Fetish, Recognition, Revolution

Front Cover
Princeton University Press, Mar 6, 1997 - Foreign Language Study - 275 pages

This book concerns the role of language in the Indonesian revolution. James Siegel, an anthropologist with long experience in various parts of that country, traces the beginnings of the Indonesian revolution, which occurred from 1945 through 1949 and which ended Dutch colonial rule, to the last part of the nineteenth century. At that time, the peoples of the Dutch East Indies began to translate literature from most places in the world. Siegel discovers in that moment a force within communication more important than the specific messages it conveyed. The subsequent containment of this linguistic force he calls the "fetish of modernity," which, like other fetishes, was thought to be able to compel events. Here, the event is the recognition of the bearer of the fetish as a person of the modern world.


The taming of this force in Indonesian nationalism and the continuation of its wild form in the revolution are the major subjects of the book. Its material is literature from Indonesian and Dutch as well as first-person accounts of the revolution.

 

Contents

The I of a Lingua Franca
13
If I Were a Dutchman
26
What Did Not Happen to Indonesians
38
A Society of Appearances
48
Fetishizing Appearance or Is I a Criminal?
54
Evading Fiction
68
The Ghost of the Lingua Franca
75
Appearances Again
78
The Wish for Hierarchy
161
Vengeance
169
The Impulse toward Hierarchy
171
The Crowd
174
Revolution
181
Collaboration and Cautious Rebellion
183
Suspicion Again
192
Red Money Cautious Rebellion
197

The Camera and the Law
84
Recognition
95
Student Hidjau and The Feeling of Freedom
97
Scandal Women Authors and SinoMalay Nationalism
115
Love Sick or the Failures of the Fetish and of Translation
134
Photographs
149
Revolution Without the Fetish of Modernity Freedom or Death
208
No Entry
216
Pramoedya Ananta Toers Flunky + Maid or Conservative Indonesian Revolutionary Indonesian and the Lack of Indonesian Literature
231
Notes
255
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

Popular passages

Page 3 - Afore I looked upon the Scripture as a history of things that passed in other countries, pertaining to other persons ; but now I looked upon it as a mystery to be opened at this time, belonging also to us".

About the author (1997)

James T. Siegel is Professor of Anthropology and Asian Studies at Cornell University. He is the author of The Rope of God; Shadow, and Sound: The Historical Thought of a Sumatran People; and Solo in the New Order: Language and Hierarchy in an Indonesian City (Princeton).