A history of modern Indonesia since c.1300

Bibliographic Information

A history of modern Indonesia since c.1300

M.C. Ricklefs

Stanford University, 1993

2nd ed

  • : hbk
  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 326-350

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this second edition, all parts of the book have been revised and sections added wherever new research has required this, greater attention has been given to economic issues, and two new chapters have been written on the period since 1965. The bibliography has been brought completely up to date. Indonesia is the forth most populous nation of the earth and a major producer of oil and other resources. It is also the most populous nation of the Islamic world and at the same time heir to vigorous pre-Islamic traditions and complex cultural heritages of the many islands which make up the Republic. Its colourful history, from the coming of Islam c. 1300 to the present day, is described in this comprehensive work. The emphasis throughout the book is on the history of the Indonesian peoples themselves. An essential narrative of political history is provided as well as discussions of social, cultural and economic affairs. Chapter bibliographies are included to guide readers to the most recent scholarly works on the subject. Behind this structure, the book poses the important question of how the diverse but related linguistic and ethnic communities of the Indonesian archipelago became a unified nation. Attention is therefore given first to those influences which set the scene for the post-1300 era of Indonesian history: the spread of Islam; early European contact; the emergence of the new Indonesian states and the variety of indigenous cultural, literary and religious traditions. The turbulent seventeenth century and eighteenth centuries are then analysed in terms of the largely inconclusive struggles for hegemony among Indonesian states and the Dutch. The nineteenth century saw Dutch colonial rule gradually imposed throughout the archipelago, and the twentieth century opened with quite new issues which were by now common to most of the peoples of Indonesia. Islamic revivalism and anti-colonial movements further helped to draw Indonesia together, a process which culminated in the revolution and independence. Since then, Indonesia's unification has made many achievements possible, but has not prevented the emergence of persistence of serious problems. W ithout political or religious bias, using both western and Indonesian sources, this history assists the serious study of both the past and the present of this beautiful and important Southeast Asian nation.<

Table of Contents

  • List of maps
  • Preface to the first edition
  • Preface to the second edition
  • A note on orthography
  • Abbreviations
  • Part I. The Emergence of the Modern Era: 1. The coming of Islam
  • 2. General aspects of pre-colonial states and major empires, c. 1300-1500
  • 3. The arrival of the Europeans in Indonesia, c. 1509-1620
  • 4. The rise of New States, c. 1500-1650
  • 5. Literary, religious and cultural legacies
  • Part II. Struggles for Hegemony, c. 1630-1800: 6. Eastern Indonesia, c. 1630-1800
  • 7. Java, c. 1640-82
  • 8. Java, madura and the VOC, c. 1680-1745
  • 9. Java and the VOC, c. 1745-92
  • Part III. The Creation of a Colonial State, c. 1800-1910: 10. Java, 1792-1830
  • 11. Java, 1830-1900
  • 12. The outer Islands, c. 1800-1910
  • Part IV. The Emergence of the Idea of Indonesia, c. 1900-42: 13. A new colonial age
  • 14. The first steps towards national revival, c. 1900-27
  • 15. Repression and economic crisis, 1927-42
  • Part V. The Destruction of the Colonial State, 1942-1950: 16. World War II and the Japanese occupation, 1942-5
  • 17. The revolution, 1945-50
  • Part VI. Independent Indonesia: 18. The democratic experiment, 1950-7
  • 19. Guided democracy, 1957-65
  • 20. Creating the new order, 1965-75
  • 21. The new order since 1975
  • Notes and references
  • Bibliography
  • Maps
  • Index.

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Details

  • NCID
    BA30795453
  • ISBN
    • 0804721947
    • 0804721955
  • Country Code
    us
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Stanford
  • Pages/Volumes
    xiii, 378 p.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Subject Headings
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