4th Edition

A History of Cambodia

By David Chandler Copyright 2008
    382 Pages
    by Routledge

    384 Pages
    by Routledge

    In this clear and concise volume, author David Chandler provides a timely overview of Cambodia, a small but increasingly visible Southeast Asian nation. Praised by the Journal of Asian Studies as an ''original contribution, superior to any other existing work'', this acclaimed text has now been completely revised and updated to include material examining the early history of Cambodia, whose famous Angkorean ruins now attract more than one million tourists each year, the death of Pol Pot, and the revolution and final collapse of the Khmer Rouge. The fourth edition reflects recent research by major scholars as well as Chandler's long immersion in the subject and contains an entirely new section on the challenges facing Cambodia today, including an analysis of the current state of politics and sociology and the increasing pressures of globalization. This comprehensive overview of Cambodia will illuminate, for undergraduate students as well as general readers, the history and contemporary politics of a country long misunderstood.

    Preface to The Fourth Edition , Introduction , The Beginnings of Cambodian History , Kingship and Society at Angkor , Jayavarman VII and the Crisis of the Thirteenth Century , Cambodia After Angkor , State, Society, and Foreign Relations, 1794–1848 , The Crisis of the Nineteenth Century , The Early Stages of the French Protectorate , Cambodia’s Response to France, 1916–45 , Gaining Independence , From Independence to Civil War , Revolution in Cambodia , Cambodia Since 1979 , Bibliographic Essay

    Biography

    David Chandler