Year published :January 2018

Pages :272 pp.

Size :15 x 23 cm.

Rights :Thailand, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Vietnam

ISBN: 9788776942298

Warring Societies of Pre-colonial Southeast Asia: Local Cultures of Conflict Within a Regional Context

by NIAS

Edited by Michael W. Charney and Kathryn Wellen

Why is it that warfare in Southeast Asian history is depicted so differently in various historical sources and representations? Why have scholars looking at different countries found so many exceptions to regional overviews of warfare? The present volume seeks to present a new approach to the study of warfare in the region by abandoning the generalizations made in the conventional literature. The contributors offer a range of new studies of warfare in local areas within the region, looking at warfare on its own, local terms rather than for what it says about warfare in the region as a whole. This approach for the first time submits Southeast Asia to comparative analysis in a way that avoids artificial and misleading regional attributes. The varied case studies, researched and written by a number of experts of local warfare within the region include naval warfare eighteenth century Vietnam, civil war in South Sulawesi during the Pénéki War, the art and texts of war in Burmese warfare, modes of warfare in precolonial Bali, war captive taking in Thailand, and kinship, religion, and war in late eighteenth century Maguindanao, and preparations for war in the Pacific rimlands. The volume makes an important contribution to the new literature emerging on the culture of indigenous warfare in North and South America, Africa, South Asia, the Middle East, and the Pacific Islands, by offering a new and robust Southeast Asian entry on the one hand while adding to a new approach to the growing literature on early modern Southeast Asia warfare.

Highlights

  • First book to identify and explain the diverse cultures of precolonial warfare across Southeast Asia.
  • Aims to decipher war situations independently of modern interpretations/constructions given them by states, cultural gatekeepers, etc.

About the Editors

Michael W. Charney is Professor of Asian and Military History at SOAS, the University of London. He is a military and imperial historian working on Southeast Asia in the premodern and modern periods and on precolonial and colonial West Africa.

Dr Kathryn Wellen is a historian at the KITLV (part of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences) in Leiden.

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