Research Supervisor Connect

Southeast Asian history and art

Summary

Professor Vickers researches and publishes on the cultural history of Southeast Asia. He has held a series of Australian Research Council grants (Discovery and Linkage), the most recent of which is a large team project re-examining Australian history through a multilingual lens. His previous projects looked at modern and contemporary Indonesian art, Cold War history, and labour and industry in Southeast Asia. He has created a virtual museumon the history of Balinese painting, continuing previous pioneering work in Digital Humanities and teaching. His books include the highly popular Bali: A Paradise Created (2012), The Pearl Frontier: Indonesian Labor and Indigenous Encounters in Australia's Northern Trading Network (2015, with Associate Professor Julia Martínez), A History of Modern Indonesia (2013) and Balinese Art: Paintings and Drawings of Bali, 1800-2010 (2012). Professor Vickers has supervised more than 35 PhD theses to completion, and has taught subjects on Southeast Asian history and culture from first year undergraduate to Honours and Masters levels. Professor Vickers is frequently asked to comment on Indonesia and Australian-Indonesian relations for national and international media.

Supervisor

Professor Adrian Vickers.

Research location

Asian Studies, School of Languages and Cultures (SLC)

Program type

Masters/PHD

Synopsis

Research interests

  • Indonesian history and historiography
  • Indonesian art, particularly Balinese art
  • Australian-Indonesian relations
  • Labour and globalisation in the Asia-Pacific
  • Maritime Southeast Asia
  • Panji stories in Southeast Asia

Teaching and supervision

  • Southeast Asian history and art
  • Modern Indonesian history and culture
  • Indonesian art and culture
  • Indonesian history, historiography and politics
  • Southeast Asian cultural history
  • Australia and Indonesia

 

 

Additional information

1. If you are interested in this research opportunity, you are encouraged to email the potential supervisor directly.  To find their email address, follow the link provided to their profile page. 

When contacting them, you should describe your academic educational background and research experience, and include an academic transcript and CV (resume). You should also include a research proposal (1500-2000 words); refer to How to write a research proposal for guidance. You should explain why you want to undertake a PhD and how you believe your research topic aligns with the supervisor’s own research. You may be asked to supply a sample of written work.

2. Your potential supervisor may offer you advice on developing your research proposal before you submit your application. You will need to provide a written statement from your potential supervisor that they have agreed to supervise your project.

3. If you would like general advice in your subject area before submitting an application, contact an academic advisor listed here: https://www.sydney.edu.au/arts/study/postgraduate-research/postgraduate-research-contact.html

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Opportunity ID

The opportunity ID for this research opportunity is 442