Writing The Nation

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WRITING THE NATION: THE PREWAR INDONESIAN NATIONALIST

NOVEL

by Dr. Thomas Rieger

Human consciousness is, if not identical with, at least strongly determined by language.1
What we can and are likely to imagine is thus something which depends quite heavily on our
linguistic or cultural background. Among the many different categories of speech acts,
literature stands out as one where imagination of a very systematic, carefully constructed kind
is communicated to an audience usually consisting of a considerable number of persons of a
certain speech community. 2 It is therefore by no means accidental that the emergence of
literature as a discourse, as a particular class of speech acts3, as well as of certain genres like
the novel, has played a major role in processes of collective imagination aiming at the
construction of collective identity as a class 4 or nation. For the latter case, Bhabha (1990), in
a recently published collection of essays, has coined the term of writing the nation. As
Bhabha points out, writing the nation always implies writing the nations "Other“, constructing
identity by deliminating it, by setting demarcations. Writing the nation in the sense of
Anderson's imagined community thus implies inevitably the imagination of differences, more
often than not by means of antagonistic semantic isotopies5, consisting of a system of binary
oppositions representing 'us' and "them“, supplying fertile ground for the seed of hatred.
Without denying the importance of phenomena like the canonisation of "national literatures“
and its interaction with the formation of standardised "national languages"6 in the following
we will thus focus on the textual level as being of more direct interest to the subject of this
conference.

Speaking of the Indonesian nationalist novel necessitates a number of clarifying introductory


remarks. Using the term "Indonesian" may provoke criticism, as it might be perceived as ana-
chronistic, at least with regard to the period preceding World War 1. Without refuting this
criticism as a matter of principle, 1 would like to point out that in terms of a new identity, an
Indonesian identity, to be constructed, Indonesianness and participation in the national move-
ment7 have to be regarded as synonymous and, as 1 have argued elsewhere8, the point of de-
parture of that movement, the pergerakan, has to be set at the foundation of the Chinese refor-
mist organisation TIONG HOA HWE KOAN in 1900. Using terms like "novel" or "literature" with
regard to texts or groups of texts produced in an environment quite different from post-
romantic Europe seems to be at loggerheads with what Foucault has taught us about the his-
torical contingency of what was once (and by some still is) regarded as an eternal and univer-
sal category: literature. Though, due to the specific socio-historic conditions under Dutch co-
lonial rule, the transformation of Malay from a chirographic language at best into a full
fledged typographic one9 under a variety of mainly external influences, a recomposition of
the discourse structure took place in the latter half of the 19th century, producing, among
others, a literary discourse in the (post-)romantic European sense. The very existence of
literature, its birth under the impact of broader socio-cultural changes induced by foreign
domination, is certainly worth further reflection, however 1 have to content myself here with
stating that the use of that notion does not spring from a simple euro-centric transfer of con-
cepts.10 Finally, the notion of a „nationalist“ novel needs some explanation. Without any
theoretical pretension I suggest here as a working definition that a novel will be categorised
as „nationalist“ if: 1. one or several of its characters belong to the nationalist movement or an
organisation of that movement is assigned a function within its narrative structure; and 2. that
character or organisation is assigned a positive value.
It is worth noting here, that although an important proportion of the material to be presented
is either completely new or has never received the scholarly attention that it seems to merit,
things are changing in the field of history, linguistics, letters as well as political science con-
cerned with Indonesia. Recent research into the history of the country's nationalist movement,
such as conducted by Anderson (1991) and Shiraishi (1990), has started to move away from
the classical approach which used to focus almost exclusively on "political" organisations,
their leaders and publications along with the colonial authorities' answers to their actions.

The epoch of writing the nation can be roughly divided into two periods, the first stretching
from 1905 to 1926, the second one from 1927 to 1942. This division is supported by general
historical data as well as by the properties of the texts under consideration. The years from
1905 to 1926, Shiraishi's 'age in motion" are the time of the first wave of anti-colonial awa-
kening and mobilisation which came to an abrupt end with the bloody repression of the com-
munists' and islamic lefts' uprising of late 1926 and early 1927. The texts produced during
this period are marked by an attitude of searching, of assimilating concepts, of gradual
emancipation from a too simplistically "progress-"oriented world-view. The second period,
coming to an end only with the Japanese occupation in 1942, saw not only a dramatic
geographic and quantitative expansion in the production of nationalist novels, but was also
marked by much clearer textual strategies on the part of the nationalist writers. Nationalist
discourse in literary works, evolving quite rapidly since the mid-1920s, had been by the early
1940s established as a fairly closed discourse.

