Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:358Hits:19950437Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID148293
Title ProperOfficial and unrecognized narratives of recovery in post conflict Aceh, Indonesia
LanguageENG
AuthorGrayman, Jesse Hession
Summary / Abstract (Note)Anthropological analyses of post conflict narratives reveal how strategic interests mobilize to resolve or perpetuate conflict. Three years after the 2005 Helsinki peace agreement between the Government of Indonesia and the Free Aceh Movement (GAM) that ended GAM’s thirty-year separatist rebellion, the author led a post conflict programming evaluation. Drawing upon qualitative interviews of rural informants for this study and using an anthropological approach to narrative analysis, this article argues that recovery narratives can be understood in terms of official and counter-official discourses, each utilizing strategic resources to amplify their interpretation of an unfolding peace process. Subaltern narratives heard most clearly are empowered because they adhere to narrative conventions proscribed by the peace agreement and other powerful discourses such as GAM’s separatist ideology. Other unrecognized voices are left out; their stories of recovery resist easy interpretation and sidestep clichéd narratives of peace.
`In' analytical NoteCritical Asian Studies Vol. 48, No.4; Dec 2016: p.528-555
Journal SourceCritical Asian Studies 2016-12 48, 4
Key WordsIndonesia ;  Post conflict ;  Separatism ;  Aceh ;  Narrative ;  Recovery