Valerie Mashman is an Associate Research Fellow at the Institute of Borneo Studies, Universiti Malaysia Sarawak. Her research interests in the field of anthropology examine issues of oral history and narratives, peace-making, values and social change, indigeneity, gender and material culture with a particular focus on indigenous peoples of Borneo.
""Border History is a valuable addition to Borneo Studies... Mashman's commentary adds important cultural and historical detail and highlights alternative renderings of the stories, such as colonial and other accounts of the same events and individuals. Rather than diminishing Melian's narratives, such contextual analysis enriches them, underscoring the very human hopes, fears, and dilemmas that underlay their telling."" Liana Chua, University of Cambridge, Asian Studies Review ""Rather than simply relate stories, Mashman analyses the narratives to explore Kelabit ideas of identity; of belonging to lun tauh (our people); of what is regarded as making a person lun doo' (a good person). In short, Mashman examines the Kelabit way of being in and perceiving the world... A short review cannot do full justice to Mashman's work. Suffice to say, it should be read by all Borneo and wider Austronesian scholars, and has much to offer anthropologists in general."" Mary Hawkins, University of Sydney, Oceania, Vol. 95, Issue 2 (2025)