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New Monsoon
New Monsoon

Our primary aim is to  provide analysis, anecdote and new perspectives on Southeast Asia on issues ranging from politics and international relations, modern history, religion, culture, ecology, economy, language, and migration, all based on regional expertise and local sources (fieldwork, oral history, archives, local media, etc.).

The goal of the Southeast Asia Platform is also to establish a network of cooperation between experts across various regional and disciplinary fields of expertise. Countries of Mainland Southeast Asia like Myanmar or Vietnam, are often studied separately from the nations of Insular Southeast Asia such as Indonesia and the Philippines. We aim to bridge these conceptual and disciplinary boundaries (as well as the state-centered analysis) that prevent the sharing of research results and restrict opportunities for establishing broader theoretical debates.

The platform organizes thematic conferences and workshops in cooperation with scholars and experts from Czech research institutes and universities as well as academic institutions across Europe and other parts of the world. The Platform for Southeast Asian Studies will also be represented through regular scholarly seminars in Prague on themes relevant to Southeast Asia (the  Southeast Asia Lecture Series ), where invited experts present their most recent research findings from the region.

The platform plans to launch a regular blog on Southeast Asian affairs that will provide short topical analytical pieces and comments on the studied region, called New Monsoon, monsoon winds representing a key climatic phenomenon, which facilitated trade and cultural exchange in the Indian Ocean basin and southwestern Pacific.

From a long-term perspective, our goal is to contribute to the consolidation of the tradition of Southeast Asian studies at Czech academic institutions and serve as a   Prague Southeast Asian Platform that will collect and share top research findings on the region as well as provide a networking umbrella for all relevant activities. In line with that, we seek to enhance our joint capacity to network with other prestigious research institutions in Central Europe, the wider European context, and elsewhere across the globe.

Activities associated with the platform will build on the long-standing commitment to collaboration that already exists between the Oriental Institute researchers and academics from the Institute for International Relations in Prague, the Faculty of Philosophy and Arts (the Institute of Asian Studies) of Charles University, together with Palacký University in Olomouc, the University of Vienna, the Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, the University of Passau, etc.

HankerM·newmonsoon.eu·
New Monsoon
Doing Theory in Southeast Asia
Doing Theory in Southeast Asia

This open-access database aims to provide a platform for students, teachers, researchers, artists, and curators to exchange critical ideas about diverse Southeast Asian cultures.

The website features a table that lists intellectual, critical, and creative works about different Southeast Asian contexts categorized according to author, medium, and field. It includes annotations about academic journals in the region. Lastly, the section ‘Archipelagic Juxtapositions’ explores emergent topics, which uncover possible connections among seemingly unrelated objects, conditions, and processes pertaining to myth, geopolitics, art, music, and the environment.

‘Doing Theory in Southeast Asia’ was supported by a Hong Kong Research Grants Council (RGC) General Research Fund (GRF), together with a Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) Faculty of Arts Direct Grant.

