Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies

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Dr Patrick Jory
Edited Books
Kamaruzzaman Bustamam-Ahmad and Patrick Jory, eds., Islamic Studies and Islamic Education
in Contemporary Southeast Asia (Kuala Lumpur: Yayasan Ilmuwan: 2011).
Michael J. Montesano and Patrick Jory, eds., Thai South and Malay North: Ethnic Interactions on
a Plural Peninsula (Singapore: NUS Press, 2008).
Patrick Jory and Jirawat Saengthong, Poet lok thurakit rang nok saen lan [Bird’s Nests: Secrets of a
Billion Dollar Business] Nakhon Si Thammarat, Thailand Research Fund; Regional Studies
Program, Walailak University, 2007 [in Thai].
Articles
“Thai Historical Writing”, in Axel Schneider and Daniel Woolf, eds., The Oxford History of
Historical Writing, Volume 5: Historical Writing Since 1945 (Oxford: Oxford University Press,
2011).
“Review Article: The Rise and Fall of Empires and the Case for Liberal Imperialism”, Kyoto Review
of Southeast Asia, February 2010, available at http://kyotoreviewsea.org/KCMS/
“Some Remarks on the Current State and Possible Future of Southeast Asian Studies”
Jati, Special Issue, Department of Southeast Asian Studies, University of Malaya (2010): 2833.
“Thailand: Recent History” in The Far East and Australasia 2009, 40th Edition (London:
Routledge, 2008), pp. 1190-1213.
“From “Melayu Patani” to “Muslim”: The Spectre of Ethnic Identity in Southern Thailand”,
Southeast Asia Research, 15, 2 (July 2007): 255-279.
“‘Patani Melayu’ to ‘Thai Muslim’”, ISIM Review 18 (Autumn 2006): 42-3.
“Problems in Contemporary Thai Nationalist Historiography”, Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia,
Review Essay / March 2003, available at http://kyotoreview.cseas.kyotou.ac.jp/issue/issue2/article_251.html
“Thai and Western Buddhist Scholarship in the Age of Colonialism: King Chulalongkorn
Redefines the Jatakas”, The Journal of Asian Studies, 61, no. 3 (August 2002): 901-928.
“Barami and the Vessantara Jataka: The Origin and Spread of a Premodern Thai Concept of
Power”, Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 16, 2 (2002): 36-78.
“The King and Us: Representations of Monarchy in Thailand and the Case of ‘Anna and the
King’”, The International Journal of Cultural Studies, 4, 2 (June 2001): 201-218.
“Books and the Nation: The Making of Thailand’s National Library”, The Journal of Southeast
Asian Studies, 31, 2 (September 2000): 351-373.
“Multiculturalism in Thailand”, The Harvard Asia-Pacific Review, 4:1, (Winter 2000): 18-22.
“Thai Identity, Globalisation, and Advertising Culture”, Asian Studies Review, 23, 4
(December 1999): 461-87.
“Political Decentralisation and the Resurgence of Regional Identities in Thailand”, Australian
Journal of Social Issues, Special Issue: National and Cultural Identities, 34, 4 (November 1999):
337-52.
“Southeast Asia’s Götterdämmerung?”, The Asia-Pacific Magazine, No. 11 (1998): 12-15.
“Damrong Rajanubhab, Prince (1862-1943): Thai Prince and Historian”, entry for
D.R.Woolf, ed., A Global Encyclopaedia of Historiography, Vol. 1 (New York: Garland
Publishing, 1998), p. 221.
“Thiphakorawong, Chaophraya (19th Century Thai Chronicler)”, entry for D.R. Woolf, ed.,
A Global Encyclopaedia of Historiography, Vol. 2 (New York: Garland Publishing, 1998), p. 884.
Book Chapters
“Luang Pho Thuat and the Integration of Patani”, in Michael J. Montesano and Patrick Jory,
eds., Thai South and Malay North: Ethnic Interactions on a Plural Peninsula (Singapore: NUS Press,
2008), pp. 292-303.
Articles (in Thai)
“Songkhram prawatisatniphon thai: kan tor su khong sathaban kasat nai prawatisat samai
mai” [Thai History Wars: the Struggle of the Monarchy in Modern Thai History], Fa Dio Kan
[Same Sky] (January – September 2010): 100-124.
“Pattani nai rup lor luang pho thuat” [Pattani in the Image of Luang Pho Thuat] Ratthasatsan
[Journal of Political Science], Special Issue: 60th Anniversary of the Faculty of Political
Science, Thammasat University, 30th Anniversary of the Journal of Political Science, Vol. 4
(2010): 424-472.
“Parithat nangsu: wa duai khwan rung rueang – lom salai khong jakrawat lae panha wa duai
jakrawatniyomseri” [Review Article: The Rise and Fall of Empires and the Case for Liberal
Imperialism] An [READ] Vol. 1, No. 3 (Oct-Dec 2008): 174-187.
