전세계 동남아 자료관
배수경
2010-09-09 00:00
I. International
- WorldCat
- http://infotree.library.ohiou.edu/scripts/redirect.html?id=132
Worldcat is an international database containing bibliographical records (citations only) for tens of millions of books, periodicals, audio-visual materials, archival sources, maps, etc. Drawing on information from hundreds of university catalogues throughout North America and parts of Europe, Worldcat serves as a kind of central depository of bibliographic records. - Center for Research Libraries (CRL)
- http://infotree.library.ohiou.edu/scripts/redirect.html?id=1511
The Center for Research Libraries maintains over 300,000 monographs, more than 6,000 newspaper titles, and over 300 major microform collections. CRL\'s strengths include South and Southeast Asia, particularly rare or out-of-print serials. - CRL is a consortium of North American universities, colleges and independent research libraries. The consortium acquires and preserves newspapers, journals, documents, archives and other traditional and digital resources for research and teaching. These resources are then made available to member institutions cooperatively, through interlibrary loan and electronic delivery.
II. United States
- Arizona State University Libraries
- http://www.asu.edu/lib/
The Southeast Asia Collection at Arizona State University holds a fairly large assortment of Western and Southeast Asian-language materials. Collection strengths include Indonesian, Thai and Vietnamese-language materials. Also of note are the Agnese Nelms Haury Collection on Burma, the William Sage Collection on Laos, and the Mimijac Palgen Cambodian Photograph Collection. - University of California Berkeley Library
- http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/
The South & Southeast Asia Library-a special collection within the Berkeley University library-houses more than 600,000 titles, roughly half of which pertain directly to Southeast Asia. - Cornell University Library
- http://www.library.cornell.edu/
The Southeast Asia Collection at Cornell University, named the Echols Collection in 1977, remains a premier resource on Southeast Asia. Consisting of well over 250,000 monograph titles, 21,000 serial titles, and 900 newspaper titles, the Echols Collection is today the largest Southeast Asia collection in the world. Special strengths include Indonesian and Thai-language materials. - University of Hawaii at Manoa Libraries
- http://libweb.hawaii.edu/
The Southeast Asia Collection at the University of Hawaii at Manoa is particularly strong on contemporary publications from Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand. - The Library of Congress
- http://www.loc.gov/
The Library of Congress houses more than 128 million books, manuscripts, newspaper titles, maps, and other printed materials. The Library of Congress holds several hundred thousand titles on Southeast Asia. LC generally makes its resources available to students and faculty through interlibrary loan and electronic delivery. - University of Michigan Library
- http://www.lib.umich.edu/
The Southeast Asia division of the Harlan Hatcher Library at the University of Michigan is an excellent resource for both vernacular and English-language materials from Southeast Asia, but especially from Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines. - Northern Illinois University Libraries
- http://www.niulib.niu.edu/
The Donn V. Hart Southeast Asia Collection at Northern Illinois University houses over 75,000 volumes, primarily in the social sciences, from Southeast Asia. Areas of special strength include the Burma, Thai, Philippine, Indonesian, and Malaysia/Singapore collections. Holdings on Burma are particularly substantial. In addition, the SEA Collection houese an extensive collection of palm-leaf manuscripts in Burmese, Thai, and Lao, some of which has been digitized. - University of Oregon Libraries
http://libweb.uoregon.edu/
The Southeast Asia Collection at the University of Oregon houses a growing collection of materials from Southeast Asia, with special emphasis on Thailand and Laos.
- University of Washington Libraries
- http://www.lib.washington.edu/
The Southeast Asia section of the University of Washington Libraries is particularly strong on publications from Indonesia, Thailand, and Laos. Of special note are library holdings on the anthropology and religion of Thailand (reflecting the research interests of well-known scholar Charles Keyes), human rights and law in Southeast Asia, and modern Vietnamese history. - University of Wisconsin Libraries
- http://www.library.wisc.edu/
The Southeast Asia Collection at the University of Wisconsin-Madison is a superb resource for both vernacular and Western-language materials from Southeast Asia. Special strengths include publications on Indonesia and Thailand. Of note, too, are the Southeast Asian digital images and texts project and the SEA video collection. - Yale University Library
- http://www.library.yale.edu/
The Southeast Asia Collection at Yale University is especially strong on vernacular and Western-language materials on Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Singapore. In recent years, Yale University Libraries has also expanded its holdings on Cambodia and Vietnam.
