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ID089378
Title ProperVisual representations of ethnic violence
Other Title Informationan Indonesian portrayal
LanguageENG
AuthorDavidson, Jamie S
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The horrific violence that has marred Indonesia's 'transition to democracy' raises numerous disconcerting questions; not least of which is how future interested actors or governments - central and regional alike - will tackle these atrocities in a historical framework. How should a series of historical events, such as the killing of thousands of Indonesians by Indonesians be (un)officially remembered? Two paintings that hang in Sambas, West Kalimantan's most prominent cultural centrepiece, the Alwadzi Koebillah kraton, are remarkable, for they give us a glimpse as to how local voices might attempt to possess the historical meanings and readings of Indonesia's recent ethnic strife. Perhaps one of a kind in Indonesia, these paintings boldly portray the bloody battles that took place in Sambas in early 1999, pitting the 'courageous' and 'youthful' Malays of Sambas against the 'middle-aged' and 'treacherous' Madurese. These depictions make it abundantly clear that, through this bloodletting, Sambas Malays awoke from their slumber in time to mobilise, to confront and to defeat their nemesis. As an ethnopolitical force, the glorious rise of 'Malay' is unmistakable. The broader political context in which these paintings were commissioned, however, invests them with greater significance. Only in a decentralised state, one distinct from the excessive centralism of the New Order, would the (semi) public display of these heroic memorials to local, i.e. non-national, violence be made possible.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethinicity Vol. 10, No. 2; Jun 2009: p.121 - 143
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol. 10, No. 2; Jun 2009: p.121 - 143
Key WordsEthnic Violence ;  Indonesia ;  Sambas ;  West Kalimantan ;  Politics of Representation and Memory


 
 
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