Wang Gungwu

Wang Gungwu is a university professor at the National University of Singapore and an emeritus professor at The Australian National University (ANU). He holds a BA Hons and MA from the University of Malaya in Singapore, and a PhD from SOAS University of London. He was a professor of history at the University of Malaya, professor of Far Eastern history at ANU and vice-chancellor of the University of Hong Kong. His recent publications include Home is Not Here (2018); China Reconnects: Joining a Deep-Rooted Past to a New World Order (2019); Home is Where We Are (with Margaret Wang, 2020); Living with Civilisations: Reflections on Southeast Asia’s Local and National Cultures (2023); and Roads to Chinese Modernity: Civilisation and National Culture (2025).

No Borders »

Journeys Across Islands and Continents

Authored by: Wang Gungwu
Publication date: 2026
Over the course of a long life, the author, historian and university leader Wang Gungwu has travelled between and spent periods in Asia, Europe and Australia. Born in the Dutch East Indies at the start of the 1930s, and growing up in Ipoh, British Malaya, Wang was to study at the National Central University in Nanjing, China, before the Revolution, at the University of Malaya (Singapore) and at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Returning to Malaya, Wang ultimately found that serious scholarship of historical and contemporary China could only be undertaken from a greater distance, at The Australian National University, Canberra, which offered him a position as Chair of Far Eastern History. Later, Wang would serve as Vice-Chancellor of Hong Kong University during the lead-up to the handover of this key trading island from Britain back to China, before returning to Singapore as executive chairman of the Institute of East Asian Political Economy (IEAPE). In No Borders, Wang takes the reader into these disparate personal and social worlds, as well as into the imagined worlds of history and, at times, the present, that formed the focus of his enduring fascination and enquiry as a major scholar of China, Southeast Asia and international relations. To read this autobiography is to spend memorable time with a singular, urbane intellectual whose life has been lived at the intersection of competing forces of order and disorder within turbulent decades across both the East and West. A vivid historical and personal portrait is here enriched by thoughtful insight and deeply learned reflection.

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