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Localizing Modernity in Colonial Bali During the 1930s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 April 2011
Abstract
Through an examination of an essay written by a Balinese intellectual in the 1930s, this article explores how notions of modernity and nationalism can take root in particular localities. The essay makes a case for modernization and nationalism in Bali, and points to the existing caste system, which it identifies as largely a colonial creation, as an obstacle to progress that should be eliminated.
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References
Earlier versions of this paper were presented at the EUROSEAS conference in Hamburg in September 1998, and at the Association for Asian Studies conference in Boston in March 1999. I would like to thank Webb Keane, Nyoman Darma Putra and the anonymous referee of this journal for their helpful and stimulating comments.
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11 Schulte Nordholt, “The Making of Traditional Bali”; see also Picard, Michel, Bali. Cultural Tourism and Touristic Culture (Singapore: Archipelago Press, 1996)Google Scholar, ch. 1.
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16 There seems to have been a kind of exchange between Poedjangga Baroe and Djatajoe; personal communication Nyoman Darma Putra.
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18 Chatterjee, The Nation and Its Fragments, p. 6.
19 Korn, Victor, Het Adatrecht van Bali, 2nd ed. (ʼs-Gravenhage: G.Naeff, 1932), pp. 509, 664.Google Scholar
20 I am grateful to David Stuart-Fox who gave me a copy of the text. The meaning of wangsa is vague, since it also refers to (ethnic) group or race, but Wirjasutha himself translates it as caste. G.N.M. Wirjasutha, Tjatoer Wangse di Bali (n.p., 1939).
21 This quote is attributed to a book by René Fulop Miller entitled Lenin and Gandhi. I have not yet been able to trace this volume.
22 This is the Arja Samaj, an Indian reform movement founded by Dayananda Saraswati (1824–83), which still exists. During the 1950s and 1960s contacts between religious leaders in Bali and elsewhere, amongst others the Arja Samaj, were intensified. Bakker, “The Struggle of the Hindu Balinese Intellectuals”, pp. 57, 141, 299.
23 Schulte Nordholt, “The Making of Traditional Bali”.
24 He added that in Java and England an aristocracy survived without a caste system and without strict marriage laws.
25 Listed as De Hindoes by W.F. Stutterheim; Het leven van Ramakrishna by R. Rolland; Lenin en Gandhi by Rene Fulep Miller; Agama and Darmasoesila [ed.] by A.A. Bagoes Djelantik; Adatrechtbundels 15 and 28. Since it is very difficult to measure how and to what extent Wirjasutha actually made use of these books, I have not included them in my research.
26 Algemeen Rijksarchief Den Haag, Ministerie van Koloniën, “Memorie van Overgave Assistent Resident Zuid Bali, B. Cox 1940”; Schulte Nordholt, The Spell of Power, p. 311. When I asked former Assistant Resident Cox during an interview in 1981 about this matter, he said he did not remember anything about it. Instead, he emphasized his active role in Amnesty International.
27 I am grateful to Prof. I G.N. Yudana and I G.Ng.A. Wiryasutha (Wirjasutha's son), in Singaraja, who gave me valuable biographical information during interviews in December 1997. See for an analytical focus on these concerns, see Barth, Fredrik, Balinese Worlds (Chicago: University Chicago Press, 1993)Google Scholar.
28 Soerja Kanta 2, 4, April 1926. I owe this reference to Nyoman Darma Putra.
29 Nyoman Darma Putra told me in this respect that the typography of Wirjasutha's pamphlet resembles that used by Djatajoe.
30 Cf. Schulte Nordholt, The Spell of Power, ch. 9.
31 In 1926, when he was active in Soerja Kanta, he was called Mas Wirjasutha, whereas in 1939 he had added the title Gusti.
32 See Wirjasutha, G.N.M., “Verslag dari lezing tentang ‘Penjakitnja perkoempoelan di Bali’”, Djatajoe 3, 6 (1939): 175–78Google Scholar. I should like to thank Michel Picard for sending me a copy of this article. Because of heavy rain, only 20 people attended the meeting.
33 Wirjasutha, “Verslag dari lezing”, p. 175.
34 See for a similar experience shortly after the Second World War, the transfer of docter A.A.M. Djelantik from Bali to the island of Bum because he did not take side with the Dutch during the revolution. Djelantik, The Birthmark, ch. 30.
35 Whether this play was ever performed is not clear. The writing of theatre plays in order to communicate ideas of modernity and nationalism was quite common in the interwar period. Cf. I G.Ng. Bagus, “The play ‘Woman's Fidelity’”, and Bodden, M., “Utopia and the shadow of nationalism. The plays of Sanusi Pane, 1928–1940”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 153 (1997): 322–55CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Note the irony in connection with the ban on his essay that ‘terbit’ also means ‘to publish’.
36 J. Kersten, Bali, p. 87.
37 With regard to Batak literature, see Rodgers, Susan, “Imagining Tradition, Imagining Modernity: A Southern Batak Novel from the 1920s”, Bijdragen tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde 147 (1991): 273–97CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
38 Guha, “Some Aspects of the Historiography of Colonial India”.
39 Milner, The Invention of Politics in Colonial Malaya, pp. 51–53, 270–71.
40 Ibid., pp. 288–89.
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