Indonesia beyond Suharto
Donald K Emmerson (ed)
After years of
invisibility in the media, Indonesia burst into the headlines in 1997
and has remained there since. Devaluation, recession, and the
succession from Suharto to Habibie were accompanied by urban unrest and
communal strife. A parliamentary election, East Timor's
self-determination, and a presidential election unfolded amid more
violence. Indonesia's latest leader, Abdurrahman Wahid, must now cope
with multiple challenges to national unity, democratisation, and
economic recovery. Indonesia's prolonged and multifaceted crisis cannot
be understood without the historical, political, economic, social, and
cultural perspectives provided by this book. Chapters by Robert Cribb,
Bill Liddle, Michael Malley, Anne Booth, Richard Borsuk, Ahmad Habir,
Bob Hefner, Kathryn Robinson, Virginia Hooker, and Don Emmerson.
M E Sharpe (with the Asia Society), 1999, 395pp, ISBN 1-56324-889-1 (hard) US$69.95, 1-56324-890-5 (paper) US$26.95
Messages in stone - Statues and sculptures from tribal Indonesia
Skira & Alain Viaro
The Southeast Asian
archipelago includes numerous islands that are strewn with stone
monuments and statues. Some of these carvings date back to an ancient
past that is almost impossible to calculate. Others are but a few
decades old. A number of these sculptures reach such an impressive size
that they might almost rival the well-known giant carvings of Easter
Island. For nearly a quarter of a century the Barbier-Mueller Museum
has striven to assemble a coherent collection of these monolithic
monuments. Although other events have since enabled art lovers to learn
more about the archipelago's stone sculptures, never has a single
exhibition been devoted entirely to this art - until today.
Skira, 1999, 200pp, 285 colour illustrations, ISBN 8881183919 (hard), US$55.00
Eroica - The quest for oil in Indonesia (1850-1898)
J Ph Poley
A tribute to the
pioneers of oil exploration in Indonesia. Using authentic reports,
diaries, relevant texts, personal notes and pictures, Poley brings to
life the heroic efforts of Reerink (Cheribon, W Java), Zijlker and
Kessler (Deli, NE Sumatra), Stoop (Surabaya and Rembang, E Java),
Menten (Kutei, E Kalimantan), Kessler and IJzerman (Palembang, SE
Sumatra), and their crews. They faced almost insurmountable odds in
many locations: an impenetrable, cruel jungle, an inclement climate,
tropical diseases, technical mishaps, financial restrictions, and, last
but not least, government and legal constraints. There was no
geological science to guide them, and drilling technology was still in
its infancy. Yet it was their vision and perseverance which finally put
Indonesia on the world map of oil-producing nations, and which
contributed materially to the development of today's life of luxury.
Much of the present text and several of the pictures are here presented
for the first time to the general public.
Kluwer, 2000, 188pp, ISBN 0792362225 (hard), US$79.00
In service and servitude - Foreign female domestic workers and the Malaysian 'modernity' project
Christine B N Chin
Offers an
interdisciplinary approach to the in-migration of foreign domestic
workers in Malaysia. Christine Chin discusses how the state elites and
the middle classes come to rationalise the demand for - and treatment
of - domestic workers while pursuing the country's modernity project,
designed to create a stable, developed, multiethnic society. She shows
how different and competing pressures on the regional, national, and
household levels leave Filipina and Indonesian domestics open to
mistreatment and abuse, most directly by employment agencies and
employers. Chin argues that late-twentieth-century efforts to expand
open markets and establish global free trade encourage the exploitation
of transnational migrant workers, and that such exploitation should not
become an acceptable part of pursuing the 'good life'.
Columbia Univ Pr, 1998, ISBN 0231109873 (paper), US$18.50, 0231109865 (hard), US$47.50
The spectre of comparisons - Nationalism, Southeast Asia, and the world
Benedict Anderson
'A collection of subtle and scholarly essays by the author of Imagined communities.
Anderson is a rare bird: a learned Cornell professor who writes about
international politics with subversive elegance and a philosopher's
flair for first principles' (Boston Globe). Includes chapters on
Indonesia, Thailand, and the Philippines.
Verso, 1998, 374pp, ISBN 185984184 (paper), US$19.00
Culture and privilege in capitalist Asia
Michael Pinches (ed)
The new rich of Asia
have played a crucial role in the social and economic transformation of
the region. Yet they are also a focal point for the cultural
restructuring of national, ethnic, religious and class identities in
Asia. In this latest volume in the New Rich in Asia series the authors
examine the cultural reconfiguration, consumer behaviour, economic
success and cultural status of the new rich. The book includes case
studies from Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, the Philippines,
India and China that challenge the narrow political-economic and
cultural-determinist approaches that have so far dominated the
literature on capitalist development in Asia. While the new rich are
celebrated in some quarters, they are reviled in others.
Routledge, 1999, 336pp, ISBN 0-415-19764-3 (paper), US$32.99, UK�19.99
To change Bali
Adrian Vickers, I Nyoman Darma Putra, Michele Ford (eds)
In honour of the often
outspoken anthropologist of Bali, Professor I Gusti Ngurah Bagus, nine
leading scholars of Bali from around the world have produced this
series of essays on social and cultural change. Taking Professor
Bagus's path-breaking essays as their starting point, these scholars
examine the media, history and society in this rapidly
changing part of Indonesia. Contributers include Carol Warren, Helen
Creese, Lynette Parker, Henk Schulte Nordholt, Adrian Vickers, I Nyoman
Wijaya, I Nyoman Darma Putra, Maya Sutedja-Liem, and Mark Hobart.
Available Michelle Chin (djucass@indosat.net.id), Deja Vu Gallery & Bookshop, PO Box 363, Ubud, Bali 80571, Indonesia, tel (62 361) 978225, fax (62 361) 978224, Rp 70,000
Subud and the Javanese mystical tradition
Antoon Geels
Subud is one of
hundreds of mystical movements (aliran kebatinan) that grew
significantly in number and size in post-war Indonesia. Along with
other movements it has attracted people from the West and has now
spread to about eighty countries. Subud's conceptual apparatus is
firmly rooted in the cultural history of Java. Under the banner of
change and renewal, Subud presents a message which, fundamentally, is
one of continuity in a society in transition.
NIAS-Curzon Press, 1997, 262pp, ISBN 0-7007-0623-2 (hard), email books@nias.ku.dk, UK�30 + postage,
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