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Writing Asian History MTA
A Critical Guide to Sources, Methods, and Debates in Asian Historiography
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Writing Asian History This book offers a comprehensive methodological guide for advanced students and scholars of Asian history, arguing for an approach that is critical, multilingual, and deeply attuned to the politics of knowledge. It posits that writing Asian history requires moving beyond traditional archives to engage with a vast mosaic of regions, polities, and communities whose histories constantly cross borders and scales. The central task for the historian is to transform disparate traces—texts, objects, numbers, images, and memories—into persuasive interpretations. This process demands rigorous source criticism, sensitivity to the power structures embedded in archives, and a willingness to question foundational categories like "Asia" itself.

The guide is structured into three parts. The first part establishes the methodological toolkit. It begins by tackling the conceptual framing of "Asia," exploring the histories of regions, periodization, and the inherent biases of historical categories. It then moves to the core skills of historical practice: source criticism, multilingual and translational work, and navigating the diverse, often politicized archival landscapes across Asia. This section provides practical strategies for reading different source types, from chronicles and legal documents to quantitative data, maps, and oral histories. It emphasizes the importance of understanding how each source is shaped by its own specific context, genre, and power dynamics, urging historians to triangulate across a wide range of evidence to build robust interpretations.

The second part of the book expands the historian’s toolkit by examining specific thematic and evidentiary fields. It demonstrates how to engage with material and non-textual sources such as archaeology, epigraphy, art, film, and music. It then delves into major historiographical debates that have shaped the field, offering methods for approaching the histories of religion and ritual, empire and colonialism, the nation-state, gender and family, labor and migration, and environment and climate. This section illustrates how different analytical lenses—from feminist and subaltern studies to science and technology studies—can illuminate different problems and produce more nuanced, inclusive histories that move beyond elite, male-dominated narratives.

Finally, the book looks to the practice and future of the historical profession. It addresses the "transregional turn," encouraging historians to use comparative and oceanic frames like the Silk Roads and the Indian Ocean to trace connections and challenge Eurocentric narratives. It also examines the impact of the digital revolution, offering guidance on using digital humanities tools for data analysis and mapping while remaining critically aware of their inherent biases. The guide concludes by emphasizing the historian’s role in the public sphere, advocating for engagement with wider audiences through public history, journalism, and policy work. Ultimately, it is a roadmap for designing projects, engaging with complex archives, and crafting interventions that are ethically grounded, analytically sharp, and contribute to a more dynamic and self-aware understanding of Asia’s diverse and interconnected pasts.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Navigating Asia's vast and diverse archives, from imperial chronicles and religious canons to legal records and oral testimonies, often requires a multilingual approach to understand sources in their original languages and scripts.
  • The book advocates for a critical and contextual methodology, emphasizing the need to question foundational concepts like 'Asia,' evaluate sources for bias and provenance, and move beyond Eurocentric periodizations.
  • Chapters offer focused guidance on handling specific types of historical evidence, including administrative and legal documents, quantitative data like prices and taxes, as well as non-textual sources like maps, artifacts, and visual media.
  • The guide explores how to engage with major historiographical fields such as gender and queer history, environmental history, and the history of science to analyze power structures and knowledge circulation.
  • Attention is given to the practical and ethical dimensions of historical research, covering topics like access to archives, collaboration in multilingual projects, and the use of digital humanities tools and public history engagement.
Who's It For:

This book is written for advanced students and professional scholars of Asian history who are developing or undertaking original research. It is an indispensable guide for doctoral candidates, researchers, and faculty seeking to refine their methodological toolkit. Scholars in related disciplines such as anthropology, religious studies, or political science who are conducting historical research on Asia will also find it provides a critical framework for navigating the continent's complex archives and historiographical debates.

Author:

Sean Mills

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

January 11, 2026

Word Count:

67,543 words

Reading Time:

4 hours 44 minutes

Sample:

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3 ratings