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For financial support during my dissertation phase, I’m grateful to the Advanced Studies in Thai program at Chiang Mai University and to the Yale Council on Southeast Asian Studies, which gave me two small but critical grants to help fund my research in Thailand and the United States. The Yale Graduate School’s dissertation write-up fellowship was another important source of funding that allowed me to proceed when other options fell through. The National Research Council of Thailand graciously handled my application to begin my work.
In Thailand, I was fortunate to form a circle of colleagues and friends who were a source of good practical advice as well as good cheer. I’m grateful to Chalong Soontravanich for his mentorship and for his patient assistance with a difficult visa issue. I also recall with gratitude the helpfulness and hospitality of Puangthong Rungswasdisab Pawakapan and Niti Pawakapan. It was Puangthong who, in turn, introduced me to Kamoltip (Tip) Chang-kamol, my intrepid research assistant, whose competence I came to greatly respect and rely on. Tip transformed what might have been a lonely enterprise into a more enjoyable, shared undertaking in investigative history. I must also thank Jumana Dalal, Sinit Deesomsuk, Skylar Sukapornchai, and Mark Harris for making Bangkok seem, at times, almost like home.
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