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Seaways and Gatekeepers: Trade and State in the Eastern Archipelagos of Southeast Asia, c.1600–c.1906

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Paton, Maureen (22 June 2012). "Miriam Margolyes: I had no secrets from my mother". The Guardian . Retrieved 5 November 2021. Sutherland met Miriam Margolyes in 1967 and they have been partners since then. [8] [9] However, they do not live together and spend sporadic periods in London, Tuscany, and Australia. [10] Margolyes described Sutherland as an " introvert" [11] and the secret to their lasting relationship as "not living together." [10] Publications [ edit ] Key research papers [ edit ]

Sutherland, Heather (1973). "Notes on Java's Regent Families: Part I". Indonesia. 16 (16): 112–147. doi: 10.2307/3350649. hdl: 1813/53565. JSTOR 3350649. Learning of her research interest, Lance Castles from the University of Melbourne who had recently enrolled for Ph.D. under the supervision of Harry J. Benda at Yale University asked his supervisor to invite Sutherland to join their team. [5] [6] Under Benda, Sutherland earned her doctoral degree in 1973 on the thesis titled " Pangreh Pradja: Java's indigenous administrative corps and its role in the last decades of Dutch colonial rule." [7] She continued teaching at the University of Malaya for one year. [4] The Making of a Bureaucratic Elite: The Colonial Transformation of the Javanese Priyayi. Asian Studies Association of Australia. 1979. ISBN 978-0-7081-1814-6. From Mindanao to Timor, Bali to New Guinea, Sutherland finds new linkages and discovers fresh fractures down the centuries. A brilliant re-imagining of how people thought and lived, with a dazzling command of the sources. The book transforms the way we see the past of island Southeast Asia." Sutherland, Heather (2001). "The Makassar Malays: Adaptation and Identity, c. 1660-1790". Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 32 (3): 397–421. doi: 10.1017/S0022463401000224. S2CID 55948675.Sutherland, Heather (2009). "Treacherous Translators and Improvident Paupers: Perception and Practice in Dutch Makassar, Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 53 (1–2): 319–356. doi: 10.1163/002249910X12573963244566. Peake, Amber (7 August 2020). "Miriam Margolyes married: Is Miriam Margolyes married?". Express.co.uk . Retrieved 5 November 2021. Please be aware that the delivery time frame may vary according to the area of delivery - the approximate delivery time is usually between 1-2 business days. In Seaways and Gatekeepers, trade provides the integrating framework for local and regional histories that cover more than 300 years, from the late 16th century to the beginning of the 20th, when new technologies and changing markets signaled Western dominance. The introduction considers theories from the social sciences and economics which can help liberate writers from dependence on states as narrative frameworks. Southeast Asian specialists can learn from this book, which ignores conventional geographic and temporal boundaries. It will also appeal to those working on wider themes such as global history, state formation, the evolution of markets and anthropology. What will the upcoming 20th Congress of the Communist Party of China (CPC) bring, and what will the next decade of CPC rule look like? Who will rule China and what future do they envision for the Party and China? In this volume, the East Asian Institute in Singapore brings together an exceptional team of world-leading China experts from Asia, the United States, Europe and Australia to set out the future implications of trends in CPC politics and governance in CPC General Party Secretary Xi Jinping’s “New Era.” The essays collected in this volume bring together cutting-edge research and insights into the China’s economy, society, politics, military and international relations targeted at for a professional audience in government, business, the media, NGOs and universities. The book is distributed Open Access under a Creative Commons license, and sold in print editions in Asia.

Reid, Anthony (14 September 2020). "Thoughts for Lance Castles". Inside Indonesia . Retrieved 5 November 2021. Sutherland, Heather (2011). "Whose Makassar? Claiming Space in a Segmented City". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 53 (4): 791–826. doi: 10.1017/S0010417511000417. S2CID 145715220. Seaways and Gatekeepers: Trade and State in the Eastern Archipelagos of Southeast Asia, C.1600-c.1906. NUS Press. 2021. ISBN 978-981-325-122-9.

Schulte Nordholt, H. G. C.; Raben, R., eds. (2005). "Contingent Devices". Locating Southeast Asia Geographies of Knowledge and Politics of Space. Leiden: Brill. pp.20–59. doi: 10.1163/9789004434882_003. ISBN 9789004434882. Publication Name: Seaways and Gatekeepers: Trade and State in the Eastern Archipelagos of Southeast Asia, c.1600-c.1906 Boomgaard, Peter (2007). A World of Water: Rain, Rivers and Seas in Southeast Asian Histories. Singapore: NUS Press. p.355. ISBN 978-9971-69-371-8.

Sutherland, Heather (1968). "Pudjangga Baru: Aspects of Indonesian Intellectual Life in the 1930s". Indonesia. 6 (6): 106–127. doi: 10.2307/3350714. hdl: 1813/53440. JSTOR 3350714. a b Peake, Amber (31 July 2020). "Miriam Margolyes partner: Who is Miriam's partner Heather?". Express.co.uk . Retrieved 5 November 2021. Sutherland, Heather (1973). Pangreh Pradja: Java's indigenous administrative corps and its role in the last decades of Dutch colonial rule (PDF) (Ph.D. Thesis thesis). Yale University. OCLC 893239539.Monsoon Traders: Ships, Skippers and Commodities in Eighteenth-Century Makassar. Brill. 2021. ISBN 978-90-04-48691-1. (with Gerrit Knaap) This combination of ambition and caution led the author to divide the book into two sections. The first, Foundations, traces the geographic, economic and political patterns which constituted a deeply rooted sub-stratum knitting this extensive region together. These synchronic chapters provide the basis for the cautious part two, Glimpsed Histories. The author seemed to tread carefully here. Although she emphasizes the trading ties and political alliances that connected diverse regions into shifting clusters, the author tries to give politically unincorporated societies their due share of attention. Trade rather than the state is the central motif. The resulting story is one of adaptation, opportunities grasped and lost, and of tenuous but very resilient webs within wider systems. But it is all very incomplete: local perspectives are extremely rare. Rather than forcibly merging these Glimpsed Histories into one explicit theme the author has deliberately chosen to leave the fragments where they lie. The results may be jagged, but a little uncertainty is preferable to a misleading homogenisation which could preclude promising avenues of enquiry. Sutherland, Heather (1975). "The Priyayi". Indonesia. 19 (19): 57–77. doi: 10.2307/3350702. JSTOR 3350702. This is a scholarly tour de force : a brilliant historical exploration of the lively trading world of the islands of the Sulu, Sulawesi and Arafura seas, a region in Southeast Asia that, for centuries, poured forth exotic products to the capitals of the world. It distils a lifetime of research into a revealing account of a vitally important part of our planet." – James Fox , Australian National University

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