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Shared Cultures and Shared Geography: Can There Ever Be a Sense of Common ASEAN Identity and Awareness?

Farish A. Noor
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Farish A. Noor: S Rajaratnam School of International Studies Nanyang Technological University Singapore

No DP-2015-77, Working Papers from Economic Research Institute for ASEAN and East Asia (ERIA)

Abstract: This paper looks at the state of identity politics in Southeast Asia today, and focuses on how the postcolonial nation-states of the ASEAN region have been trapped by the somewhat exclusive narratives of national history, as written by the first generation of postcolonial historians of the 1950s/60s. However, it is argued that such narrow national narratives overlook the fact that Southeast Asia has always been a region characterised by fluidity and movement, and where identities – of individuals, communities, and nations – were seldom fixed. For there to be a deeper understanding and appreciation of Southeast Asian identity, a more comprehensive and less exclusive approach needs to be taken in the writing of history which takes off from the premise that the region was always a fluid continuum and that societal development never takes on a linear trajectory. The chapter calls for a different way of understanding Southeast Asian identity that accepts hybridity and complexity as the attendant realities of social life, anywhere.

Keywords: ASEAN; Southeast Asian history; precolonial Southeast Asia; nationalism and national identity (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 17 pages.
Date: 2015-11
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-sea
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