HankerM·seasia.crs.cuhk.edu.hk·
Doing Theory in Southeast Asia
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
South Asia Open Archives (SAOA) is a collaborative, open-access resource for research, teaching, and learning about South Asia. The member-driven collection includes historical and contemporary sources from and about the region in arts, humanities, social sciences, history of science, and other fields in English and other South Asian languages. With items in dozens of languages (including thousands in English, Bengali, Urdu, and Tamil) distributed across multiple themes (including Art History & Music, Caste & Social Structure, History of Science, Language & Literature, Social, Poitical & Economic History, and Women & Gender), and compiled into useful research collections (including official reports from Bihar and Orissa, the Bombay Presidency, the Madras Presidency, the Indian Census, and Newspaper Reports) the South Asia Open Archives offers a rich and growing collection of historical and contemporary sources for researching, teaching, and learning about South Asia. Developed through collaborative, member-driven efforts to make in-demand research materials digitally available for use by anyone in the world with an internet connection, the South Asia Open Archives represents a novel and innovative approach to post-custodial digital collection development.
HankerM·jstor.org·
South Asia Open Archives on JSTOR
Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu
Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu
e Ming Shi-lu (明實錄) (also known as the Veritable Records of the Ming Dynasty) is a collective name for the successive reign annals of the emperors of Ming China (1368-1644). Each of the shi-lu comprises an account of one emperor's reign, and was compiled after that emperor's death on the basis of a number of sources created during the reign. These collected texts, which run to close to 40,000 pages of unpunctuated, manuscript Classical Chinese constitute one of the most important primary texts of the Ming dynasty, and contain a wealth of materials unrecorded in other sources. Among the unique materials contained within the Ming Shi-lu (MSL) are a wide range of references to polities and societies which today we consider to be parts of "Southeast Asia". Given the annalistic nature of the MSL and the difficulties of searching such a huge corpus, many of these have long remained unknown. This work identifies all of the references to Southeast Asia contained within the MSL and provides them to readers in English-language translation. In addition to the more obvious Southeast Asian polities of maritime and mainland Southeast Asia, this database also includes references to the many Yunnan Tai polities which have subsequently been incorporated within the Chinese state. The fact that many of these references predate European sources on Southeast Asia underlines their importance to historians of the region.
·epress.nus.edu.sg·
Southeast Asia in the Ming Shi-lu
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Welcome to www.orientalarchitecture.com, a photographic survey of Asia's architectural heritage. Here you can view over 40,000 photos of 1,450 sites in twenty-three countries, with background information and virtual tours. This website is a collection of photos from many different contributors.
·orientalarchitecture.com·
Asian Historical Architecture: A Photographic Survey
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Orientalistický Expres, z. s. je sdružením českých současných i bývalých studentů a dalších členů akademické obce, jejichž badatelský zájem se soustředí či soustředil na některý z regionů Orientu v nejširším možném významu tohoto slova.
·orientalistickyexpres.cz·
Orientalistický Expres – Asociace českých orientalistů
Southeast Asia Digital Library
Southeast Asia Digital Library
The Southeast Asia Digital Library (SEADL) exists to provide educators, students, scholars and members of the general public with a wide variety of materials published or otherwise produced in Southeast Asia. Drawn largely from the collections of universities and scholars in this region, SEADL contains digital facsimiles of books and manuscripts, as well as multimedia materials and searchable indexes of additional Southeast Asian resources. Nations represented in the collection include Brunei, Cambodia, East Timor, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam.
HankerM·sea.lib.niu.edu·
Southeast Asia Digital Library
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
The Asian Center is the University of the Philippines' only unit with a regional area of specialization and one of the colleges in the university's Diliman campus. Established in 1955 as the Institute of Asian Studies, the Asian Center offers graduate-level multidisciplinary academic programs on Asian Studies and on Philippine Studies.
HankerM·ac.upd.edu.ph·
Asian Center | University of the Philippines Diliman
Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre | London School of Economics and Political Science
Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre | London School of Economics and Political Science
The Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre (SEAC) is a multidisciplinary Research Centre of the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE), established in 2014. Building on the School’s deep academic and historical connections with Southeast Asia, SEAC seeks to foster world-leading academic and policy research with a focus on the Southeast Asian social and political landscape, guided by the Centre’s core intersecting research themes of urbanisation, connectivity and governance. SEAC’s blog is a platform for analysing and debating the Southeast Asia region’s critical and pressing issues as LSE’s gateway to Southeast Asia. The blog will introduce academic research of LSE faculty, fellows, students and alumni as well as external researchers and SEAC’s Southeast Asia early career researcher network members.