To illustrate both periods and substantiate my general characterisation of them, in the fol-
lowing a number of exemplary works from both periods will be presented in more detail.

Relatively well-known among scholars, but usually dismissed on aesthetic grounds as "mere
propaganda" are three novels by authors belonging to the Semarang-based milieu of the
Islamic left, Student Hidjo [The student Hidjo] by Marco Kartodikromo (1919), Hikajat
Kadiroen [The Life-Story of Kadiroen] by Semaoen (1920) and Rasa Merdika [The Taste of
Freedom/ Feeling Free] by Soemantri (1924). Marco Kartodikromo, founder of the first
Indonesian association of journalists and one of the principal figures of the pre-1926 left, tells
the story of a young Javanese aristocratic sent to the Netherlands for study, having an affair
with a Dutch girl but finally returning to Indonesia, marrying his Javanese fiancée and
becoming an official of the colonial administration. Although a certain cultural opposition is
constructed between the Dutch, rough and boorish, unable to control their emotions, and as
for their women - of easy virtue, and the Javanese, polite and refined in their behaviour,
always mastering their emotions and of perfect virtue in the case of women, this contradiction
is never presented as an irreconcilable one: the very Dutch style of the letters exchanged
between the two young women in love with Hidjo, and, in political terms, the eventual
integration of the hero into the colonial apparatus, are clear indications of this.11 Tickell
(1982: 189) is certainly right in stating that

The overt political message of the novel sits squarely within the intellectual boundaries of
early twentieth century Dutch "ethical" thought and echoes some of the major catch cries of the
Dutch Ethici. There is a call for enlightened and educated rule by the Dutch.

The SAREKAT ISLAM, Indonesia's first modem anti-colonial mass-movement which gave
birth both to a part of reformist Islam and the revolutionary left of Indonesia, is presented
more or less as a cultural institution in the life of the elite, designed to ascertain a sense of
Muslim identity and self-respect.
Somewhat more outspoken, but still very much with the same limitations, is Semaoen's
Hikajat Kadiroen, which appeared a year after Marco's work. The author was at the time one
of the principal figures of the nationalist movement, contending with H.O.S.Tjokroaminoto
for the leadership of the SAREKAT ISLAM, leading the most militant and influential trade
union (the railway workers' V.S.T.P.) and being one of the founders of the Indonesian
Communist Party in May of that year.

As Maier (1986: 106) has pointed out, in terms of structure Semaoen's novel is both a Bil-
dungsroman and a roman à thèse. This is a crucial point: the relationship between the coloni-
ser and the colonised, between Dutch and Indonesians, is still depicted in a very moderate
way by using repeatedly the image of a parent-child relationship between the Dutch colonial
government and its subjects. But the ultimate goal is "adulthood" on the part of the child, or
independance on the part of the colonised. In the course of the plot Kadiroen becomes a
former colonial official and turns leader of the communist party, whereas in Marco's novel
the hero ends up as a colonial official. Semaoen's discourse does not construct any
antagonism between Dutch and Indonesians in general, colonialism is in a very mechanistic
interpretation of historical materialism (certainly not Semaoen's privilege at that period ... )
explained as the simple result of an almost natural law and the colonial government is seen as
some sort of arbiter above contending groups of society, to be aided by the Communist Party
to "introduce“ social justice to the colony. Universal brotherhood between the races and
religions is suggested on several occasions in a fashion more reminiscent of contemporary
theosophical discourse than of the Communist Manifesto. But the "child' has started to think
about growing up, mass organisation is advocated as a means of strengthening the
Indonesian's position in the competition with the governments other child, the Dutch
capitalists, for the „parents“ favour. And a warning is issued: should all benevolent efforts of
the government fail, the party would have to resort to "communist' action and a system of
soviets (councils) is proposed as the adequate form of running the country's administration.

