Situated Testimonies : Dread and Enchantment in an Indonesian Literary Archive
معرفی کتاب «Situated Testimonies : Dread and Enchantment in an Indonesian Literary Archive» نوشتهٔ Laurie J Sears, (Laurie Jo)، منتشرشده توسط نشر University of Hawai'i Press در سال 2017. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
The Indonesian writer Pramoedya Ananta Toer made a distinction between a "downstream" literary reality and an "upstream" historical reality. Pramoedya suggested that literature has an effect on the upstream flow of history and that it can in fact change history. In Situated Testimonies Laurie Sears illuminates this process by considering a selection of Dutch Indies and Indonesian literary works that span the twentieth century and beyond and by showing how authors like Louis Couperus and Maria Dermoût help retell and remodel history.
Sears sees certain literary works as "situated testimonies," bringing ineffable experiences of trauma into narrative form and preserving something of the dread and enchantment that animated the past. These literary works offer a method of reading the emotional traces that historians may fail to witness or record - traces that elude archival constructions where political factors or colonial conditions have influenced processes of what is preserved and how it is shaped. Sears' use of Donna Haraway's notion of "situatedness" reiterates the idea that all of us speak from somewhere. Testimony, especially eyewitness testimony, is a gold standard in historical methodology, and the authors of literary works are eyewitnesses of their time. But the works of authors like Tirto Adhi Soerjo and Soewarsih Djojopoespito are first of all written as literature, and literary or stylistic devices cannot be ignored.
Sears finds substantial evidence of the movement of psychoanalytic theories between Europe and the Indies/Indonesia throughout the twentieth century. She concludes that far from being only a Jewish or European discourse, psychoanalysis is a transnational discourse of desire that has influenced Indies and Indonesian writers for more than a century. Psychoanalytic ideas, and the suggestion by French psychoanalyst Jean Laplanche and Indonesian author Ayu Utami that memories, like literature, can move us back and forth in time, have inspired Sears' thinking about historical archives, literature, and trauma.
Table of Contents Preface Acknowledgments Note on Conventions Selected Timeline of Indies and Indonesian Histories Introduction: The Afterwardsness of History Chapter 1. Desire, Phantoms, and Commodities: Maria Dermoût’s Colonial Critique Chapter 2. At Home and Not at Home in Empire: Transnational Phantasies of Colonial Modernity Chapter 3. A Neurotic Family Romance of Modernity and the National Form Chapter 4. The End of the Nationalist Romance Chapter 5. Trauma and Its Doubles in Postcolonial Masculinity Chapter 6. Masculinist Trauma and Feminist Melancholia Afterword: Trauma, Translation, and a Critical Path Notes Glossary Selected Bibliography Index About the Author