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The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia
A Cultural History

Presents a new approach to heritage formation in Asia, conveying the power of the material remains of the past.

Marieke Bloembergen (Author), Martijn Eickhoff (Author)

9781108499026, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 16 January 2020

338 pages, 29 b/w illus.
23.5 x 15.9 x 2 cm, 0.67 kg

'Bloembergen and Eickhoff demonstrate the Dutch roots of modern Indonesian conceptualisations of heritage, and how Indonesian practices stretch across Southeast Asia to India and beyond. This is a highly original and provocative contribution to global understandings of tradition and its ownership.' Adrian Vickers, University of Sydney

This study offers a new approach to the history of sites, archaeology, and heritage formation in Asia, at both the local and the trans-regional levels. Starting at Hindu-Buddhist, Chinese, Islamic, colonial, and prehistoric heritage sites in Indonesia, the focus is on people's encounters and the knowledge exchange taking place across colonial and post-colonial regimes. Objects are followed as they move from their site of origin to other locations, such as the Buddhist statues from Borobudur temple, that were gifted to King Chulalongkorn of Siam. The ways in which the meaning of these objects transformed as they moved away to other sites reveal their role in parallel processes of heritage formation outside Indonesia. Calling attention to the power of the material remains of the past, Marieke Bloembergen and Martijn Eickhoff explore questions of knowledge production, the relationship between heritage and violence, and the role of sites and objects in the creation of national histories.

Introduction: towards a mobile history of heritage formation in Asia
1. Site interventions, knowledge networks, and changing loyalties on Java, 1800–1850s
2. Exchange, protection, and the social life of Java's antiquities, 1860s–1910s
3. Great sacred Majapahit: biographies of a Javanese site in the nineteenth century
4. Greater Majapahit: the makings of a proto-Indonesian site across decolonisation, 1900s–1950s
5. The prehistoric cultures and historic past of South-Sumatra on the move
6. Resurrecting Siva, expanding local pasts: centralisation and the forces of imagination across war and regime changes, 1920s–1950s
7. Fragility, losing, and anxiety over loss: difficult pasts in wider Asian and global contexts
Epilogue: heritage sites, difficult histories, and 'hidden forces' in postcolonial Indonesia.

Subject Areas: Material culture [JFCD], Archaeology by period / region [HDD], Archaeology [HD], Social & cultural history [HBTB], Asian history [HBJF], Colonial art [ACBS], Art of indigenous peoples [ACBK]

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