to cultural legitimation and identity, to Buddhism and Buddhist meditation, and to how the principles of Darwinian evolution apply to historical change. Engaging Asia is thus a volume that will stimulate and satisfy, while at the same time honouring a scholar whose unusual career took him from marine biologist to war correspondent to respected scholar of Southeast Asian politics and history.

Highlights

  • Makes significant new contributions to Lao studies.
  • A welcome addition to the understudied history of Laos, concentrating on the colonial and revolutionary periods.
  • Provides new and in-depth analyses by both recognised and aspiring scholars.

About the Author

Desley Goldston is an independent scholar and educator who has travelled widely and lived many years in Asia, including a decade in Laos. Taking advantage of access at that time to previously secret Party documents, she undertook her doctoral dissertation on the 1975 revolutionary seizure of power, for which Martin Stuart-Fox was her supervisor.

 

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