The Durian Chronicles: Reflections on US and Southeast Asia Policy in the Trump Era
By (Author) Sally Tyler
Chin Music Press
Chin Music Press
10th January 2023
United States
General
Non Fiction
327.730590905
Paperback
192
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
The curious durian fruit, both delicious and stinky, is the embodiment of dissonance. Author Sally Tyler uses the fruit's dual nature as a metaphor for exploring the dissonance inherent in recent policy and political trends in the U.S. and Southeast Asia. Such dissonance is on display when hopeful social movements bring young and old into the streets by the tens of thousands at the same time a call to restore order paves the way for dictators like Duterte, the tacit ratification of yet another Thai coup, and the election of Trump. The book's essays, a series of snapshots spanning four years, tackle topics from criminal justice and drug addiction to fashion activism and artistic censorship.
Tyler's work, some of which has appeared in New Mandala and Policy Forum, analyzes the U.S. retreat from multilateralism at a time when complex global problems -- climate change, economic inequality, the coronavirus pandemic -- require even greater collaboration. Through the lens of a dynamic, yet under-reported, region, Tyler brings fresh perspective to Trump policy reverberations in far corners of the world and argues for greater connectivity in what has become a fractured era.
"Sally Tyler brings a unique perspective to the complex dynamics and culture of Southeast Asia and their interplay with the US. This enjoyable collection offers insights seen nowhere else and will appeal to the specialist and casual reader alike."
-Derek Mitchell, President of the National Democratic Institute (NDI) and former US ambassador to Burma
-Beatrice Siviero, The Southeast Asia Globe
-Martyn Pearce, Founding Editor of the Asia & Pacific Policy Society's Policy Forum
Sally Tyler is an attorney and policy practitioner in Washington, DC, where she has worked in the U.S. labor movement for more than two decades. She is a frequent commenter on events in Southeast Asia.