“Prawatisat chao phuen muang aborigini nai thana prawatisat thong thin: kan muang nai
prawatisat khong chat Australia” [Aboriginal History as Australian ‘Local History’: The
Politics of National Narratives] in Suwit Maprasong, ed., Naew khit kan sueksa prawatisat thong
thin [Ideas in the Study of Local History]. Conference Proceedings, Conference on Nakhon Si
Thammarat Local History, 20 June 2008, pp. 66-73.
“Jak melayu patani su muslim: phap lon haeng atalak thang chatiphan nai phak tai khong
thai” [From Melayu Patani to Muslim: the Specter of Ethnic Identity in Southern Thailand],
trans. Nipon Sohem and Prinya Nuanpiam, Fa Dio Kan [Same Sky] Vol. 4, No. 2 (April-June
2006): 154-65.
(reprinted in Prinya Nuanpian, ed., Nok niyam khwan pen thai. Thai-Patani: muea rao at yu ruam
lae baeng yaek jak kan dai [Outside the Definition of Thainess. Thailand – Patani: When We
Can Neither Live Together nor Separate (Songkhla, Sun thale sap sueksa, 2008), pp. 27-48.)
“Suep sao kamnoet ho samut haeng chat: nangsu kap khwam pen chat” [Books and the
Nation: The Making of Thailand’s National Library] trans. Prajak Kongkirati,
Sinlapawathanatham [Arts and Culture], 24-25, 9 (July 2004): 112-123.
Translations
“On the Phetburi Maha Chat” in Nidhi Eoseewong, Pen and Sail: Literature and History in
Early Bangkok, ed. Chris Baker and Ben Anderson (Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2006), pp.
200-226.
Kanokphong Songsomphan, “The Role and Status of Folk Literature in the Age of
Globalization”, in Tenggara: Journal of Southeast Asian Literature, Vol. 45/46 (2002): 66-70.
Reviews
Review, Johan Fischer, Proper Islamic Consumption: Shopping among the Malays in Modern Malaysia
(Copenhagen: NIAS Press, 2008), for Journal of the Siam Society, Vol. 98 (2011), (forthcoming).
Review, Rachel V. Harrison and Peter A. Jackson, The Ambiguous Allure of the West: Traces of
the Colonial in Thailand, Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press, 2010, for Southeast Asian
Studies, Journal of the Kyoto Center of Southeast Asian Studies (2011), (forthcoming).
Review, David Streckfuss, David Streckfuss, Truth on Trial in Thailand: Defamation, Treason and
Lèse-Majesté. London and New York: Routledge, 2011, for New Mandala: New Perspectives on
Mainland Southeast Asia, http://asiapacific.anu.edu.au/newmandala/2010/12/20/review-oftruth-on-trial-tlcnmrev-xiv/ 20 December (2010).
Review, Howard Federspiel, Sultans, Shamans & Saints: Islam and Muslims in Southeast Asia
(Chiang Mai: Silkworm Books, 2008), for Journal of the Siam Society, Vol. 97 (2009): 287-89.
Review, Duncan McCargo, ed., Rethinking Thailand’s Southern Violence (Singapore: NUS Press,
2007), for Journal of the Siam Society, Vol. 96 (2008): 285-88.
Review, Chris Baker and Pasuk Phongphaichit, A History of Thailand, (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2005), for Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, Vol. 38, No. 2 (June
2007): 404-405.
Conference Report, “Voices of Islam in Europe and Southeast Asia”, American Journal of
Islamic Social Sciences, Vol. 23, No. 1 (Winter 2006): 142-44.
Review: David Bourchier and Vedi Hadiz, eds. Indonesian Politics and Society: A Reader
(London and New York: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003), for Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia, Issue 4,
Regional Economic Integration (October 2003) (http://kyotoreview.cseas.kyotou.ac.jp/issue/issue3/index.html)
Review, Marc Askew, Bangkok: Place, Practice and Representation, (London and New York:
Routledge 2002), for Asian Studies Review, Vol. 27, No. 2 (June 2003): 274-75.
Review, Ruth McVey, ed., Money and Power in Provincial Thailand, (Copenhagen: Nordic
Institute of Asian Studies, 2000), for Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 16, 1 (May 2002): 58-9.
Review, Katherine Bowie, Rituals of National Loyalty: An Anthropology of the State and the Village
Scout Movement in Thailand (New York: Columbia University Press, 1997), for Anthropological
Forum, 9, 2 (1999): 215-17.
Newspaper Articles
“The Silence of the Intellectual Lambs: The Sept 19 Military Overthrow of an Elected
Government has Placed Thailand’s Academics in a Difficult Position”, Bangkok Post, Friday,
February 23 2007, Section 1, p. 11.
“All Together Now: Uniformed Students, Uniform Minds: Why Uniforms Have No Place
in a University”, Bangkok Post, Monday, December 11 2006, Outlook, p. 1.
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