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A01=Colin Long
A01=Marc Askew
A01=William Logan
assembly
Auguste Pavie
Author_Colin Long
Author_Marc Askew
Author_William Logan
Buddha Images
building
Capital's Gdp
Capital’s Gdp
Category=GTM
Category=JBSD
Cold War Southeast Asia
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Fa Ngum
French colonial legacy
geopolitical transformation
government
Khorat Plateau
Lan Na
lao
Lao Economy
Lao Elite
Lao Government
Lao History
Lao Issara
Lao PDR
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Lao People’s Democratic Republic
Lao Women
Laos
Luang Prabang
Mainland South East
Mainland South East Asia
Middle Mekong
Nakhon Phanom
Nakhon Ratchasima
national
National Assembly Building
party
pathet
people's
postcolonial urbanism
Rama III
revolutionary
royal
Royal Lao Government
Southeast Asian studies
urban anthropology
urban identity formation Laos
Vientiane Plain

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415596626
  • Weight: 490g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 31 Jul 2010
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Providing insights into this neglected Southeast Asian city, this interesting book interprets Vientiane’s landscape - physical as well as imagined - as a reflection of key aspects of Lao geo-political history, the nature of Lao urbanism, and its critical relation to constructions of Lao identity in the contemporary period. It is argued that the patterns of change seen through Vientiane’s past embody the key political and economic processes and transformations impacting on the people of Laos.

The Lao urban past has rarely been an object of attention by scholars. Laos, in fact, is continually portrayed as a rural backwater, marginal to the dynamic trends affecting most of the Southeast Asian mainland. In contrast to these persistent and static portrayals of Laos as a tiny landlocked backwater, with no significant urban present or past, the authors aim to document, explain and evaluate the significance of the Lao urban landscape.

Focusing on the theme of Vientiane’s ‘marginality’ in its various forms, the book interprets this apparent marginality as an historically-produced phenomenon resulting from geo-politics dating from the pre-colonial period and extending into the post-colonial period. Drawing on a wide range of research materials, Vientiane is the first work of its kind on this ignored city.

Marc Askew is Associate Professor in the School of Social Sciences, Victoria University, Melbourne, Australia.

William Logan is Alfred Deakin Professor and holds the UNESCO Chair of Heritage and Urbanism in the School of History, Heritage and Society, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.

Colin Long is a lecturer in cultural heritage at the Cultural Heritage Centre for Asia and the Pacific at Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia.

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