Chapter 1: Trade and Statecraft in Early Southeast Asia Chapter 2: Early International Maritime Trade and Cultural Networking in the Southeast Asia Region, ca. 100-500 Chapter 3: Competition on the East Coast of the Mainland: Early Champa and Vietnam Political Economies Chapter 4: The Foundations of Indonesian Polity: Srivijaya and Java to the Early Tenth Century Chapter 5: Structural Change in the Javanese Community, ca. 900-1300 Chapter 6: The Temple-Based Mainland Political Economies of Angkor Cambodia and Pagan Burma, ca. 889-1300 Chapter 7: Transitions in the Southeast Asian Mainland Commercial Realm, ca. 900-1500 Chapter 8: Maritime Trade and Community Development in Fourteenth- and Fifteenth-Century Java Chapter 9: Upstream and Downstream Unification and the Changing Sense of Community in Southeast Asia's Fifteenth-Century Maritime Port-Polities Chapter 10: Maritime Trade and State Development, ca. 1250-1500 References
Kenneth R. Hall is professor of history at Ball State University.
A coherent and comprehensive narrative of the functioning and
implications of regional and international economic developments on
Southeast Asian social organization in the pre-modern era that has
hitherto not been attempted. . . . An important contribution to the
field of Southeast Asian studies as well as global history and
international studies. * Journal Of Economic and Social History Of
The Orient *
This book is a most valuable contribution, especially as it covers
a period that few know well and that no one else is trying to
synthesize into such an overall work. Hall not only provides a
much-needed economic and political analysis of his own and others'
scholarship on the varied parts of Asia, he puts it all-islands and
mainland-into a thoughtful interpretive framework that advances our
study of Southeast Asia considerably. -- John Whitmore, University
of Michigan
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