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Asian studies, and strong proponent of Bay of Bengal Community, Prof. V. Suryanarayan, became critical of the division
of the world into West Asia, South Asia,
Southeast Asia and East Asia, and termed this conception of area as an offshoot of our intellectual dependence on Western scholarship (Suryanarayan 2000). Surprisingly, it was not the scholarship but the warfare (World War II) that
made Southeast Asia popular, thanks to the large scale publication of maps of Southeast Asia by National Geographic Society to meet the wartime demand for maps. For all the lopsidedness in region-forming process, Southeast Asia was made visible and the nomenclature was legitimized. The toponym,
Southeast Asia, though in its binomial expression conforms to the logic of geography, does not have any semblance with the grandiosity of region’s history and culture and hence the etymology of Southeast Asia seems to be rhetoric (Yagama Reddy 2005).
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