[1]
Barmé, S. 2002. In and Around the Cinema (specific sub-chapters: Sex in the City and Erotic Entertainment). Woman, man, Bangkok: love, sex, and popular culture in Thailand. Rowman & Littlefield. 76–89.
[2]
Bayly, C. 2004. Industrialization and the new city. The birth of the modern world, 1780-1914: global connections and comparisons. Blackwell. 170–198.
[3]
Bayly, C. and Harper, T. 2005. 1942: A Very British Disaster. Forgotten armies: Britain’s Asian empire and the war with Japan. Penguin Books. 106–155.
[4]
Betta, C. 2003. From Orientals to Imagined Britons: Baghdadi Jews in Shanghai. Modern Asian Studies. 37, 4 (Oct. 2003), 999–1023. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X03004104.
[5]
Chakravarti, N.R. and Institute of Race Relations 1971. The Indian minority in Burma: the rise and decline of an immigrant community. Oxford University Press for the Institute of Race Relations.
[6]
Christie, C.J. 2000. A modern history of Southeast Asia: decolonization, nationalism and separatism. I.B. Tauris.
[7]
Clayton, B. et al. 1986. Buck Clayton’s jazz world. Bayou Press.
[8]
Evers, H.-D. 1988. Traditional Trading Networks of Southeast Asia. Archipel. 35, 1 (1988), 89–100. DOI:https://doi.org/10.3406/arch.1988.2418.
[9]
Fawaz, L.T. and Bayly, C.A. eds. 2002. Port cities as nodal points of change. Modernity and culture: from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean. Columbia University Press. 75–95.
[10]
Field, A.D. 2010. Turning lazy opium smokers into spry jazz maniacs. Shanghai’s dancing world: cabaret culture and urban politics, 1919-1954. Chinese University Press. 53–82.
[11]
Frost, M.R. and Balasingamchow, Y.-M. 2009. Singapore: a biography. Didier Millet.
[12]
Ghosh, D. 2016. Burma–Bengal Crossings: Intercolonial Connections in Pre-Independence India. Asian Studies Review. 40, 2 (Apr. 2016), 156–172. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2016.1158237.
[13]
Henriot, C. and Yeh, W. 2004. In the shadow of the rising sun: Shanghai under Japanese occupation. Cambridge University Press.
[14]
Hosagrahar, J. 2005. Sanitizing Neighborhoods. Indigenous modernities: negotiating architecture and urbanism. Routledge. 83–113.
[15]
Kaviraj, S. 1997. Filth and the Public Sphere: Concepts and Practices about Space in Calcutta. Public culture : bulletin of the Project for transnational cultural studies, University of Pennsylvania. (1997), 83–113.
[16]
Keyes, C. 1977. Cities in Changing Societies in Mainland Southeast Asia. The golden peninsula: culture and adaptation in mainland Southeast Asia. Macmillan. 259–337.
[17]
Khaing, M.M. 1962. Chapter 8. Burmese family. Indiana University Press. 140–161.
[18]
Khilnani, S. 2003. Cities. The idea of India. Penguin. 107–149.
[19]
Kusno, A. 2000. Modern architecture and traditional polity: Jakarta in the time of Sukarno. Behind the postcolonial: architecture, urban space, and political cultures in Indonesia. Routledge. 49–70.
[20]
Lee, L.O. 1999. Shanghai modern: the flowering of new urban culture in China, 1930-1945. Harvard University Press.
[21]
Margaret Sarkissian 1987. ARMENIANS IN SOUTH-EAST ASIA. Crossroads: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Southeast Asian Studies. 3, 2 (1987), 1–33.
[22]
McCANN, G. 2011. Sikhs and the City: Sikh history and diasporic practice in Singapore. Modern Asian Studies. 45, 06 (Nov. 2011), 1465–1498. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X11000138.
[23]
Mitter, R. and dawsonera 2005. A bitter revolution: China’s struggle with the modern world. Oxford University Press.
[24]
Osterhammel, J. et al. 2014. The transformation of the world: a global history of the nineteenth century. Princeton University Press.
[25]
Reid, A. 1993. The City and Its Commerce. Southeast Asia in the age of commerce, 1450-1680: Vol.2: Expansion and crisis. Yale University Press. 62–131.
[26]
Roff, W.R. 1967. The origins of Malay nationalism. Yale U.P.
[27]
Scott, J.C. 1998. The High-Modernist City: An Experiment and a Critique. Seeing like a state: how certain schemes to improve the human condition have failed. Yale University Press. 103–146.
[28]
Warren, J.F. 2003. Rickshaw coolie: a people’s history of Singapore, 1880-1940. Singapore University Press, National University of Singapore.
[29]
Warren, J.F. 2003. Rickshaw coolie: a people’s history of Singapore, 1880-1940. Singapore University Press, National University of Singapore.
[30]
Wasserstrom, J.N. 2009. Conclusion. Global Shanghai, 1850 - 2010: a history in fragments. Routledg. 124–140.