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Language and Power - Exploring Political Cultures in Indonesia (Paperback)
Loot Price: R963
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Language and Power - Exploring Political Cultures in Indonesia (Paperback)
Series: The Wilder House Series in Politics, History and Culture
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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In this lively book, Benedict R. O'G Anderson explores the cultural
and political contradictions that have arisen from two critical
facts in Indonesian history—that while the Indonesian nation is
young, the Indonesian state is ancient, originating in the early
seventeenth-century Dutch conquests; and that contemporary politics
are conducted in a new language, Bahasa Indonesia, by peoples
(especially the Javanese) whose cultures are rooted in medieval
times. Analyzing a spectrum of examples from classical poetry to
public monuments and cartoons, Anderson deepens our understanding
of the interaction between modern and traditional notions of power,
the meditation of power by language, and the development of
national consciousness. This volume brings together eight of
Anderson's most influential essays written over the past two
decades. Most of the essays address aspects of Javanese political
culture—from the early nineteenth century, when the Javanese did
not yet have words for politics, colonialism, society, or class,
through the early nationalism of the 1900s, to the era of
independence after World War II, when deep internal tensions
exploded into large-scale massacres. In the first group of essays
Anderson considers how power was imagined in traditional Javanese
society, and how these imaginings shaped Indonesia's modern
politics. Other essays focus on the significance of the
incongruences between the egalitarian, ironizing national language
through which modern Indonesia has been imagined and the powerful
influence of the hierarchical, authoritarian Javanese official
culture. Finally, two essays on consciousness illuminate the
crucial eras before and after the rise of Indonesia's nationalist
movement. One reflects on Javanese intellectuals' phantasmagoric
efforts to keep imagining "Java" as the island was overrun by
colonial capitalism and absorbed into the huge, heterogeneous
Netherlands East Indies; the second traces the transition from old
culture to new nation through the autobiography of an eminent
Javanese first-generation nationalist politician.
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