ABSTRACT

This book uses an interdisciplinary approach to chart how various forms of violence – domestic, military, legal and political – are not separate instances of violence, but rather embedded in structural inequalities brought about by colonialism, occupation and state violence. The book explores both case studies of individuals and of groups to examine experiences of violence within the context of gender and structures of power in modern Indonesian history and Indonesia-related diasporas. It argues that gendered violence is particularly important to consider in this region because of its complex history of armed conflict and authoritarian rule, the diversity of people that have been affected by violence, as well as the complexity of the religious and cultural communities involved. The book focuses in particular on textual narratives of violence, visualisations of violence, commemorations of violence and the politics of care.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

Gendered violence in the making of modern Indonesia

chapter 1|20 pages

Narrating intimate violence in public texts

Women’s writings in the Sumatran newspaper Soenting Melajoe 1

chapter 2|20 pages

Living in a conflict zone

Gendered violence during the Japanese occupation of the Netherlands East Indies 1

chapter 3|25 pages

Home at the front

Violence against Indonesian women and children in Dutch military barracks during the Indonesian National Revolution 1

chapter 4|17 pages

The sexual and visual dynamics of torture

Analysing atrocity photographs from Indonesian-occupied East Timor

chapter 5|18 pages

Memory on stage

Affect, gender and the performative in 1965–66 survivor testimonies

chapter 6|24 pages

Commemorating gendered violence two decades on

Chinese Indonesian women’s voices in the diaspora

chapter 7|20 pages

Caring for the un-speakable

Coercive pedagogies, shame, and the structural violence continuum in Indisch intergenerational memory work

chapter 8|18 pages

The politics of care

A case study of domestic violence in Aceh 1

chapter 9|16 pages

Gendered violence, gendered care

Nonintervention, silence work and the politics of HIV in Aceh

chapter |5 pages

Afterword: Gender, violence, power

The pervasiveness of heteropatriarchal moral orders in Indonesia across time and space