1980
DOI: 10.1017/s0022463400019032
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The Case for a Maritime Perspective on Southeast Asia

Abstract: On early European maps of what is now called Southeast Asia, the sea lies in the foreground, its whales and mermaids, waves and ships precisely drawn and prominent. To a modern reader looking back through centuries, with hindsight, such maps may illustrate ignorance, science lapsing into art, the greater scale ofsea features compared to those on land a straightforward function of the ocean's being a larger, blanker slate on which to draw. Yet the aquatic monster big enough to swallow Singapore, the headlands a… Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The nations of Southeast Asia probably have the strongest maritime traditions and the greatest reliance on marine fisheries of any region within the Third World (Emmerson, 1980a). Indonesia and the Philippines are both archipelagic nations with coastlines among the longest of any nations on earth (Kent & Valencia, 1985).…”
Section: Regional Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The nations of Southeast Asia probably have the strongest maritime traditions and the greatest reliance on marine fisheries of any region within the Third World (Emmerson, 1980a). Indonesia and the Philippines are both archipelagic nations with coastlines among the longest of any nations on earth (Kent & Valencia, 1985).…”
Section: Regional Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%