Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View

Page range: 1-14 Tagliacozzo argues in his contribution that Indonesia can usefully be studied over a one thousand year arc, starting with shipwrecks in archipelago waters in the tenth century and ending with the flow of avian flu pathogens in the early twenty-first century. The trans-regional dimen...

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Main Author: Tagliacozzo, Eric
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1813/54516
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spelling ftcornelluniv:oai:ecommons.cornell.edu:1813/54516 2023-07-30T04:02:28+02:00 Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View Tagliacozzo, Eric 2010-10 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/1813/54516 en_US eng Cornell University Southeast Asia Program Indonesia https://hdl.handle.net/1813/54516 article 2010 ftcornelluniv 2023-07-15T18:46:29Z Page range: 1-14 Tagliacozzo argues in his contribution that Indonesia can usefully be studied over a one thousand year arc, starting with shipwrecks in archipelago waters in the tenth century and ending with the flow of avian flu pathogens in the early twenty-first century. The trans-regional dimension of Indonesian history is a fascinating and provocative one; what do we learn by skipping over the centuries to look at Indonesia as part of larger geographies? What shift in focus does this zoom effect imply? How utilitarian is it to think of Indonesia as part of much larger, often global stories? Article in Journal/Newspaper Avian flu Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
institution Open Polar
collection Cornell University: eCommons@Cornell
op_collection_id ftcornelluniv
language English
description Page range: 1-14 Tagliacozzo argues in his contribution that Indonesia can usefully be studied over a one thousand year arc, starting with shipwrecks in archipelago waters in the tenth century and ending with the flow of avian flu pathogens in the early twenty-first century. The trans-regional dimension of Indonesian history is a fascinating and provocative one; what do we learn by skipping over the centuries to look at Indonesia as part of larger geographies? What shift in focus does this zoom effect imply? How utilitarian is it to think of Indonesia as part of much larger, often global stories?
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Tagliacozzo, Eric
spellingShingle Tagliacozzo, Eric
Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
author_facet Tagliacozzo, Eric
author_sort Tagliacozzo, Eric
title Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
title_short Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
title_full Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
title_fullStr Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
title_full_unstemmed Trans-Regional Indonesia over One Thousand years: The Art of the Long View
title_sort trans-regional indonesia over one thousand years: the art of the long view
publisher Cornell University Southeast Asia Program
publishDate 2010
url https://hdl.handle.net/1813/54516
genre Avian flu
genre_facet Avian flu
op_relation Indonesia
https://hdl.handle.net/1813/54516
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