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I promise you that I will not sing.
I will spare you that, at least.
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But I am a historian
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with a background in philosophy,
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and my main area of research is basically
the history of Southeast Asia,
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with a focus on 19th century
colonial Southeast Asia,
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and over the last few years,
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what I've been doing is really
tracing the history of certain ideas
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that shape our viewpoint,
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the way we in Asia, in Southeast Asia,
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look at ourselves
and understand ourselves.
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Now, there's one thing
that I cannot explain as a historian,
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and this has been puzzling me
for a long time,
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and this is how, and why,
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certain ideas,
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certain viewpoints
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do not seem to ever go away.
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And I don't know why.
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And in particular,
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I'm interested to understand why
some people, not all by all means,
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but some people
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in postcolonial Asia
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still hold on to a somewhat
romanticized view of the colonial past,
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see it through kind of rose-tinted lenses
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as perhaps a time that was
benevolent or nice pleasant.
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even though historians know
the realities of the violence
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and the oppression and the dark side
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of that entire colonial experience.
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So let's imagine that I build
a time machine for myself.
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I build a time machine.
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I send myself back to the 1860s,
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a hundred years before I was born.
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Oh dear, I've just dated myself.
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OK, I go back a hundred years
before I was born.
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Now, if I were to find myself
in the context of colonial Southeast Asia
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in the 19th century,
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I would not be a professor.
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Historians know this.
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And yet, despite that,
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there's still some quarters that somehow
want to hold on to this idea
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that that past was not as murky,
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that there was a romanticized side to it.
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Now, here is where I as a historian,
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I encounter the limits of history.
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Because, I can trace ideas.
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I can find out the origins
of certain cliches, certain stereotypes.
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I can tell you who came up with it,
where and when and in which book,
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but there's one thing I cannot do.
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I cannot get into the internal
subjective mental universe of someone
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and change their mind.
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And I think this is where, and why,
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over the last few years,
I'm increasingly drawn
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to things like psychology
and cognitive behavioral therapy,
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because in these fields,
scholars look at the persistence of ideas.
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Why do some people
have certain prejudices?
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Why are there certain biases and phobias?
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We live, unfortunately, sadly, in a world
where still misogyny persists,
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racism persists, all kinds of phobias.
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Islamophobia, for instance, is now a term.
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And why do these ideas persist?
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Many scholars agree that it's partly
because, when looking at the world,
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we fall back, we fall back, we fall back
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on a finite pool,
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a small pool of basic ideas
that don't get challenged.
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Look at how we, particularly us
in Southeast Asia,
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represent ourselves to ourselves
and to the world.
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Look at how often,
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when we talk about ourselves,
my viewpoint, my identity, our identity,
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invariably we fall back, we fall back,
we fall back, we fall back
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on the same set of ideas,
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all of which have histories of their own.
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Very simple example:
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we live in Southeast Asia,
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which is very popular with tourists
from all over the world.
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And I don't think that's
a bad thing, by the way.
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I think it's good
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that tourists come to Southeast Asia
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because it's part and parcel
of broadening your worldview
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and meeting cultures, etc. etc.
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But look at how we represent ourselves
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through the tourist campaigns,
the tourist ads that we produce.
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There will be the obligatory coconut tree,
banana tree, orangutan.
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And the orangutan doesn't even get paid.
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(Laughter)
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Look at how we represent ourselves.
Look at how we represent nature.
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Look at how we represent the countryside.
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Look at how we represent
agricultural life.
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Watch our sitcoms.
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Watch our dramas. Watch our movies.
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It's very common,
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particularly in Southeast Asia,
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when you watch these sitcoms,
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if there's someone from the countryside,
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they are invariably, they are ugly,
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they are funny, they are silly,
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they are without knowledge.
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It's as if the countryside
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has nothing to offer.
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Our view of nature,
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despite all our talk,
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despite all our talk about
Asian philosophy, Asian values,
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despite all our talk about how we have
an organic relationship to nature,
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how do we actually treat nature
in Southeast Asia today?
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We regard nature as something
to be defeated and exploited.
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And that's the reality.
