Ditemukan 4 dokumen yang sesuai dengan query
Hans Hagerdal
"
ABSTRACT
The article is focused on early colonial interaction with the Aru Islands, geographically located in southern Maluku, at the easternmost end of the Indian Ocean world. The study examines how relationships were constructed in the course of the seventeenth century, how they were institutionalized and how this engendered forms of hybridity. Moreover, it discusses forms of resistance and avoidance in relation to the Dutch East India Company (VOC). Aru constitutes an interesting case as it ...
"
Depok: University of Indonesia, Faculty of Humanities, 2019
909 UI-WACANA 20:3 (2019)
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Hans Hagerdal
"
The present article departs from the inherent problems of grasping the voice of
the subaltern other in a colonial context. While postcolonial theoreticians have
occasionally spoken pessimistically about the possibilities of reconstructing the
agency of dominated categories of non-Westerners, recent research on early
Southeast Asia has on the contrary envisaged new lines of inquiry through
an ingenious use of the extant sources, preferably through interdisciplinary
communication. But can we use the colonial archive in order to highlight social
history in non-literate societies ...
"
University of Indonesia, Faculty of Humanities, 2012
pdf
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Hans Hagerdal
"
ABSTRACT
The present study focuses on a set of events in the Aru Islands, Maluku, in the late eighteenth century which are documented in some detail by Dutch records. A violent rebellion with Muslim and anti-European overtones baffled the Dutch colonialists (VOC) and led to a series of humiliations for the Company on Aru, before eventually being subdued. As one of the main catalysts of the conflict stands the chief Tamalola from the Muslim island Ujir. ...
"
Depok: University of Indonesia, Faculty of Humanities, 2019
909 UI-WACANA 20:3 (2019)
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library
Hans Hagerdal
"
The article analyses early European knowledge about Belu, a historical region in Central Timor which, although “belonging” mostly to the Dutch colonial sphere, still had a position of cultural-ritual centrality on a Timor-wide level. Before the mid-nineteenth century, the region was, from a Dutch point of view, largely unknown in terms of political hierarchies, social structure, and economic opportunities. However, three officially commissioned authors, A.G. Brouwer, W.L. Rogge, and H.J. Grijzen, wrote extensive reports about ...
"
Depok: Fakultas Ilmu Pengetahuan dan Budaya Universitas Indonesia, 2023
909 UI-WACANA 24:3 (2023)
Artikel Jurnal Universitas Indonesia Library