About this Event
640 Stewart Ave, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA
https://einaudi.cornell.edu/programs/southeast-asia-program/academics/gatty-lecture-seriesGatty Lecture Series
Join us for a talk by Eric C. Thompson, Associate Professor at the Department of Sociology & Anthropology at the National University of Singapore, who will discuss the writing of a book The Story of Southeast Asia.
This Gatty Lecture will take place at the The Kahin Center, 640 Stewart Ave. Lunch will be served. For questions, contact seapgatty@cornell.edu.
About the Talk
In this talk, the author discusses the writing of The Story of Southeast Asia (NUS Press, 2024). The book is a historical anthropology of the region and its people. While using a historical-chronological structure, it outlines a series of themes that have created the region as we know it today: migration and settlement, trade and industry, state building (and state avoidance), adoption of popular religions, gender and kinship relationships, contested sovereignty, and modernity. Although written in a clear narrative language with a broad (popular, undergraduate) audience in mind, the book touches on many ongoing debates in Southeast Asian studies and other disciplines and makes arguments (mostly implicit or in passim) for the framing of these debates (e.g. around periodization, agency, identity, and gender/kinship). The author will discuss several of these (and invites discussion of others): What were the motivations of writing the book and the positionality of the author? Why attend to an exceptionally longue durée? What are the “strange parallels” between the adoption and spread of Theravada, Islam, Confucianism, and Christianity in the region? How does Southeast Asia make us rethink the relationship between modernity and gender relations? How can we (and should we) put colonialism in its place? And of course, what in the heck was Sriwijaya?
About the Speaker
Eric C. Thompson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at the National University of Singapore. He holds a PhD in sociocultural anthropology from the University of Washington and was a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of California Los Angeles. He is the author of Unsettling Absences: Urbanism in Rural Malaysia (2007) and The Story of Southeast Asia (2024), co-author of Awareness and Attitudes toward ASEAN (2007) and Do Young People Know ASEAN? (2016), and co-editor Southeast Asian Anthropologies (2019) and Asian Smallholders: Persistence and Transformation (2019) among other publications.
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