Empire of the Winds: The Global Role of Asia’s Great Archipelago
Autor Philip Bowringen Limba Engleză Paperback – 16 sep 2020
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781350162341
ISBN-10: 1350162345
Pagini: 336
Ilustrații: 34 colour plates in 16pp; 28 mono plates in 16pp; 16 maps.
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1350162345
Pagini: 336
Ilustrații: 34 colour plates in 16pp; 28 mono plates in 16pp; 16 maps.
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Presents the history of Nusantaria, the world's largest archipelago and a cultural crossroads in Southeast Asia
Notă biografică
Philip Bowring is a journalist and author based in Asia since 1973. He was formerly Editor of the Far Eastern Economic Review and correspondent for the Financial Times and Wall Street Journal, columnist for the International Herald Tribune, and contributor to the Guardian and South China Morning Post. He graduated in History from Cambridge University and is a student of the history and economy of maritime Asia.
Cuprins
List of Maps and Illustrations GlossaryPrefaceIntroduction1. Child of a Drowned Parent2. Nusantaria's Defining Features and Early People3. To Babylon and Back4. Ghosts of Early Empires5. Culture from India, Goods from China6. Srivijaya: Vanished Great Mandala7. Java Takes Centre Stage8. Tamil Tigers of Trade 9. Champa: Master of the East Sea10. Malagasy Genes and African Echoes 11. China Raises its Head 12. The Majapahit Good Life13. Tremble and Obey: The Zheng He Voyages14. Nails, Dowels and Improbable Ships 15. Malay Melaka's Lasting Legacy16. The Northern Outliers17. Islam's Great Leap East18. Nusantaria: Holed near the Waterline19. Barangays and Baybayin20. Makassar, Bugis and Freedom of the Seas21. Where Kings Reign but Priests Rule22. The Sulu Factor: Trading, Raiding, Slaving23. Nusantaria's Existential Crisis 24. Labour, Capital, Kongsi: The Power of the Chinese 25. High Noon of Occupation26. Empty Lands No Longer27. Freedom, Fears and the FutureNotesBibliographyIndex
Recenzii
"Bowring, in a remarkable display of taut writing, whisks us through the archipelago's geological eruption and mythic floods to the rise and fall of multiple port states and emerging regional dynasties and into the modern era of disruption, decay and dismemberment in less than 300 pages. At the same time, he does a wonderful demolition job on Beijing's self-serving take on Asian history."
"[Bowring] writes this rich and rambling history as in fact a narrative of change and renewal . It is not easy to convince policymakers that history might be the place to look for solutions, yet we have nowhere else to turn to imagine what might yet be possible."
"Beautifully presented with numerous informative maps, excellent illustrations and a very useful glossary, it is both a fascinating read and a very valuable history of one of the world's most important regions."
"Rich in detail, and laced with vivid anecdotes ... Bowring notes that Nusantaria is just as vulnerable to climate change as it was after the Ice Age ... will the book's excellent maps of Nusantaria have to be drawn again?"
"This hardcover book is handsomely produced with a beautiful dust jacket showing fine Nusantarian galleys in the Moluccas, recorded during the Louis de Freycinet expedition of 1817-20. It's a volume that offers readers a deeper understanding of the vibrant maritime peoples and events that unfolded literally on Australia's tropical northern doorstep, to better appreciate the complex development of the human, political and economic region that we inhabit."
"This is an important and timely book. Whatever its shortcomings as formal history-and Philip Bowring states clearly that he is no specialist and no academic-for the suitably forewarned general reader at whom it is aimed, who is looking to better understand a complex and pivotal region of the modern world, Empire of the Winds is a must-read."
"Bowring has taken on the mission of restoring to its rightful place in world history a region that shaped global trade, and with its unrivalled shipbuilding techniques and navigation skills drew disparate cultures - and their ideas and know-how - together across vast oceans, and whose contribution to humankind's dominion over this planet's resources has been largely forgotten."
"[Bowring] writes this rich and rambling history as in fact a narrative of change and renewal . It is not easy to convince policymakers that history might be the place to look for solutions, yet we have nowhere else to turn to imagine what might yet be possible."
"Beautifully presented with numerous informative maps, excellent illustrations and a very useful glossary, it is both a fascinating read and a very valuable history of one of the world's most important regions."
"Rich in detail, and laced with vivid anecdotes ... Bowring notes that Nusantaria is just as vulnerable to climate change as it was after the Ice Age ... will the book's excellent maps of Nusantaria have to be drawn again?"
"This hardcover book is handsomely produced with a beautiful dust jacket showing fine Nusantarian galleys in the Moluccas, recorded during the Louis de Freycinet expedition of 1817-20. It's a volume that offers readers a deeper understanding of the vibrant maritime peoples and events that unfolded literally on Australia's tropical northern doorstep, to better appreciate the complex development of the human, political and economic region that we inhabit."
"This is an important and timely book. Whatever its shortcomings as formal history-and Philip Bowring states clearly that he is no specialist and no academic-for the suitably forewarned general reader at whom it is aimed, who is looking to better understand a complex and pivotal region of the modern world, Empire of the Winds is a must-read."
"Bowring has taken on the mission of restoring to its rightful place in world history a region that shaped global trade, and with its unrivalled shipbuilding techniques and navigation skills drew disparate cultures - and their ideas and know-how - together across vast oceans, and whose contribution to humankind's dominion over this planet's resources has been largely forgotten."