All Stories

  1. Cultural adaptation and integration
  2. Slavery and Forced Labour in Asia: Status Quaestionis
  3. The restrictive border between India's Nicobars and Aceh
  4. A semi-autobiographical take on life and policy in 1950s Jakarta.
  5. The tension between state boundaries and economic flows in the Indonesian Archipelago
  6. Editorial Foreword
  7. Recognising Global Interdependence Through Disasters
  8. Book Review
  9. Could Aceh have like Siam maintained formal independence with different 19th century policies
  10. Revisiting Southeast Asian History with Geology: Some Demographic Consequences of a Dangerous Environment
  11. Building Cities in a Subduction Zone: Some Indonesian Dangers
  12. Religious Pluralism or Conformity in Southeast Asia’s Cultural Legacy
  13. Two probable Indonesian tsunamis - Mataram (Java) 1618; Aceh (Sumatra) 1660
  14. Documenting the memory of connections between Aceh and Turkey
  15. Historical Thought and Historiography: Southeast Asia
  16. History and Seismology in the Ring of Fire: Punctuating the Indonesian Past
  17. Dutch (VOC) reporting on Sultanate of Aceh, 1636-1661
  18. How Southeast Asia lost its lead in gender equality.
  19. How the 'Social Revolutions' of Sumatra violently overthrew the traditional rulers.
  20. Turkey-Aceh Relations, 1500-1910
  21. 1. Introduction: Maritime Interactions in Eastern Asia
  22. Offshore Asia
  23. Philippe Beaujard, Les Mondes de l Océan Indien, 2 volumes. Paris: Armand Colin, 2012; maps, illustrations, indexes. Tome I: De la Formation de l État au Premier Système-Monde Afro-Eurasian (4e Millénaire Av. J.-C. 6e Siècle Apr. J.-C.). 624 pp. ISBN: ...
  24. Indonesia's Place in the world
  25. Comparing Malaysia and Singapore with self-declared migrant societies like Australia.
  26. Chinese in Southeast Asian gold, silver and tin mines in in the 18th and 19th centuries.
  27. Indonesia in the 20th Century
  28. Regional Networks of Knowledge in Eastern Asia Interrupted Histories
  29. Imperial Alchemy
  30. Malay (Melayu) and its descendants: multiple meanings of a porous category
  31. Seven papers on Changes and Challenges to 'Chinese' identity outside China
  32. The difficult options of assimilation or 'outsiderness' for Indonesia's Peranakan Chinese.
  33. Finding a History for the Bataks of North Sumatra
  34. Special issue Editors' introduction: four approaches to the Aceh question
  35. War, peace and the burden of history in Aceh
  36. GLOBAL AND LOCAL IN SOUTHEAST ASIAN HISTORY
  37. Nineteenth-Century Pan-Islam below the Winds
  38. The Identity of “Sumatra” in History
  39. Conflicting Histories: Aceh and Indonesia
  40. Elephants and Water in the Feasting of Seventeenth-Century Aceh
  41. Understanding Melayu (Malay) as a Source of Diverse Modern Identities
  42. Introduction: Islam in a plural Asia
  43. Islam in South-East Asia and the Indian Ocean littoral, 1500–1800: expansion, polarisation, synthesis
  44. Studying “Asia” in Asia
  45. A Precious Dutch Map of Aceh, c. 1645
  46. Indigenous Southeast Asian identities
  47. President's message: moving on
  48. Political “tradition” in Indonesia: the one and the many
  49. ASAA matters
  50. The struggle for national identity of Sabah's indigenous people
  51. A New Phase of Commercial Expansion in Southeast Asia, 1760–1850
  52. The Last Stand of Asian Autonomies
  53. Humans and Forests in Pre-colonial Southeast Asia
  54. Book review article in response to Leonard Andaya and Chris van Fraassen.
  55. The eighteenth century in Southeast Asian history
  56. Historiographical Reflections on the Period 1750–1870 in Southeast Asia and Korea
  57. Economic and Social Change, c. 1400–1800
  58. The Origins of Revenue Farming in Southeast Asia
  59. Southeast Asia in the Early Modern Era
  60. New guide to Asian studies in Japan
  61. Report on a visit to Dili, 22–24 June 1991
  62. Book Review
  63. The Seventeenth-Century Crisis in Southeast Asia
  64. An ‘Age of Commerce’ in Southeast Asian History
  65. Southeast Asia in the Age of Commerce, 1450-1680. Vol. 1, The Lands below the Winds
  66. Female Roles in Pre-colonial Southeast Asia
  67. Southeast Asia and the ‘Indian Ocean’ enterprise
  68. Slavery, Bondage, and Dependency in Southeast Asia. Edited by Anthony Reid, with the assistance of Jennifer Brewster. St. Lucia: University of Queensland Press, 1983. N.p.
  69. From Betel-Chewing to Tobacco-Smoking in Indonesia
  70. Imagined Communities. Reflections on the Origin and Spread of Nationalism.
  71. Community and Nation. Essays on Southeast Asia and the Chinese.
  72. The Australian contribution to Indonesian Studies: motivations and achievements.
  73. Indonesia
  74. The Structure of Cities in Southeast Asia, Fifteenth to Seventeenth Centuries
  75. Shadow and Sound: The Historical Thought of a Sumatran People. By James Siegel. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1979. x, 284 pp. Figures, Glossary. $14.00.
  76. Southeast Asian Transitions: Approaches Through Social History.
  77. Indonesia. By Donald W. Fryer and James C. Jackson. London: Ernest Benn, and Boulder: Westview Press, 1977. xvii, 313 pp. Illustrations, Glossary, Selected Bibliography, Index. $24.00
  78. A Japanese police report documented a wave of peasant demands from the new rulers
  79. The Japanese Occupation and Rival Indonesian Elites: Northern Sumatra in 1942
  80. The Japanese Occupation and Rival Indonesian Elites: Northern Sumatra in 1942
  81. On the Importance of Autobiography
  82. The Birth of the Republic in Sumatra
  83. The Kuala Lumpur riots and the Malaysian political system
  84. Sixteenth Century Turkish Influence in Western Indonesia
  85. The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia: 1511–1957. Edited by John B'astin. Prentice-Hall, Inc.Englewood Cliffs, N.J.1967. Pp. ix, 179. US$1.95.
  86. Nineteenth Century Pan-Islam in Indonesia and Malaysia
  87. Religion in Early Modern Southeast Asia: Synthesising Global and Local
  88. Preface
  89. Aceh: memories of monarchy
  90. Chinese as a Southeast Asian ‘other’
  91. The late introduction of family names to Southeast Asia
  92. Imperial alchemy–revolutionary dreams
  93. Nationalism and Asia
  94. Revolutionary State Formation and the Unitary Republic of Indonesia
  95. The hybrid maritime actors of Southeast Asia
  96. Understanding Southeast Asian nationalisms
  97. “Closed” and “Open” Slave Systems in Pre-Colonial Southeast Asia
  98. “Slavery so Gentle”: A Fluid Spectrum of Southeast Asian Conditions of Bondage
  99. Singapore between Cosmopolis and Nation