A qualitative leap forward towards a closed nationalist discourse is achieved by Soemantri's


novel Rasa Merdika (1924). Soemantri was among the leaders of the PKI (Communist Party
of Indonesia) in the mid-1920s and at times editor in chief of the party's paper (Shiraishi,
1990:

242n, 246). As the works of Marco and Semaoen, Soemantri's novel was composed in prison.
In terms of its plot on the verge of a plagiat of Semaoen's Hikajat Kadiroen, the novel offers
nevertheless several interesting aspects. First, the obvious integration. of Partondo's
translation of the Communist Manifesto, published a year earlier (McVey, 1965: 433n) as an
intertext contributes to a certain coherence of Soemantri's discourse, which is much more
closed than Semaoen's. The notions of "means of production“ [alat-alat menghasilkan, p.77],
"capitalist exploitation“ [penghisepan dari kapital, p.78] of "imperialism" [imperialisme,
p.78], the "proletariat" [kaoem proletar, p.79; kasta proletar, p.80] and „class struggle"
[klassenstrijd, p.81; interestingly enough borrowed from, Dutch] are for the first time
introduced into literary discourse. A Marxist analysis of the role of the state replaces
Semaoen's quite conciliatory discourse on the colonial government:
The capitalist class engages in systematic exploitation, protected by its organs, whereas the
proletarian's lot is starvation. (Soemantri, 1924: 86) 12

The author also insists on the irreconcilable nature of the class antagonism between workers
and capitalists (p.89).

Perhaps even more interesting than this radicalisation is the way in which the author's
community's "Other", the Dutch, are presented. Contrary to the works of Marco and
Semaoen, in Soemantri's novel we'll look in vain for a positive Dutch character. When the
hero still is, at the beginning -of the story, a colonial official, his Dutch superior shows an
almost pathological desire for displays of deference on the part of his inferiors (p.20). His
second boss, after he has taken a job in the private sector, is apparently a gentle and generous
person, but in reality a racist, greedy for profit, whose only reason for treating his indigenous
employees well is to assure their working morale and maximum performance (p.58). The
message cannot be clearer the Dutch are bad and if anyone among them seems to be alright,
he certainly is a hypocrite.

Although the demarcation between "us“ and "them“ had thus become quite clear, we are still
in a somewhat preparatory stage of the process of "writing the nation", as the discourse is still
internationalist - a trait that both the islamic as well as the socialist currents of the time bore -
and it is more or less by the absence of Dutch workers and Indonesian capitalists from Soe-
mantri's discourse, a certain congruence of the lines of class division with lines of racial divi-
sion, that we can discern the germ of nationalism proper in this last text.

A fourth novel from this period, representing a current different from the Semarang left Mus-
lim milieu, but as a part of the general social ferment certainly not entirely unrelated with it,
is Kwee Seng Tjoan's Tjerita Anak Prampoean Di Bikin Sebagi Parit Mas atawa Iboe jang
Doerhaka [The Story of a Daughter exploited as a Goldmine or The Cruel Mother] published
in 1917. Unfortunately, only the first of the three volumes of this work seems to have sur-
vived, so we leave aside questions of narrative structure here. Nevertheless the limited part of
the novel which has been at our disposal is interesting enough to have a closer look at it here.
The story is set in the Chinese quarter of down town Batavia (Jakarta) in a milieu of ordinary
local born as well as immigrant Chinese. It abounds in borrowings from Hokkian (Fujian)
Chinese to an extent unusual even for the works of pre-war ethnic Chinese writers but
contains - equally unusual for this period - almost no borrowings from Dutch, whereas the
authenticity of the dialogues in Batavian Malay is most remarkable. The essential point how-
ever is the strong emphasis placed on Chinese education:

After our people here in the Indies achieved unity and has recognised the primordial importance of
education for enabling everybody to earn a living, the Tiong Hoa Hwee Koan was founded,
because learning a foreign language first in order to be admitted to a [Dutch; T.R.] school is too
difficult apart from the fact that their fees are prohibitive for everybody except the rich or those
earning a top salary.13
(Kwee Seng Tjoan, 1917: 23)

Apart from using the proto-nationalist "Insulinde" for referring to the Dutch East Indies, the
perspective of the author is obviously sino-centric, the term bangsa already having undergone
the semantic shift from its former "feudal“ connotation14 referring to the Chinese as an ethnic
community or even a nation, as the stress on "unity“ suggests.15 This point becomes even
more obvious in the following quotation, an extract from the speech of the director of the
TIONG HOA HWE KOAN school that the novel's hero frequents:

