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A Biography of Decolonization in Cold War Southeast Asia

Organizer: Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Michigan

Type/Location: Hybrid / Ann Arbor, MI

Description:

This paper revisits mid-20th century Asia, Southeast Asia especially when the promise of decolonization met the perils of the Cold War. Theoretically, it argues for an eventful geography of decolonization based on the actions, perspectives, and biographies of historical actors. Empirically, it discusses the life and work of Oey Hong Lee (1924-1992), a visionary intellectual, activist, and journalist from Indonesia. His Indonesian-language book “Asia Won in Dien Bien Phu” (1961) narrates the diplomatic and military struggles between France and Vietnam that ended the First Indochina War (1946-54). In dialog with anti-colonial theorists Aime Cesaire, Frantz Fanon, and others, Oey advanced a regional understanding that balanced contextual nuance with geopolitical imperative. In contrast to his better-known contemporaries, Oey focused on the regional tensions between decolonization and geopolitical struggle, analyzing less the universalizing binary between colonizer and colonized and more the specific histories of place, in this case, Vietnam and Indonesia. In so doing, he rejected the regional construct of Southeast Asia as a creature of American-led Cold War machinations in favor of an emancipatory idea of Asia positioned at the vanguard of decolonizing world order. All the while, Oey navigated a political landscape in Indonesia that, between 1955-65, was roiling with Cold War intrigue, nativist Islam, and anti-Chinese sentiment that ultimately forced him into exile.

About the Speaker:

Christian C. Lentz is an Associate Professor of Geography and Adjunct Associate Professor of History at University North Carolina-Chapel Hill. Professor Lentz studies the political, social, and environmental history of modern Vietnam and Indonesia. More particularly, he writes about nationalism, statemaking, and territory after World War II when anti-colonial movements contested European empire and transformed ruling relations in its wake. Trained in Southeast Asian history, development sociology, and environmental science, his interdisciplinary approach grounds archival materials in their generative context. In 2017, he was a member of the School of Historical Studies at the Institute of Advanced Studies in Princeton. In 2021, the Association for Asian Studies awarded Contested Territory the Harry J. Benda Prize for outstanding first book on Southeast Asia in any discipline.

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