This edited collection explores the possibilities, perils, and politics of constructing a regional identity. The Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), a multinational institution comprised of 10 member states, is dedicated to building a Southeast Asian regional identity that includes countries along Southeast Asia’s Mekong River delta: Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, Laos, and Myanmar.

After successfully establishing an economic community in 2015, where capital and people can freely move across national borders, ASEAN and its partners now aim to develop a sociocultural community that is fully functional in a wide range of sectors by 2025. As part of this vision, ASEAN wishes to construct a regional identity by uniting over 600 million people, which will be achieved partly through national school systems that teach shared histories. In this text, the contributors critically examine the many questions that arise in the face of this significant change: What does an ASEAN identity look like? Is it even possible or desirable to create a common identity across the diverse peoples of Southeast Asia? Given the divergent memories of history, how would a regional identity exist alongside national identity? Memory in the Mekong grapples with these questions by exploring issues of shared history, national identity, and schooling in a region that is frequently underexamined and underrepresented in Western scholarship.

Book Features:

  • First comparative study of regional identity and schools in the Mekong.
  • In-depth analysis of UNESCO Bangkok’s Shared Histories project.
  • Use of historical memory theoretical tools to understand identity formation, extending the work on imagined communities.
  • Chapters written by researchers from across the Mekong.
Les mer
Explores the possibilities, perils, and politics of constructing a regional identity. The book examines issues of shared history, national identity, and schooling in a region that is frequently underexamined and underrepresented in Western scholarship.
Les mer
  • Contents
  • ForewordThongchai Winichakul  ix
  • Acknowledgments  xi
  • Introduction: Toward a Southeast Asian Identity? Schools as Contested Sites of Collective Memory  1
  • Will Brehm
  • Part I: Regional Memory
  • 1.  The UNESCO Shared Histories Curriculum: Paradoxes and Possibilities  23
  • Rosalie Metro and Will Brehm
  • 2.  Regional Memory in Con­temporary Cambodia: "Cautious Resistance and Calculated Conformity"  47
  • Will Brehm
  • Part II: National Memory
  • 3.  Whose Kingdoms and Whose Settlement? Hegemonic National Memory Inside Thai Textbooks  75
  • Vong-on Phuaphansawat and ­Will Brehm
  • 4.  Vietnamese Citizenship in Transition: State Curricula Pre- and Post-Doi Moi  103
  • Bich-Hang Duong
  • Part III: Public Memory
  • 5.  Thinking With History in Pursuit of Truth in Myanmar  133
  • Anna Zongollowicz
  • 6.  Finding Unity in Diversity: Public Identity Patterns in Lao PDR  153
  • Will Brehm, Thongdeuane Nanthanavone, Somsanit Larvankham, and Yasushi Hirosato
  • 7.  Exploring Unity and Diversity in the Histories of Southeast Asia  177
  • Yuto Kitamura
  • AfterwordShigeru Aoyagi  187
  • About the Editors and Contributors  191
  • Index  193
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780807766378
Publisert
2022-03-04
Utgiver
Teachers' College Press; Teachers' College Press
Vekt
432 gr
Høyde
230 mm
Bredde
155 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
216

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