Fwd: [tlc] TLC: Online access to historical newspapers from Southeast Asia [references to Thailand & Cambodia]

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Cyler Conrad

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Aug 30, 2022, 10:42:17 AM8/30/22
to AASEAA
FYI - A very useful resource!

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From: McDaniel, Justin <jmc...@sas.upenn.edu>
Date: Mon, Aug 29, 2022 at 2:42 PM
Subject: [tlc] TLC: Online access to historical newspapers from Southeast Asia [references to Thailand & Cambodia]
To: rels...@groups.sas.upenn.edu <rels...@groups.sas.upenn.edu>


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From: Lia Genovese.
Thanks,
justin
 
----- Forwarded message -----
From: Southeast Asia Library Group (SEALG) <commen...@wordpress.com>
Sent: Saturday, 27 August 2022, 23:14:31 GMT+7
Subject: [New post] Online access to historical newspapers from Southeast Asia

Site logo image jigunma posted: "In the decades of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, much of Southeast Asia was under Western colonial dominance. Most of the region was divided among the British, French, Dutch, Spanish, and American powers, supplanted by a brief period " Southeast Asia Library Group (SEALG)

Online access to historical newspapers from Southeast Asia

jigunma

Aug 27

In the decades of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, much of Southeast Asia was under Western colonial dominance. Most of the region was divided among the British, French, Dutch, Spanish, and American powers, supplanted by a brief period of Japanese influence following the outbreak of World War II in Europe and the Pacific. The post-war era witnessed a series of revolutions as local leaders looked to regain independence from colonial powers. Decolonisation efforts and movements spread throughout the region, leaving the newly independent states in charge of their own political, economic, and social pathways for the first time in decades.

The Southeast Asian Newspapers, an Open Access collection supported by the Center for Research Libraries and its member institutions, chronicles the changes that took place throughout the region during this period, and the challenges of early statehood. Covering several countries from the region, including Cambodia, Indonesia, Myanmar (formerly Burma), Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam, and featuring multiple languages such as Dutch, English, French, Javanese, Khmer, Spanish, Thai, and Vietnamese, the Southeast Asian Newspapers collection incorporates a wealth of coverage and perspectives on major regional and global events of the late nineteenth and twetieth centuries.

To date, altogether 129 newspaper titles with a total of 67,762 issues dating from between 1839 to 1976 have been included: 57 from the Philippines, 37 from Vietnam, 24 from Indonesia, 5 from Thailand, 3 from Malaysia, 1 from Cambodia and 1 from Myanmar. Among the earliest printed newspapers in the collection are Tranh đ̂áu, a newspaper in Vietnamese language published in Saigon (33 issues from between 1839 to 1938, with gaps), and Nangsư̄ čhotmāihēt (หนังสือจดหมายเหตุ - Bangkok Recorder), a Thai newspaper published in Bangkok (11 issues from 1844 to 1845).

The online collection provides free access to the fully digitised issues of the newspapers (altogether 463,246 pages). Search functions by newspaper title, free word search, date and map help locate information easily. One additional feature is "On this date in history", which presents randomly selected articles from various newspapers published in different countries on the date in history of the visit of this collection.

(This post contains information from the website of the Southeast Asian Newspapers collection)

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--
Cyler Conrad, PhD, RPA
Adjunct Assistant Professor of Archaeology (LAT)
Department of Anthropology
University of New Mexico
cyl...@unm.edu
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