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America's Strategy in Southeast Asia: From Cold War to Terror War

(Paperback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

America's Strategy in Southeast Asia: From Cold War to Terror War

Contributors:

By (Author) James A. Tyner

ISBN:

9780742553583

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Publication Date:

20th December 2006

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

327.73059

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

268

Dimensions:

Width 150mm, Height 233mm, Spine 21mm

Weight:

408g

Description

Geography encompasses everything from the localwhere human beings live, work, and travelto metageographies like nations and regions. James A. Tyner's inventive and multidisciplinary ideas on geography similarly range from the personalhis father's experience in the military during the Vietnam Warto a broad discussion of how the United States has come to exercise power through the production of geographic knowledge, in this case in Southeast Asia. Since the end of the Second World War, Southeast Asia has served as a surrogate space to further American imperial interests, which are economic, political, territorial, and moral in scope. America's Strategy in Southeast Asia contends that the construction of Southeast Asia as a geographic entity has been a crucial component in the creation of the American empire. For example, America's most blatant experience of colonial rule occurred the Philippines, America's longest war was fought in Vietnam, and most recently, some American policymakers have identified Southeast Asia as the "Second Front" in the War on Terror. Yet, America's overriding strategy in Southeast Asia and the region itself remains something of a mystery for the American populacea "black box" in America's geographical imagination. This clear and innovative book educates readers about Southeast Asia's importance in American foreign policy.

Reviews

The ways we divide the world geographically have powerful political and social implications. This may seem an obvious point when the focus of attention is a highly charged, contested construct such as the 'Islamic World,' but it applies to seemingly objective regional divisions as well. Southeast Asia is a case in point. As this book powerfully shows, Southeast Asia is anything but a geographical given. It is a regional construct of recent vintage that has emerged out of, and has shaped, U.S. foreign policywith far-reaching implications for the politics and economics of the region. Tyner's penetrating analysis of the emergence and power of the Southeast Asian regional idea represents the most important response to date to Martin Lewis and Kren Wigen's call (in the Myth of Continents) for a vigorous reexamination of the metageographical notions we use to make sense of the world. -- Alexander B. Murphy, University of Oregon
James Tyner writes with commitment and critical insight. America's Strategy in Southeast Asia is both a useful geographical-historical analysis of the U.S. government's past imperial ventures in Southeast Asia and a timely warning of the projects the government is currently carrying out as it locates the region within the War on Terror. -- Jim Glassman, University of British Columbia

Author Bio

James A. Tyner is associate professor in the Department of Geography at Kent State University.

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