ABSTRACT

Focusing on the geographies between the Mekong and the Indus, this book brings objects to the centre of enquiry in the understanding of modern Asian frontiers. It explores how a range of objects have historically been significant bearers and agents of frontier making. For instance, how are objects connected to aspects of state making, social change, everyday life, diplomacy, political and ecological worlds, capital, forms of violence, resistances, circulations, and aesthetic expressions?

This book seeks to interrogate and understand the dynamism of frontiers from the vantage point of objects such as salt, rubber, tea, guns, silk scarves, horses, and opium. It attempts to explore objects as sites of encounter, mediation, or dislocation between the social and the spatial. The book not only locates objects in the specificities of frontier spaces, but it also looks at how they are produced, circulated, and come to be intricately linked to a wide range of people, institutions, networks, and geographies. In the process, it explores how objects traverse and come to inhabit multiple historical, cultural, and geographical scales.

This book will be of interest to researchers and academics working in areas of history, social and cultural anthropology, Asian studies, frontiers and borderland studies, cultural studies, political and economic studies, and museum studies. 

chapter |17 pages

Introduction

Objects of frontiers

part I|71 pages

Commodities, resource frontiers, and state making

chapter 1|22 pages

Trans-Indus Salt

Objects, resistance, and violence in the North-West Frontier of British India

chapter 2|25 pages

‘Objects’ of Appropriations

Locating material efficacies of rubber in the northeastern resource frontier of British India, 1810–1906

chapter 3|22 pages

Tibetan Materiality Versus British ‘Ornamentalism’

Diplomacy, objects, and resistance in the imperial archive

part II|63 pages

Networks, things, and violence

chapter 4|16 pages

From Highlands to Lowlands

The Pu’er tea trading network and ethnic-group interactions in the frontier of Yunnan, 1662–1796

chapter 5|23 pages

Embracing the Black and White Gold

The shift and continuity of the core objects in the tropical Yunnan borderlands

chapter 6|22 pages

Guns, Gifts, and Guerrillas

Knowledge and objects during World War II in the Indo–Myanmar (Burma) frontier

part III|44 pages

Regions, cultures, and connections

chapter 7|17 pages

A Spot of Enlightenment

Tea as a fuel for connectivity in Himalayan Buddhist cultures

chapter |7 pages

Afterword

The flow of objects at the political edges: a postscript