"You, the students, must not forget that we had to make a big effort to establish this school and
that we hope to see appropriate results in the future, that is to say that our people here in the
Indies will know its language and its script. Only when ail the overseas Chinese will be able to
read Chinese, then the moment will have come that our love for our fatherland can blossom and
only then we will be able to re-establish close ties between us and China! Learn earnestly for your
own and your people's sake!“16
(ibid., p.77)

This is one of the finest examples of Huaqiao-nationalism in Indonesian literature: ad-


vancing the Indies' overseas Chinese lot by regaining Chineseness and re-establishing ties
with the land of the ancestors and becoming part of a (great) Chinese nation). All this is
advanced by the diction used (Chinese borrowings), the setting in a Chinese quarter, the
mixed personnage of peranakan (local born) and totok (immigrated) Chinese and not least the
school which becomes almost a metaphor of the nation in a sense quite similar to the way in
which the pergerakan constituted something like the Indonesian nation in statu nascendi. An
interesting feature of this effort of writing the (Chinese) nation is the virtual absence of all
other ethnic communities of the Indies, were the Chinese constitute but a small minority. This
symptomatic absence as well as any concrete reference to the situation in China are typical
for a brand of nationalism which should soon undergo a grave crisis, giving rise to another
phenomenon, the one which Tan (1988) has baptized "min-zhu nationalism", the retaining of
cultural group identity within a multi-ethnic nation, for the case of Malaysia.

***
*

As we have remarked above, the period 192 7-1942 was marked my the emergence of new
centers of literary production, especially outside Java, as well as an overall quantitave expan-
sion. From the enormous wealth of material we cannot present here but a few examples con-
sidered as the most representative of a number of features of nationalist novel writing of the
time. The four works that we will present are Roestam Digoelist [Roestam, the Prisoner from
Digoel17 by D.E.Manu Tune (1940), Teratai Terkoelai [The Broken Lotus] by Merayu Sukma
(1940), Radiks Wikanta [name of the hero] by Ifin (1941) and Pendekar dari Chapei [The
Warrior from Chapei] by Kwee Tek Hoay (1932).

Chronologically the first one, Kwee Tek Hoay's voluminous work of roughly 800 pages was
published after the Japanese aggression in Manchuria and its atrocities committed during the
heavy fighting in the Chinese quarters of Shanghai in 1931 which stirred up considerable
emotion among Chinese communities in Southeast Asia. It has to be seen in the context of the
conflicts within the Chinese community about their role in the political life of Indonesia.
Kwee Tek Hoay, a former supporter of Huaqiao-nationalism who had turned against this
current in 1926 and had become an advocate of the pro-Dutch orientation, wrote the novel in
order to expose the alledged weaknesses of the Huaqiao-nationalists grouped around the
paper SIN PO. The third current, the Indonesia-oriented group led by Liem Koen Hian,
appears in one of the other works that we will discuss below. To give an idea of the violent
and often personally insulting character of these political conflicts we reproduce here a
carricature published in the magazine PANORAMA of which Kwee Tek Hoay was for some
time the editor.
The negative way the author presents two Chinese youth organisations is symptomatic for the
erosion of the euphoria of only a couple of years earlier: these organisations are no longer
seen as pioneers of Chinese nationalism but as vehicles for the private, in the first place
sexual ambitions of their members. Huaqiao-nationalism in general is ridiculed by presenting
it as hypocrite: the novels's anti-hero, an ardent Huaqiao-nationalist who promised to sacrify
his life in the battle against the Japanese in Chapei is finally caught selling Japanese goods in
the west-Javanese countryside. Strictly speaking, this novel does thus not fit into our
definition of a nationalist novel, it is an example of "deconstructing the nation" rather than of
writing the nation, but it is instructive as one of the possible conclusions of the development
begun in the previous period. The same pessimistic tone can be found also in novels more
sympathetic to the Chinese organisations, like Ong Siauw King's Terloenta-loenta (Suffering]
published in Palembang in 1928.