III. Europe
- British Library
- http://www.bl.uk/
The strengths of the British Library's Southeast Asia holdings include Burmese, Thai, Vietnamese, Malay-Indonesian, and Javanese sources. There are fine collections of illustrated Burmese and Thai manuscripts. The printed book collections are particularly strong in early imprints. Also of note is a collection of contemporary pro-democracy literature from Burma. - International Institute of Social History (IISH)
- http://www.iisg.nl/
The International Institute of Social History (IISH), founded in Amsterdam in 1935, is one of the world\'s largest documentary and research institutions in the field of social history. The institution�s holdings on Southeast Asia, particularly Indonesia, are quite good. - School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) Library, University of London
- http://www.soas.ac.uk/library/index.cfm
The Southeast Asia collection at the SOAS Library includes publications on a wide range of topics covering all of the nations of the region. However, the main emphasis of the collection is mainland Southeast Asian languages, linguistics, and anthropology. Of particular interest is the Burma Campaign Memorial Library, a collection of material relating to the Japanese occupation of Burma during World War II. - Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen (KIT)
- http://www.kit.nl/
Koninklijk Instituut voor de Tropen (KIT) is a not-for-profit, independent research institute focussing on, and with particular expertise in, areas of international and intercultural cooperation. A special strength of KIT and its rather extensive library collection is its emphasis on Indonesia. - KITLV-Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies
- http://www.kitlv.nl/
KITLV is renowned for its extensive collection of books, manuscripts, prints and photographs on island Southeast Asia. Special emphasis is placed on the former Dutch colony of Indonesia. - Oriental Department, Library of Leiden University
- http://www.leidenuniv.nl/pun/ubhtm/ubor/ordep.htm
The Oriental Department of the Leiden University Library houses a wide-range of materials on Southeast Asia. However, special emphasis is on print materials in and about the Austronesian languages spoken in Malaysia, Brunei, Indonesia, and the Philippines. The majority of acquisitions are works of modern Malaysian and Indonesian literature and studies on this body of literature.
IV. Australia
- National Library of Australia
- http://www.nla.gov.au/asian/
The National Library of Australia, the largest reference library in the southern hemisphere, also has one the world\'s finest Southeast Asian collections. The library\'s holdings include vernacular and Western-language materials on Burma, Thailand, Cambodia, Vietnam, Malaysia, and Indonesia. Of special note, however, is its Indonesian collection, consisting of more than 160,000 volumes. The library\'s Thai collection, comprised of roughly 36,000 volumes, and 60 newspaper titles, is also impressive. - Monash Asia Institute
- http://www.lib.monash.edu/matheson/asrc/
The Southeast Asia Collection at Monash University is one of the oldest and largest in Australia. Its holdings on Indonesia, consisting of some 25,000 books and 1,500 journal and newspaper titles, is particularly strong. The David Chandler collection of Pol Pot-era Cambodian materials is another strength of the library.
V. Asia
- Chulalongkorn University Library
- http://library.car.chula.ac.th/
- Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Singapore (ISEAS) Library
- http://www.iseas.edu.sg/library.html
The ISEAS library currently holds some 500,000 titles (consisting mainly of books, journals, newspapers, microforms, and audio-visual materials on Southeast Asia. Special emphasis is placed on resources in the applied social sciences. - Kyoto University Library
- http://www.kulib.kyoto-u.ac.jp/
- National Library of Malaysia
- http://www.pnm.my/
- National Library of Thailand
- http://www.nlt.go.th/
- Thammasat University Library
- http://library.tu.ac.th/newlib2/index.asp
- University of Kebangsaan Malaysia Library
- http://www.ukm.my/ukmportal/index.htm