Wayan Jarrah Sastrawan has written a remarkable book, the implications of which reach far beyond the Javanese historical works that he subjects to critical scrutiny. He reminds us that the materiality and modality of texts, whether oral, mnemonic, or written, and their different rates of survival in often environmentally hostile climates are crucial factors in the formation of subsequent historical understanding. The evidentiary challenges that faced Southeast Asian chroniclers and epic poets who had to make sense of conflicting and patchy texts and traditions are little different from those facing all scholars wrestling with incomplete or contradictory sources.--Daniel Woolf, Professor of History, Queen's UniversityThis book revolutionizes the study of how Javanese history was made. It provides new ways of understanding how the texts used for interpreting Java's premodern history were put together; and more than this, it provides novel readings of those texts that substantially change interpretations of time, people, and place.--Adrian Vickers, author of A History of Modern Indonesia and Bali: A Paradise Created
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