Matthew Reeder

Matthew Reeder is a social and cultural historian of Southeast Asia and its global interconnections. With a focus on Thailand and its Mainland neighbors, he is interested in how identity is shaped from above and below, and in the many ways that marginalized peoples make history.

His book manuscript, “Telling Apart: The Politics of Ethnic Claims in Early Modern Siam,” demonstrates that ethnic labels were increasingly mobilized for political purposes, and “peoples” increasingly understood as abstract social concepts, well before Siam’s “modern” turn in the late-nineteenth century.

Before coming to the Department of History, Reeder was a postdoctoral fellow at the Asia Research Institute and an assistant professor at Yale-NUS College. He received his doctorate from Cornell University, where his dissertation earned the Messenger Chalmers and Lauriston Sharp prizes.

His research has been supported by the Ministry of Education (Singapore), the Fulbright-Hays Program, the Council of American Overseas Research Centers, the American Historical Association, the Center for Khmer Studies, and the École française d’Extrême-Orient.

TEACHING AREAS:

  • Southeast Asia
  • Early Modern World History
  • Identity and Ethnicity
  • Thailand
  • Sino-Southeast Asian Borderlands


SELECTED PUBLICATIONS: