The Organization of Production in the Pre-Colonial Southeast Asian Port City
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Reid, Anthony
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New South Wales University Press, licensed rights to University of Hawaii Press
Abstract
Much of the writing on Asian port cities in recent years, including the present
volume, has been devoted to understanding the functioning and role of
European colonial port cities-'beachheads of an exogenous system ...
peripheral but nevertheless revolutionary'. 1 These colonial ports in Asia were
indeed revolutionary, chiefly because they became in the nineteenth and
twentieth centuries the channel through which the industrial revolution and
finance capitalism began to transform Asia. They first undermined and finally
overwhelmed the older cities which had always been at the centre of Asian
life. To understand how and to what extent they did so, it is necessary to
understand how the traditional Asian port city functioned, and how it related
to the political and cultural life of its surroundings. One of the neglected aspects
of this prominence of the port city in Southeast Asia is the extent of industrial
activity carried on in them which, in producing for both local and overseas
markets, significantly added to commercial and maritime entrepot functions.
The purpose of this chapter is to discuss the organisation of this production
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Brides of the Sea: Asian Port Cities in the Colonial Era
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