More representative of the general trend of the period is D.E.Manu Turies Roestam Digoelist
(1940). The novelette was published in Medan, the most important among the new emerging
centres of literary production at the time. It tells the story of the young nationalist Roestam,
who, after being relegated from his school for insubordination, takes up a job in a plantation
in the Simalungun region. Defending plantation workers against physical harassment of their
Dutch supervisor, Borsthaar, and organising clandestine education meetings he becomes
popular among the workers. Borsthaar, hating Roestam for making him lose his face, spies on
the young Indonesian and has him arrested by the colonial police at one of his clandestine
meetings. In court Roestam admits to be a member of the illegal communist party and is
banned to Boven Digoel. After returning to Sumatra some years later, he wants to marry his
long-time fiancé, Tjindai, but only after a whole range of adventures the two are finally
united. Apart from the fact, that this work is the only one dealing with real underground
activity and one of the few daring to take up the problem of the deplorable situation in the
plantations, the construction of Indonesianness in this novel is quite interesting. A double
delimitation takes place: horizontally against the foreign, the Dutch: Roestam, the defender of
the weak, brave and honest, the ksatria [knight, chevalier] to use the appropriate Indonesian
image is opposed to the cruel and cunning Dutch, maltreating the weak, relying on collective
force of the colonial apparatus to confront his personal enemy. His name, which can be
translated with "hairs of the chest", regarded by many Indonesians as a disgusting physical
feature of Europeans, adds to this contrast. But the new Indonesia which the character
Roestam embodies is also set up "vertically" against the backward, the indigenous
conservatives embodying the past. When Roestam and Tjindai try to enforce Tjindai's parents'
permission for their marriage by resorting to the traditional custom of kawin lari (abduction
of the bride), it is the old generation committing an infraction against the respected adat
[customary law] and thereby discrediting themselves severely in the eyes of most
Indonesians. It is this combination of rebellion and preservation of identity which is typical
for most of the nationalist novels trying to construct Indonesian identity. Those who propose
conservation of the old ways or advocate to swallow Western concepts of modernity hook,
line and sinker (like St.Takdir Alisyahbana) find themselves in a more or less marginal
position.
The novel Teratai Terkoelai by Merayu Sukma (1940) is interesting for two aspects. First it
embodies in the field of publishing the growing interregional contact: the publishing
company, DOENIA PENGALAMAN, originally founded in Medan, moved to Solo in 1940.
Merayu Sukma, himself of Banjarese (Kalimantan) origin, wrote in Sumatran and later
Javanese publications about his native region. The story is also a good example for a number
of additional devices of defining Indonesian identity by delineating the imagined community
against its "Other“. The hero, a young man named Horman, quits his job as a teacher in a
government school to become a small entrepreneur and advance the "national economy". His
fiancé leaves him, because she has only contempt for his hard physical work as a petty
merchant on the river. Horman finds new friends within the pergerakan-milieu and a new
fiancée, active in the Islamic women's movement, explicitely called a perempoean
pergerakan (women of the movement] (p.64). As his fame as a pergerakan leader hses the
police becomes alerted and finally he is sentenced to a year and a half imprisonment for
disturbing public peace. The values that Horman as the personification of the new
"Indonesian" man embodies as opposed to his adversaries are listed in the following little
table:

Horman his former fiancée (and her friend and


parents)

spirit of enterprise servility of colonial official class

modesty arrogance of the indigenous colonial


officialdom

support for the pergerakan hostility against the pergerakan

impeccable attitude with regard to libertinage (or what ever the author took for
traditional/islamic norms and values with this)
regard to sexuality

Finally, the novel Radiks Wikanta by Ifin (1941) paints the picture of the militant totally sub-
merged within the pergerakan. This as well is an important aspect of writing the nation: crea-
ting a micro-cosmos were the new Indonesia already seems a tangible reality, where the
whole life of young people (the bulk of the authors as well as the readers of this kind of
literature), their work, love, leisure is situated in a setting dominated by the struggle for the
nation to be build. The story's hero, Radiks Wikanta, has barely passed from childhood to
adolescence, when he becomes involved as a full time organiser in the youth movement, the
workers' movement the women's movement hurrying from one meeting to the other,
providing that he is not serving one of his short prison terms. The novel is also remarkable for
some allusions to the previous period, something almost totally lacking in the bulk of this
literature.

Unfortunately, the covers of this as of many other works have not survived. As an interesting
example of the graphic support of the text and its images below we reproduce the cover of
another novel of the time, Synoe and Thomas' Toekang Keboen Rahasia [The Secret
Gardener] (1941).

