International Relations of the Asia-Pacific Advance Access first published online on August 6, 2007
This version published online on August 28, 2007
International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, doi:10.1093/irap/lcm016
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Southeast Asia: theory between modernization and tradition
Department of Political Science, National University of Singapore, AS1/4-5, 11 Arts Link, S(117570), Singapore
This article inquires into the absence of non-western theorizing upon Southeast Asian international relations by positing that modernization and its conceptual kin realism have proclaimed themselves as the mainstream in both theoretical and empirical research. This is as much a product of postcolonial western scholarship as it is of indigenous scholarship in reproducing the former's frameworks. The effect of this Gramscian hegemony is to marginalize possibilities for non-western international theory. There are nonetheless flickers of hope for a generic Southeast Asian contribution to theorizing International Relations, inclusive of non-mainstream western scholarship, if one considers the categories of transitional and hybrid scholarship, in addition to historically informed possibilities of a traditional Southeast Asian statehood.
The originally published version of this article was incorrect. The publisher apologises for this error.