Southeast Asia, as a
regional configuration of nation-states called ASEAN, is a community of multiple
identities. Over time, its citizens’ loyalties were formed around
national and transnational frameworks involving ethnic, religious, and
ideological affinities. In the post-independence period, they were impacted by
the processes of decolonization, nation-building, the Cold War, globalization,
and the rise of China. As a result, Southeast Asia is emerging as a confluence
of competing and overlapping
identities.
Thus, in recent years, ASEAN has noticed the
appearance of new collective imaginations about the region’s future,
committing its member states to directions beyond the politico-economic realm.
Yet there is a risk that more exclusive visions among its people, whether
national, religious, ethnic, or other allegiances, will hold
sway.
This book unpacks these competing identities. Rich in ethnographic
and historical material, its chapters examine identities shaped by generational
markers, transnational linkages, and shared experiences of violence.
Collectively, they point to the region’s historical fractures and
contemporary challenges.
Southeast Asia, as a
regional configuration of nation-states called ASEAN, is a community of multiple
identities. Over time, its citizens’ loyalties were formed around
national and transnational frameworks involving ethnic, religious, and
ideological affinities. In the post-independence period, they were impacted by
the processes of decolonization, nation-building, the Cold War, globalization,
and the rise of China. As a result, Southeast Asia is emerging as a confluence
of competing and overlapping
identities.
Thus, in recent years, ASEAN has noticed the
appearance of new collective imaginations about the region’s future,
committing its member states to directions beyond the politico-economic realm.
Yet there is a risk that more exclusive visions among its people, whether
national, religious, ethnic, or other allegiances, will hold
sway.
This book unpacks these competing identities. Rich in ethnographic
and historical material, its chapters examine identities shaped by generational
markers, transnational linkages, and shared experiences of violence.
Collectively, they point to the region’s historical fractures and
contemporary challenges.