Asia in Transition: Narratives of Ambivalence
Loo, Daron Benjamin; Chang-Yau Hoon
Borneo is often described through its diversity, but the lived realities of belonging in the region are far more complex, fluid, and compelling. This volume brings together critical narratives from Brunei Darussalam, Sabah and Sarawak in Malaysia, and Kalimantan in Indonesia to examine how ethnic, religious, and linguistic identities are negotiated across one of Southeast Asia’s most culturally rich regions.
Drawing on postcolonial thought, particularly on the idea of cultural hybridity, the book explores Borneo as a vibrant space of encounter, crossing, and negotiation. The chapters reveal how individuals and communities navigate shifting boundaries of ethnicity, citizenship, indigeneity, language, religion, and minority positioning. Rather than presenting identity as fixed or neatly defined, the volume captures the ambivalence of belonging: the tensions, uncertainties, attachments, and transformations that shape everyday life in Borneo.
Through personal and communal narratives, the book offers insight into how people become who they are in relation to history, place, power, and one another. It will appeal to readers interested in Borneo, Southeast Asian studies, identity, postcolonial theory, indigeneity, minority communities, inter-ethnic relations, and the politics of belonging. At its heart, this volume asks a powerful question: what does it mean to belong in a region where identities are constantly being blended, contested, and remade?
Details
Published by: Springer
Publication Date: 2026-11-11
Format: Hardcover
ISBN-13: 9789819224357
DOI:
Dimensions: 235cm x155cm
Pages: