Feminism and the Indonesian nationalist movement: A reading of Soewarsih Djojopoespito’s novel Buiten het Gareel
Soewarsih’s autobiographical novel written in Dutch describes the difficulties facing Dutch educated Indonesians involved in the anti-Dutch nationalist movement in the late 1930s. It deals specifically with the role which women played within the movement and how their male counterparts took an am...
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
2009
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Online Access: | http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1157/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1157/ http://journalarticle.ukm.my/1157/1/sari27%281%29-2009%5B08%5D.pdf |
Summary: | Soewarsih’s autobiographical novel written in Dutch describes the difficulties
facing Dutch educated Indonesians involved in the anti-Dutch nationalist
movement in the late 1930s. It deals specifically with the role which women
played within the movement and how their male counterparts took an ambivalent
attitude towards them. In terms of its subject matter and its construction the
novel reflects the sense of crisis of the first generation of Indonesians to have
been exposed to Dutch/European culture with which they identified but which
at the same time they felt they had to repudiate. Relying on a close reading of the text and references to critical works dealing with the author and the period,
this article demonstrates how Soewarsih deliberately uses the novel both to
give voice to her personal frustrations as a woman and to offer personal
testimony of the atmosphere and events of the times. It also argues through this
example that in all our postcolonial reading we must be cautious when we
make use of autobiographical sources and contemporary novels to reconstruct
perceptions of the past, and we need to ensure that, when reading the texts, we
employ literary, anthropological and historical critical skills in equal measure |
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