Here is an Example of the Problem with the Scholarship on “Srivijaya”
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
2M ago
As I have said a million times by now, there is a placename in Chinese historical sources, Sanfoqi 三佛齊, that in the early twentieth century, French scholar George Cœdès claimed indicated a place called “Srivijaya,” a polity supposedly based at Palembang on the island of Sumatra. As I have also said a million times, Sanfoqi ..read more
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I FINALLY Found Sanfoqi!!
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
2M ago
Off and on over the past few years, I have been researching about a place called “Sanfoqi” 三佛齊. This is a name that appears in Chinese sources from the tenth through the fourteenth centuries, and it was clearly a very important trading center in Southeast Asia. Since the early twentieth century, scholars have believed that ..read more
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Global Vietnam Book Series and Journal
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
4M ago
This year, Phan Lê Hà and I, with the support of a wonderful team of associate series editors, editorial board members and a series editorial assistant, launched a new book series with Springer Nature called “Global Vietnam: Across Time, Space and Community.” Four volumes have already been published, and several more will be published soon ..read more
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The Great Dispersal: Academia Today
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
4M ago
I always enjoy looking around me and trying to get a sense of what is happening in my profession. I’m an historian of Southeast Asian history, but I also have a background in Chinese history and world history, and I guess you could say Asian Studies as well. That professional world feels very different to ..read more
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This Should Be The Revision Age!!
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
4M ago
One point that I keep bringing up, but I don’t find it getting recognized, is the fact that the capabilities that we now have when we conduct research in the Digital Age enable us to easily significantly revise, if not outright refute, the scholarship that was produced in the Analog Age. I’ve spent a lot ..read more
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Popular Confucianism/Culture in Premodern Vietnam
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
4M ago
If there is one topic in Vietnamese history that I think people today have the hardest time understanding it is the topic of “Confucianism.” Why is that? Well, it’s a long story, but we can start with the Japanese. In the nineteenth century, some Japanese intellectuals tried to learn about Western societies and they discovered ..read more
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History in the AI Age: A Self-Reflection
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
4M ago
In the spring of 1994, during my first year of graduate school, I took a seminar on Chinese Intellectual History. In that seminar, in addition to weekly readings and discussions, we had to write and present a research paper. I chose to research a paper on “the Confucianization of Vietnam.” At that time, there were ..read more
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The East Asian Context of Lý Dynasty Buddhism
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
5M ago
I recently read a chapter by the late historian John K. Whitmore entitled “Building a Buddhist Monarchy in Đai Viêt: Temples and Texts under Lý Nhân-tông (r. 1072–1127)” and it made me think about the problem of looking at Vietnamese history from the perspective of Southeast Asia. That is what Whitmore does in this chapter ..read more
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Tianxia/Thiên Hạ in Nineteenth-Century Vietnam
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
5M ago
A few years ago, I was invited to write a paper on the concept of “Tianxia” (Thiên Hạ) in nineteenth-century Vietnam, and that paper has now been published. The paper is called “Tianxia as Anticosmopolitan and Protoracial: A Case Study of Late Imperial Vietnam” and it is published in a book entitled Tianxia in Comparative ..read more
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The Confucian Brain Drain in Ming Occupied Vietnam
Le Minh Khai's SEAsian History Blog
by liamkelley
5M ago
I have been writing about the established narrative in English-language scholarship on premodern Vietnam which sees the Lý and Trần dynasty periods as a time when Confucianism played a limited role at the court. This narrative argues that a big change, a “watershed,” came during the period of the Ming occupation (1407-1427). In particular, historians ..read more
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