HankerM·blogs.lse.ac.uk·
Saw Swee Hock Southeast Asia Centre | London School of Economics and Political Science
New Mandala | Australian National University
New Mandala | Australian National University
New Mandala provides anecdote, analysis and new perspectives on Southeast Asia. It devotes its attention to the politics and societies of Southeast Asian countries, and their connections with one another. New Mandala has a proud record of contribution to scholarly and popular debates and played a pioneering role in the digitisation of Southeast Asian studies. New Mandala is hosted by the Australian National University’s (ANU) Coral Bell School of Asia Pacific Affairs in the College of Asia and the Pacific. New Mandala was established in June 2006, with co-founder Dr Nicholas Farrelly editing and running the site until 2015. James Giggacher edited the site from May 2015 to March 2017. Liam Gammon took over in April 2017 and was the editor until July 2019, followed by Dr Rebecca Gidley. New Mandala was first established to focus on Thailand and Myanmar but has since expanded to cover the entire Southeast Asian region, and even surrounding provinces and countries. You can read more about New Mandala’s co-founders’ reflections on the history of the site upon its 10th birthday in 2016.
HankerM·newmandala.org·
New Mandala | Australian National University
Bodies and Structures
Bodies and Structures
Bodies and Structures 2.0: Deep-Mapping Modern East Asian History offers 17 spatial histories of modern East Asia and the worlds of which it is a part. Each module is based around translated textual and visual primary sources, which are also searchable via the site's "Sourcebook" tag. Built on the open-source Scalar platform, Bodies and Structures 2.0 represents a new model of collaborative, connected, and media-rich scholarship. Bodies and Structures 2.0 is open-access and peer-reviewed, with new tools for user-directed visualizations. Use it for teaching and research! Bodies and Structures 2.0 is co-directed by Kate McDonald (History, UC Santa Barbara) and David Ambaras (History, NC State University). It was developed with generous support from the National Endowment for the Humanities Office of Digital Humanities, and in collaboration with the Alliance for Networking Visual Culture.
·bodiesandstructures.org·
Bodies and Structures
SARAI Archive | Columbia University Libraries
SARAI Archive | Columbia University Libraries
South Asia Resource Access on the Internet (SARAI), also known as the South Asian Studies Virtual Library, was developed and hosted at Columbia University Libraries between 1994 and 2017. This page provides historical background on SARAI, and a list of archived websites. (Please note that archived websites may load more slowly than live websites.) SARAI started as the South Asia Gopher (SAG), which was publicly accessed by Gopher or telnet connection to the Columbia University host. The SAG was developed by David Magier, then South and Southeast Asian Studies Librarian and Director of Area Studies at Columbia University Libraries. As of March, 1994 (see H-Asia announcements by Magier on March 9, 1994 and on October 30, 1994), this "in progress" site included: A) Bibliographic resources listing major international South Asia library collections, and links to the University of Wisconsin South & Southeast Asian Studies Video Archive catalog; B) links to international online resources in Australia, India, Germany and the United Kingdom; C) listings of South Asia related Usenet newsgroups, listservs, mailing lists, and bulletin boards; D) South Asia electronic text archives and listings of software and fonts for displaying and printing South Asian texts; E) South Asia teaching resources; F) an International Directory of South Asia Scholars of individuals identifying themselves as being involved in South Asian Studies, who had filled out a form distributed by email as in this August 15, 1995 H-ASIA log); G) a Directory of South Asia Research Institutes; H) specialized databases and archives on such topics as census data, environment, and health; I) a (then forthcoming) Grants Directory under the editorship of Itty Abraham (a Social Science Research Council program director).
HankerM·library.columbia.edu·
SARAI Archive | Columbia University Libraries
The Digital South Asia Library
The Digital South Asia Library
The Digital South Asia Library (DSAL) provides digital materials for reference and research (dictionaries, gazetteers, photographs, prints, drawings, maps, statistics, bibliographies, indexes, books, and journals) on South Asia to scholars, public officials, business leaders, and other users. This program builds upon a two-year pilot project funded by the Association of Research Libraries' Global Resources Program with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Participants in the Digital South Asia Library include leading U.S. universities, the Center for Research Libraries, the South Asia Microform Project, the Committee on South Asian Libraries and Documentation, the Association for Asian Studies, the Library of Congress, the Asia Society, the British Library, the University of Oxford, the University of Cambridge, MOZHI in India, the Sundarayya Vignana Kendram in India, Madan Puraskar Pustakalaya in Nepal, and other institutions in South Asia. The original Web design for the Digital South Asia Library and the Digital Dictionaries of South Asia was by Rebecca Moore.
HankerM·dsal.uchicago.edu·
The Digital South Asia Library
American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies
American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies
The American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies (AISLS) was established in 1996. It is a member of the Council of American Overseas Research Centers (CAORC). Founded in 1981, CAORC is a private not-for-profit federation of 26 independent overseas research centers that promote advanced research, particularly in the humanities and social sciences, with focus on the conservation and recording of cultural heritage and the understanding and interpretation of modern societies. AISLS is also an affiliate of the Association for Asian Studies.
