Water Frontier focuses principally on southwest Indochina (from modern
southern Vietnam into eastern Cambodia and southwestern Thailand), which
it calls the Lower Mekong region. The book's excellent contributors
argue that, during the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, this
area formed a single trading zone woven together by the regular
itineraries of thousands of large and small junk traders. This zone in
turn formed a regional component of the wider trade networks that linked
southern China to all of Southeast Asia. This is the "water frontier" of
the title, a sparsely settled coastal and riverine frontier region of
mixed ethnicities and often uncertain settlements in which the
waterborne trade and commerce of a long string of small ports was
essential to local life. This innovative book uses the water frontier
concept to reposition old nation-state oriented histories and decenter
modern dominant cultures and ethnicities to reveal a different local
past. It expands and deepens our understanding of the time and place as
well as of the multiple roles played by Chinese sojourners, settlers,
and junk traders in their interactions with a kaleidoscope of local
peoples.