scholarly journals DISONANSI MEMORI MONUMEN KOLONIAL: STUDI KASUS TUGU CORNELIS CHASTELEIN, DEPOK, JAWA BARAT

AMERTA ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 77-92
Author(s):  
Alqiz Lukman

Abstract. Dissonant Memories of Colonial Monument: A Case Study of Cornelis Chastelein Monument, Depok Jawa Barat. Material remains from the colonial period are still marginalized from the development of archaeological research in Indonesia. In contrast, monuments, sites, or other material remains from this period are memory repository of identity struggle, development discourse, and social pattern that shaped the modern life of Indonesian society. This article examined how the Old Depok society commemorates Cornelis Chastelein, a VOC high-ranker, who liberated their ancestors and introduced Christianity to them in the form of monument. Contrary to the Old Depok society, the rebuilding of the monument of Cornelis Chastelein was opposed by the Depok government because it is considered as an act to bring back memories of colonialism. This study is using an oral history approach by interviewing Old Depok people, academics, and historical observers as key informants. The concept of dissonant memory is used to analyze interactions and negotiations in the case of the monument of Chastelein conflict. Based on this research, it is known that material remains from the colonial period have diverse values for each element of society and creates new social dynamics in the present. This article argues that archeology is not only useful for reconstructing past activity but it also can reflect present life to construct a better future.   Abstrak. Tinggalan materi yang berasal dari masa kolonial masih termarjinalkan dari perhatian perkembangan penelitian arkeologi di Indonesia. Perlu diketahui bahwa monumen, situs, atau tinggalan materi lainnya yang berasal dari masa itu menyimpan memori tentang perjuangan identitas, penentuan arah pembangunan, dan pola kehidupan sosial yang membentuk karakter masyarakat Indonesia masa kini. Artikel ini membahas bagaimana masyarakat Depok Lama mengabadikan memori sosok Cornelis Chastelein, salah seorang petinggi VOC, yang telah memerdekakan leluhur mereka dari perbudakan dan memperkenalkan ajaran agama Kristen dalam wujud sebuah monumen. Di sisi lain, pembangunan kembali Tugu Cornelis Chastelein pada 2014 mendapatkan pertentangan dari Pemerintah Kota Depok karena dianggap membawa kembali ingatan terhadap kejamnya penjajahan. Pendekatan yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini adalah metode sejarah lisan dengan mewawancarai warga masyarakat Depok Lama, akademisi, dan pemerhati sejarah sebagai informan utama. Konsep disonansi memori dipakai untuk menganalisis interaksi dan negosiasi yang tercipta dalam kasus perseteruan pembangunan Tugu Cornelis Chastelein. Patut diketahui bahwa tinggalan budaya materi dari masa kolonial memiliki nilai yang beragam bagi setiap elemen masyarakat dan dapat menciptakan dinamika sosial yang baru pada masa kini. Artikel ini berargumen bahwa ilmu arkeologi tidak hanya berguna untuk keperluan merekonstruksi kehidupan masa lalu, tetapi juga merefleksikan kehidupan masa kini untuk mengonstruksi kehidupan yang akan datang.

Rural History ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 105-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
ANGELA DAVIS

AbstractWriting in 1960 Margaret Stacey asserted that, ‘Women, compared with men, tend to show group characteristics regardless of other social factors like class. Their training from childhood sets them apart from boys and together as potential wives and mothers.’ This article will question whether Oxfordshire women did indeed believe that there was a commonality in their experiences at this time, irrespective of the locality in which they lived or the class to which they belonged, or whether these differences were more significant than their shared gender. The first objective of this article is therefore to analyse the role class played in determining women's experiences of life in Oxfordshire at this time. Leading on from this, the second objective is to investigate the importance of locality upon lived experience, and to engage, in Charles Phythian-Adams' words, in the process of ‘unravelling localized identities’ (1987). Using Oxfordshire as a case study it is possible to examine a range of communities: rural, urban and suburban. This article will demonstrate how the nature of these different communities affected women's experiences of living within them. The third objective is to discuss the ways in which the women I interviewed expressed their experiences of rural living through the oral history interview, and how their accounts relate to contemporary debates and existing historical interpretations.


Author(s):  
Alessandro Portelli

This article centers around the case study of Rome's House of Memory and History to understand the politics of memory and public institutions. This case study is about the organization and politics of public memory: the House of Memory and History, established by the city of Rome in 2006, in the framework of an ambitious program of cultural policy. It summarizes the history of the House's conception and founding, describes its activities and the role of oral history in them, and discusses some of the problems it faces. The idea of a House of Memory and History grew in this cultural and political context. This article traces several political events that led to the culmination of the politics of memory and its effect on public institutions. It says that the House of Memory and History can be considered a success. A discussion on a cultural future winds up this article.


Author(s):  
Jacquelyn Dowd Hall ◽  
Kathryn Nasstrom

A case study of the southern oral history program is the essence of this chapter. From its start in 1973 until 1999, the Southern Oral History Program (SOHP) was housed by the history department at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), rather than in the library or archives, where so many other oral history programs emerged. The SOHP is now part of UNC's Center for the Study of the American South, but it continues to play an integral role in the department of history. Concentrating on U.S. southern racial, labor, and gender issues, the program offers oral history courses and uses interviews to produce works of scholarship, such as the prize-winning book Like a Family: The Making of a Southern Cotton Mill World. The folks at the Institute for Southern Studies tried to combine activism with analysis, trying to figure out how to take the spirit of the movement into a new era.