HankerM·aisls.org·
American Institute for Sri Lankan Studies
Digital Dictionaries of South Asia
Digital Dictionaries of South Asia
The Digital Dictionaries of South Asia Project is a collaborative effort to widen access to South Asian Language Dictionaries. Established dictionaries for each of the twenty-six modern literary languages of South Asia will be mounted on the web for free and open access.
HankerM·dsal.uchicago.edu·
Digital Dictionaries of South Asia
Digital Wayang Encyclopedia
Digital Wayang Encyclopedia
The objective of the Digital Wayang Encyclopedia is to offer consistent information about the main wayang kulit characters and plots. Javanese wayang kulit (leather puppets) is one of the most important and oldest performance traditions in Southeast Asia. But the languages and conventions constitute an impediment to those not familiar with the tradition. The Digital Wayang Encyclopedia (as sister project of the Contemporary Wayang Archive) aims to be used by scholars, students, artists and wayang enthusiasts interested in Javanese wayang kulit (an Indonesian-language version is being planned). Our goal is to aid in a variety of research and creative projects, ranging from ethnographic to computational analysis. The information in the entries is hyperlinked and easily searchable. It is also encoded in machine-readable formats that can be used for data-driven quantitative analyses. Our main goal is not comprehensiveness but consistency and below we explain how we standardize the data in the entries, and the rationale for this.
HankerM·villaorlado.github.io·
Digital Wayang Encyclopedia
Character types of Sendratari Ramayana
Character types of Sendratari Ramayana
For this study, we were interested in seeing whether biomechanics could be used to investigate a question relevant to Javanse dance scholarship. We wanted to avoid a simplistic cross-cultural comparison or merely looking at practical questions such as injury preventing or teaching enhancement. Although we believe both possibilities to hold promise, we were here primarily interested in whether we could use the biomechanical toolkit to address questions relevant to dance scholars. The question we settled on is related to stylization and typology. We were interested in identifying the biomechanical markers of different character types for male dancers (refined, vigorous, vigorous-refined, simian, birdlike, and de- mon) in the dramatic Sendratari form of Yogyakarta. The reasons for focusing in this question require some discussion of Javanese dance theory and practice. Typology, or the classification of dances along several types is a key feature for the practice and appreciation of Javanese dance. Typology is central to the discursive sphere on dance, as well as to the appreciation and pedagogy of dance. Several researchers indicate that typology is also a key component of the Javanese worldview, aesthetic principles and general philosophy, and dance is just a reflection of this. In dance, there are regional types, dance types and character types. A recording of standing motion for each character type can be found in the left side panel, as well as some comparative features that enable users to explore similiarities and differences among these character types.
HankerM·villaorlado.github.io·
Character types of Sendratari Ramayana
Contemporary Wayang Archive
Contemporary Wayang Archive
Full length videos of new adaptations of Javanese wayang kulit (wayang kontemporer), with subtitles and notes. The Contemporary Wayang Archive (CWA) is a collection of re-elaborations of Java's oldest performance tradition. All of the performances were recorded in 21st century Java. This archive includes translations, notes and explanations of how the performances were received in their original context.
HankerM·cwa-web.org·
Contemporary Wayang Archive
Wayang Kontemporer. Innovations in Javanese Wayang Kulit.
Wayang Kontemporer. Innovations in Javanese Wayang Kulit.
This is the dissertation website of Miguel Escobar. This dissertation was completed in 2014 and examined in 2015 at the Theatre Studies Programme of the National University of Singapore. It was awarded the Wang Gungwu Medal and Prize for the best dissertation in Humanities and Social Sciences (2015).
HankerM·cwa-web.org·
Wayang Kontemporer. Innovations in Javanese Wayang Kulit.
Digital Humanities and Theatre Research | Miguel Escobar Varela
Digital Humanities and Theatre Research | Miguel Escobar Varela
I am a web developer, translator and theatre researcher who has lived in Mexico, The Netherlands, Singapore and Indonesia. I work as Assistant Professor of Theatre Studies at the National University of Singapore and Academic Advisor on Digital Scholarship at the NUS Libraries. I also convene Digital Humanities Singapore. My main research interests are Indonesian theatre and the digital/computational humanities.
HankerM·miguelescobar.com·
Digital Humanities and Theatre Research | Miguel Escobar Varela
DREAMSEA
DREAMSEA
DREAMSEA is a program to preserve Southeast Asian manuscripts and their contents and aims to disclose the immense cultural treasures to the world. Supported by the Arcadia Foundation in the United Kingdom, the program is run by the Center for the Study of Islam and Society (PPIM) of the Syarif Hidayatulah State Islamic University in Jakarta and the Center for the Study of Manuscript Cultures (CSMC) of the University of Hamburg. DREAMSEA preserves endangered manuscripts owned and kept by individuals who live in Southeast Asia. Manuscripts collected by institutions fall beyond the scope of the program. It is important to highlight that many manuscripts are in unfavorable conditions and their future existence is threatened. Because many manuscripts are or will be damaged, their contents may disappear forever.
HankerM·dreamsea.co·
DREAMSEA