The subject has still to be explored further, but in view of the very limited numerical strength
of most of the nationalist organisation, the limited circulation of party papers and the severe
restrictions on public meeting and propaganda tours after 1933, it can be assumed that
literature of the kind presented here, with most of the works printed in at least 5.000 copies
had a more than marginal influence on Indonesian nationalism.

NOTES
1. The argument of identity of consciousness, ideology and language, derives from the Russian linguist
Volosinov, but the idea of determination of consciousness by language is also reflected in the so-called
Saphir-Whorf theorem.
2. Conceiving of literature as a particular sort of speech act has been most convincingly suggested by Pratt
(1977). Pratts argument is not only supported by Volosinovs reflections on language, but also bears the
possibility of an interesting interpretation of Foucault's concept of discourse: "literature" as a discourse
of post-romantic Europe can be conceived of as a class of speech acts, as the result of a shift within the
system of classification of speech acts within major European languages..

3. Genres can be, if one tries to integrate the notion into the concept outlined above (see note 2), conceived
of as sub-classes of speech-acts. Such a concept combines a socio-linguistic framework of analysis
with a systemic approach suggested by the Luhmann-inspired Köhler (1977).

4. Cf. Watt's famous work on the novel and its role in the formation/constitution of the bourgeoisie as a class.
5. The concept is part of Greimas' structural semantics.

6. Balibar (1974) has aptly demonstrated this relationship in the case of France.

7. In the broad sense in which Petrus Blumberger (1931/1987) used the term.

8. Rieger (1991: IV).

9. These concepts are Ong's (1982).

10. I have elaborated that point further in my thesis (Rieger, 1991:20-54).

11. For this paragraph I have drawn on Tickell's (1982: 60-70, 101-106, 186-188) analysis of this story's
narrative structure.

12. "Kasta modal mengisep teratoer dengen dilindoengi oleh alat-alatnja tetapi si proletar tinggal toelang dan
koelitnia saja. "

13. " Tapi setelah kita poenja bangsa di ini Insulinde soeda bisa bersatoe hati dan dapet taoe djoega bahoewa
pladjaran ada sanget bergoena boeat orang mentjari pengidoepan, sementara boeat bladjar bahasa
asing terasa terlaloe soesa boeat bisa di trima didalem itoe sekola serta pembajarannja ada sanget
mahal, djika boekan anaknja orang hartawan atawa orang jang dapet gadji besar soeda tentoe tida bisa
dapet itoe pladjaran, maka itoe à orang soeda berdiriken Tiong Hoa Hwee Koan.“

14. For a discussion of the semantic development of the term bangsa see Matheson (1979).

15. Conceiving the Chinese as one group and striving for unity is not as natural as it might seem to the external
observer, only a few year before Kwee was writing, the Straits as well as the Indies had been the seen
of sometimes bloody conflicts between different ethnic group among the Chinese community.

16. Dan sekarang moerid-moerid moesti inget, jang kita orang soeda berdiriken ini roema pegoeroean dengen
soesa dan boewang banjak tanaga dengen harepan boeat dapetken boeahnja di kemoedian hari, jaitoe
soepaja kita poenja bangsa di ini Insulnde bisa mengenal hoeroef dan bahasa sendiri. Djika semoewa
Hoa Ki~ bisa batja soerat Tionghoa, di itoe waktoelah baroe bisa timboel kita orang poenja ketjintahan
hati pada kita poenja tanah aer dan djoega kita orang poenja perhoeboengan dengen Tiongkok bisa
djadi rapet kombali! Bladjarlah dengen soenggoe-soenggoe ini ada kebaekan boeat sekalian moenid-
moerid poenja diri dan djoega boeat kebaekan kita poenja bangsa!

17. Boven Digoel in the Dutch part of New Guinea was a notorious prison camp for political adversaries of the
colonial regime, especially those members of left-wing organisations who could not be prosecuted on
juridicial ground after the abortive 1926-1927 insurrection. Later. in the 1930s, members of the more
militant wing of the nationalist movement were also banned to Boven Digoel.

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originale de 1931). Dordrecht: Foris Publications.

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Rieger, T. 1991. "Le récit du mouvement nationaliste avant 1942 dans la littérature -indonésien ne",
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