Eric Tagliacozzo is the John Stambaugh Professor of History at Cornell University. His many books include Secret Trades, Porous Borders: Smuggling and States along a Southeast Asian Frontier, 1865-1915 and The Longest Journey: Southeast Asians and the Pilgrimage to Mecca.
"""A powerful history of rupture and change; of technologies no longer in use, once-priceless goods that have lost their value, prominent port cities that have become provincial backwaters, and social worlds that have altered beyond recognition. . . . In Asian Waters offers fascinating glimpses of a world at once strangely familiar and deeply foreign. ""---Yorim Spoelder, Asian Review of Books ""Fascinating. . . . This is a daring and thought-provoking book.""---Jonas Rüegg, H-Net Reviews ""A tour de force that offers a broad historical and geographic perspective of oceanic interlinkages from Japan to East Africa that evolved long before the arrival of European powers to the macro-region in the sixteenth century.""---Cuauhtemoc Villamar, Journal of World History ""Tagliacozzo suggests that to appreciate this vast maritime world, we must do away with the blinders that fossilized disciplines have imposed on us. Instead of national geobodies, we should focus on the oceans, where there is that timeless low of commodities, ideas and peoples that national borders cannot stop. . . . This is an excellent, extraordinarily superb, and fun book to read.""---Patricio Abinales, Southeast Asian Studies ""Eric Tagliacozzo’s latest ambitious work provides an eclectic history of maritime trade and interconnectivities across a vast space extending from the Persian Gulf to the seas around Japan. Though the Indian Ocean and South China Sea garner the greatest attention in this enjoyable work, the sweeping and engaging kaleidoscope of topics covered in Tagliacozzo’s work offers much to historians of the Pacific.""---Steven Ivings, Pacific Historical Review ""A major addition to the corpus of maritime and oceanic history and thus to global history. . . . Tagliacozzo’s study is exhaustively researched, creatively analyzed, elegantly presented, and makes a major contribution to maritime and global history. It should become a landmark (a lighthouse?) in maritime Asian scholarship.""---Stephen Morillo, Asian Review of World Histories ""In Asian Waters does not rewrite Indian Ocean history. . . but it is undoubtedly the best stock-taking that we have of the field, in all of its historical, thematic and methodological diversity.""---Fahad Ahmad Bishara, Journal of International Maritime History"