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
pp. 386
Author(s):  
Jennie Gray ◽  
Lisa Buckner ◽  
Alexis Comber

This paper reviews geodemographic classifications and developments in contemporary classifications. It develops a critique of current approaches and identifiea a number of key limitations. These include the problems associated with the geodemographic cluster label (few cluster members are typical or have the same properties as the cluster centre) and the failure of the static label to describe anything about the underlying neighbourhood processes and dynamics. To address these limitations, this paper proposed a data primitives approach. Data primitives are the fundamental dimensions or measurements that capture the processes of interest. They can be used to describe the current state of an area in a multivariate feature space, and states can be compared over multiple time periods for which data are available, through for example a change vector approach. In this way, emergent social processes, which may be too weak to result in a change in a cluster label, but are nonetheless important signals, can be captured. As states are updated (for example, as new data become available), inferences about different social processes can be made, as well as classification updates if required. State changes can also be used to determine neighbourhood trajectories and to predict or infer future states. A list of data primitives was suggested from a review of the mechanisms driving a number of neighbourhood-level social processes, with the aim of improving the wider understanding of the interaction of complex neighbourhood processes and their effects. A small case study was provided to illustrate the approach. In this way, the methods outlined in this paper suggest a more nuanced approach to geodemographic research, away from a focus on classifications and static data, towards approaches that capture the social dynamics experienced by neighbourhoods.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 83-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wolfgang Schneider

Beginning in 1944, Soviet authorities arrested former Jewish Council members of different ghettos and put them on trial for collaboration with the Axis powers. This case study examines the 1944 trials of Meir Teich and Isaak Sherf, two leading figures of the Shargorod ghetto’s Jewish administration. Drawing on trial documents, oral history interviews and memoirs, this article focuses on two aspects: how Soviet courts selectively accepted support for the partisans as mitigating circumstances, and how survivor networks among the witnesses influenced the trials. These aspects are discussed in the context of the (re-)Sovietization of formerly occupied territories, in this case Transnistria, the Romanian occupation zone.


2009 ◽  
Vol 34 (3) ◽  
pp. 26-38
Author(s):  
Maurizio Marinelli

Between 1860 and 1945, the Chinese port city of Tianjin was the site of up to nine foreign-controlled concessions, functioning side by side. Rogaski defined it as a ‘hyper-colony’, a term which reflects Tianjin's socio-political intricacies and the multiple colonial discourses of power and space. This essay focuses on the transformation of the Tianjin cityscape during the last 150 years, and aims at connecting the hyper-colonial socio-spatial forms with the processes of post-colonial identity construction. Tianjin is currently undergoing a massive renovation program: its transmogrifying cityscape unveils multiple layers of ‘globalizing’ spatialities and temporalities, throwing into relief processes of power and capital accumulation, which operate via the urban regeneration's experiment. This study uses an ‘interconnected history’ approach and traces the interweaving ‘worlding’ nodes of today's Tianjin back to the global connections established in the city during the hyper-colonial period. What emerges is Tianjin's simultaneous tendency towards ‘world-class-ness’ and ‘China-class-ness’.


2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-8 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Krantz

By policy design, consumers are supposed to save money when they invest in solar energy. This paper presents a case study of what happens when a church goes solar and the finances go wrong. Following the installation of solar-photovoltaic panels, the Arizona church—in the Valley of the Sun, among the sunniest places in the country—decreased its energy consumption, but its electric bills went up. Through oral-history interviews of key stakeholders, the author investigates what happened, and what could be done to prevent other religious institutions and nonprofits from experiencing the church’s fate.


Author(s):  
Frances C. Galt

This article explores the opportunities and obstacles of researching women’s trade union activism in the British film and television industries between 1933 and 2017. The surviving material on women’s union participation is incomplete and fragmented, and so my research has combined an examination of archival material—the union’s journal and the meeting minutes, correspondence and ephemera of three iterations of its equality committee—with new and existing oral history interviews. Sherry J. Katz has termed this methodological approach “researching around our subjects”, which involves “working outward in concentric circles of related sources” to reconstruct women’s experiences (90). While “researching around my subjects” was a challenging and time-consuming process, it was also a rewarding one, producing important insights into union activism as it relates to gender and breaking new ground in both women’s labour and women’s film and television history. This article concludes with a case study on the appointment of Sarah Benton as researcher for the ACTT’s Patterns report in 1973, revealing the benefits of this methodological approach in reconstructing events which have been effectively erased from the official record.


2019 ◽  
Vol 23 ◽  
pp. 105-136
Author(s):  
Dawid Kobiałka

This article discusses the results of archaeological and anthropological research concerning material remains of a prisoner of war camp in Czersk (Pomeranian province, Poland) (Kriegsgefangenenlager Czersk). In the first part, I sketch a broader historical context related to building and functioning of the camp in forests around Czersk between 1914–1919. After that, the role and meaning of  archaeological research on such type of archaeological sites are presented. In the third part, I focus on a very special category of the camp heritage which is called trench art. The last part of this paper is a case study where an assemblage of objects classified as trench art that was found at the camp is described and interpreted. This text aims at highlighting the value of such prisoners and camp’s heritage. Such material culture is a material memory of extraordinary prisoners’ creativity behind barbed wire. It makes one aware of how every piece of trash, rubbish was re-cycled during day-to-day life behind barbed wire.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document