Content Asian Studies
ASEAN Studies and Southeast Asian Studies – Morning Meditations
I’ve been sick recently, but I have a lot of ideas in my head and so I decided to record a video about them. I’ve
What the Internet Can Tell us about the Field of Asian Studies
Anyone who has visited my flash blog about the need to transform Asian Studies for the digital age (Content Asian Studies) or who has read
Imagine If We Let Google Rank Universities. . .
These days there are many universities in Asia that devote incredible amounts of energy towards improving the ranking of their respective university in world ranking
Historians and Historical Scholarship in the Digital Age
About a week ago, historian Vũ Đức Liêm published an article in the online journal Tia Sáng on “‘Small,’ ‘Brief’ and ‘Narrow’ Histories or a
Minerva Schools, Baby Boomer Politics and the Decline of Area Studies
This is a discussion about how innovation in some sectors and the lack of innovation in others is transforming the academic landscape and contributing to
New Mandala as Content Asian Studies
This video is an assessment of the New Mandala blog at ANU as an example of “Content Asian Studies.” For more on what I mean
Vin(group) University, Melbourne U. and the Future of the Humanities (and Asian Studies)
[I posted this piece on the Content Asian Studies site. Given that it covers topics (the future of Humanities/area studies education in and outside of
A New Year, A New Blog: “Content Asian Studies”
Seven years after starting “Le Minh Khai’s Southeast Asian History blog,” I feel like all of the world has changed dramatically except for one part.
Southeast Asian Studies, ASEAN and Western Scholarship
A few days ago I had the pleasure of attending two panels on “Emerging and Continuing Trends in Southeast Asian Studies” at The 10th International
The Other North American View of “The 30-Years War in Vietnam” – the View that Will Never Change as Long as Academics only Speak to Fellow Intellectuals
In the previous post I commented on a recent essay that historian Christopher Goscha published in the New York Times called “The 30-Years War in