ABSTRACT

In Behind the Postcolonial Abidin Kusno shows how colonial representations have been revived and rearticulated in postcolonial Indonesia. The book shows how architecture and urban space can be seen, both historically and theoretically, as representations of political and cultural tendencies that characterize an emerging as well as a declining social order. It addresses the complex interactions between public memories of the present and past, between images of global urban cultures and the concrete historical meanings of the local. It shows how one might write a political history of postcolonial architecture and urban space that recognizes the political cultures of the present without neglecting the importance of the colonial past. In the process, it poses serious questions for the analysis and understanding of postcolonial states.

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

part 1|72 pages

Architecture

chapter 1|24 pages

“Origins” Revisited

Colonial Milieu and the Crisis of Architectural Representations

chapter 2|22 pages

Modern Architecture and Traditional Polity

Jakarta in the Time of Sukarno

chapter 3|24 pages

Recreating Origins

The Birth of “Tradition” in the Architecture of the New Order

part 2|72 pages

Urban Space

chapter 4|23 pages

The Violence of Categories

Urban Space and the Making of the National Subject

chapter 5|24 pages

Colonial Replica

Urban Design and Political Cultures

chapter 6|23 pages

Custodians of (Trans)nationality

Urban Conflict, Middle Class Prestige, and the Chinese

part 3|46 pages

(Trans)national Imaginings

chapter 7|21 pages

Professional and National Dreams

The Political Imaginings of Indonesian Architects

chapter 8|16 pages

“Spectre of Comparisons”

Notes on Discourses of Architecture and Urban Design in Southeast Asia

chapter |7 pages

Beyond the Postcolonial?