NUS Home | Search: in Go
Back to NUS homepageNUS Press
 

Southeast Asian Lives: Personal Narratives and Historical Experience

Roxana Waterson (Editor)


Southeast Asian Lives presents life stories of ordinary people in Southeast Asia, one of the most dynamic and rapidly changing regions in the world.

The narratives illustrate the richness of life histories in revealing what it was like to go through the wrenching social adjustments that accompanied successive political transformations as Southeast Asia moved from colonialism through wartime occupation by the Japanese to the emergence of new nation states.

The authors who present these life stories are all anthropologists. Their narratives bear witness to fieldwork encounters that gave rise to close, long term friendships with the remarkable personalities whose lives are presented here, or with their families. By explaining the cultural and historical context of these highly personal, intimate accounts, the authors make them accessible to the widest possible audience and show what a fertile source such material can be for an anthropology that seeks to do justice to personal experience.

Southeast Asian Lives is a valuable resource for anthropologists and for researchers studying literature, history, biography and personal narratives. However, the book is much more than that. These moving accounts of real people adjusting to massive change offer a fascinating picture of the world of Southeast Asia that will intrigue anyone living in or concerned with this extraordinary region.

Roxana WATERSON is Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology, National University of Singapore.

publication year: 2006
300 pages
ISBN: 978-9971-69-344-2  Paperback  US$30.00  S$38.00

A co-publication with Ohio University Press.
Our edition is available worldwide except North America.

 

NUS Press: Home | Search | Site Map | Contact Us

© Copyright 2001-07 National University of Singapore. All Rights Reserved.
Terms of Use | Privacy | Non-discrimination
Last modified on 15 March, 2011 by NUS Press