Description

Book Synopsis
Dealing with New Order perceptions of the past this study gives insights into how the past can be used for purposes of national-building and regime legitimization and into the nature of the New Order. The Suharto regime created a coherent history that is reflected in recent archaeological and historical research, in popular histories and biographies, in monuments and in school textbooks. The author describes an official history stretching from the proto-Indonesia of Majapahit, through the Indonesian Revolution up to the birth of the New Order in 1965. This past emphasized political stability and national unity under the guidance of the military; socially disruptive ideas were to be avoided. He also gives a counterview to this history stressing Indonesia’s place in the larger Islamic world.

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments Note on Orthography and Sources Preface Chapter One: Using the Past Chapter Two: Heroes and Golden Ages—The Hindu-Buddhist, Islamic and Colonial Past Chapter Three: Revolutions and Coups—The New Order and Modern Indonesian History Chapter Four: Histories in Waiting—Counterviews to the New Order’s Version of the Past Chapter Five: Conclusion Glossary Bibliography Index

Official History in Modern Indonesia: New Order Perceptions and Counterviews

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    A Paperback by Michael Wood

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      View other formats and editions of Official History in Modern Indonesia: New Order Perceptions and Counterviews by Michael Wood

      Publisher: Brill
      Publication Date: 28/11/2014
      ISBN13: 9789004287976, 978-9004287976
      ISBN10:
      Also in:
      Asian history

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Dealing with New Order perceptions of the past this study gives insights into how the past can be used for purposes of national-building and regime legitimization and into the nature of the New Order. The Suharto regime created a coherent history that is reflected in recent archaeological and historical research, in popular histories and biographies, in monuments and in school textbooks. The author describes an official history stretching from the proto-Indonesia of Majapahit, through the Indonesian Revolution up to the birth of the New Order in 1965. This past emphasized political stability and national unity under the guidance of the military; socially disruptive ideas were to be avoided. He also gives a counterview to this history stressing Indonesia’s place in the larger Islamic world.

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments Note on Orthography and Sources Preface Chapter One: Using the Past Chapter Two: Heroes and Golden Ages—The Hindu-Buddhist, Islamic and Colonial Past Chapter Three: Revolutions and Coups—The New Order and Modern Indonesian History Chapter Four: Histories in Waiting—Counterviews to the New Order’s Version of the Past Chapter Five: Conclusion Glossary Bibliography Index

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