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So the way in which we live
in our part of the world,
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postcolonial Southeast Asia,
in so many ways, for me
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bears residual traces to ideas,
tropes, cliches, stereotypes
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that have a history,
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This idea of the countryside
as a place to be exploited,
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the idea of countryfolk
as being without knowledge,
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these are ideas that historians like me
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can go back, we can trace
how these stereotypes emerged,
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and they emerged at a time
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when Southeast Asia
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was being governed according to
the logic of colonial capitalism.
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And in so many ways,
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we've taken these ideas with us.
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They're part of us now,
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but we are not critical
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in interrogating ourselves
and asking ourselves,
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how did I have this view of the world?
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How did I come to have
this view of nature?
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How did I come to have
this view of the countryside?
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How do I have this idea of Asia as exotic?
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And we Southeast Asians in particular
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love to self-exoticize ourselves.
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We've turned Southeast Asian identity
into a kind of cosplay
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where you can literally
go to the supermarket, go to the mall
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and buy your do-it-yourself
exotic Southeast Asian costume kit.
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And we parade this identity,
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not asking ourselves how and when
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did this particular image
of ourselves emerge?
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They all have a history too.
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And that's why, increasingly,
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as a historian, I find that
as I encounter the limits of history
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I see that I can't work alone anymore.
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I can't work alone anymore,
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because there's absolutely no point
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in me doing my archival work,
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there's no point in me seeking
the roots of these ideas,
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tracing the genesis of ideas
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and then putting it in some journal
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to be read by maybe
three other historians.
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There's absolutely no point.
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The reason why I think this is important
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is because our region, Southeast Asia,
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will, I believe, in the years to come,
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go through enormous changes,
unprecedented changes in our history,
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partly because of globalization,
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world politics, geopolitical
contestations,
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the impact of technology,
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the Fourth Industrial Revolution.
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Our world as we know it
is going to change.
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But for us to adapt to this change,
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for us to be ready for that change,
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we need to think out of the box,
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and we can't fall back,
we can't fall back, we can't fall back
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on the same set of cliched,
tired, staid old stereotypes.
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We need to think out,
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and that's why historians,
we can't work alone now.
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I, I need to engage with people
in psychology, people in behavior therapy.
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I need to engage with sociologists,
anthropologists, political economists.
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I need above all to engage
with people in the arts
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and the media,
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because it's there in that forum,
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outside the confines of the university,
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that these debates really
need to take place.
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And they need to take place now,
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because we need to understand
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that the way things are today
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are not determined by some fixed,
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iron historical railway track,
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but rather there are many other histories,
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many other ideas that were forgotten,
marginalized, erased along the line.
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Historians like me, our job
is to uncover all this, discover all this,
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but indeed to engage this
we need to engage with society as a whole.
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So to go back to that time machine
example I gave earlier.
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Let's say this is a 19th century
colonial subject then,
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and persons wondering,
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will empire ever come to an end?
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Will there be an end to all this?
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Will we one day be free?
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So a person invents a time machine,
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goes into the future,
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and arrives here in postcolonial
Southeast Asia today.
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Our person looks around,
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and the person will say,
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yes indeed, the imperial flags are gone,
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the imperial gunboats are gone,
the colonial armies are gone.
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There are new flags, new nation-states.
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There is independence after all.
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But has there been?
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The person then watches the tourist ads
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and sees again the banana tree,
the coconut tree, and the orangutan.
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The person watches on TV
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and watches how images
of an exotic Southeast Asia
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are being reproduced again and again
by Southeast Asians.
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And the person might then
come to the conclusion
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that, well, notwithstanding
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the fact that
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colonialism is over,
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we are still in so, so many ways
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living in the long shadow
of the 19th century,
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and this, I think, has become
my personal mission,
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the reason why I think
history is so important
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and the reason why I think
it's so important for history
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to go beyond history,
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because need to reignite this debate
about who and what they are,
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all of us.
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We talk about, no, I have my viewpoint,
you have your viewpoint.
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Well, that's partly true.
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Our viewpoints are never
entirely our own individually.
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We are all social beings.
We are historical beings.
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You, me, all of us,
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we carry history in us.
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It's in the language we use.
It's in the fiction we write.
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It's in the movies we choose to watch.
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It's in the images that we conjure
when we think of who and what we are.
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We are historical beings.
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We carry history with us,
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and history carries us alone.
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But while we are determined by history,
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it is my personal belief
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that we need not be trapped by history
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and we need not be the victims of history.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)