{"title":"反对的声音:挑战殖民制度","authors":"Maartje Janse, A. Hoek","doi":"10.1163/25425099-00102001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This publication emerges from a process of co-creation in which\n historian Maartje Janse and research journalist Anne-Lot Hoek challenge the\n dominant national narrative about the colonial experience in the Dutch East\n Indies (present-day Indonesia). In combining journalistic and academic writing\n with musical performance by musician Ernst Jansz they amplify the critical\n voices that have spoken out against colonial injustice and that have long been\n ignored in public and academic debate. Even though it is often suggested that\n the mindset of people in the past prevented them from seeing what was wrong with\n things we now find highly problematic, they argue that there was indeed a\n tradition of colonial criticism in the Netherlands, one that included the voices\n of many ‘forgotten critics’ whose lives and criticism are the subject of this\n publication. The voices however were for a long time overlooked by Dutch\n historians. The publication is organized around the biographies of several\n critics (whose lives Janse and Hoek have published on before), the historical\n debate afterwards and includes reflective videos and texts on the process of\n co-creation.\n Maartje Janse started the process by tracing the life history of an outspoken\n nineteenth-century critic of the colonial system in the Dutch East Indies,\n Willem Bosch. The authors argue that it was not self-evident how criticism of\n colonial injustices should be voiced and that Bosch experimented with different\n methods, including organizing one of the first Dutch pressure groups.\n The story of Willem Bosch inspired Ernst Jansz, a Dutch musician with Indo roots,\n to compose a song (‘De ballade van Sarina en Kromo’). It is an interpretation of\n an old Malaysian ‘krontjong’ song, that Jansz transformed into a protest song\n that reminds its listeners of protest songs of the 1960s and 1970s. Jansz, in\n his lyrics, adds an indigenous perspective to this project. He performed the\n song during the Voice4Thought festival in 2016, a gathering that aimed to\n reflect upon migration and mobility in current times. Filmmaker Sjoerd Sijsma\n made a video ‘pamplet’ in which the performance of Ernst Jansz, an interview\n with Maartje Janse, and historical images from the colonial period have been\n combined.\n Anne-Lot Hoek connected Willem Bosch to a series of twentieth-century\n anti-colonial critics such as Dutch Indies civil servant Siebe Lijftogt,\n Indonesian nationalists Sutan Sjahrir, Rachmad Koesoemobroto, Dutch writer Rudy\n Kousbroek and Indonesian activist Jeffry Pondaag. She argues that dissenting\n voices have been underrepresented in the post-war debates on colonialism and its\n legacy for decades, and that one of the main reasons is that the notion of the\n objective historian was not effectively problematized for a long time.\n http://dissentingvoices.bridginghumanities.com/","PeriodicalId":306747,"journal":{"name":"Bridging Humanities","volume":"24 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-12-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Dissenting Voices: Challenging the Colonial System\",\"authors\":\"Maartje Janse, A. 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The voices however were for a long time overlooked by Dutch\\n historians. The publication is organized around the biographies of several\\n critics (whose lives Janse and Hoek have published on before), the historical\\n debate afterwards and includes reflective videos and texts on the process of\\n co-creation.\\n Maartje Janse started the process by tracing the life history of an outspoken\\n nineteenth-century critic of the colonial system in the Dutch East Indies,\\n Willem Bosch. The authors argue that it was not self-evident how criticism of\\n colonial injustices should be voiced and that Bosch experimented with different\\n methods, including organizing one of the first Dutch pressure groups.\\n The story of Willem Bosch inspired Ernst Jansz, a Dutch musician with Indo roots,\\n to compose a song (‘De ballade van Sarina en Kromo’). It is an interpretation of\\n an old Malaysian ‘krontjong’ song, that Jansz transformed into a protest song\\n that reminds its listeners of protest songs of the 1960s and 1970s. Jansz, in\\n his lyrics, adds an indigenous perspective to this project. He performed the\\n song during the Voice4Thought festival in 2016, a gathering that aimed to\\n reflect upon migration and mobility in current times. Filmmaker Sjoerd Sijsma\\n made a video ‘pamplet’ in which the performance of Ernst Jansz, an interview\\n with Maartje Janse, and historical images from the colonial period have been\\n combined.\\n Anne-Lot Hoek connected Willem Bosch to a series of twentieth-century\\n anti-colonial critics such as Dutch Indies civil servant Siebe Lijftogt,\\n Indonesian nationalists Sutan Sjahrir, Rachmad Koesoemobroto, Dutch writer Rudy\\n Kousbroek and Indonesian activist Jeffry Pondaag. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这本书是由历史学家Maartje Janse和研究记者Anne-Lot Hoek共同创作的,他们对荷属东印度群岛(今天的印度尼西亚)殖民经历的主流民族叙事提出了挑战。他们将新闻和学术写作与音乐家恩斯特·扬斯(Ernst Jansz)的音乐表演结合起来,放大了反对殖民不公的批评声音,这些声音长期以来一直被公众和学术辩论所忽视。尽管人们经常认为,过去人们的思维方式使他们看不到我们现在发现的严重问题的问题所在,但他们认为,荷兰确实有一种殖民批评的传统,其中包括许多“被遗忘的批评家”的声音,他们的生活和批评是本出版物的主题。然而,这些声音在很长一段时间内被荷兰历史学家忽视了。该出版物围绕几位评论家的传记(Janse和Hoek之前发表过他们的生平),之后的历史辩论,包括关于共同创作过程的反思视频和文本。Maartje Janse通过追溯19世纪荷属东印度殖民制度直言不讳的批评者威廉·博什(Willem Bosch)的生活史开始了这一过程。作者认为,如何表达对殖民不公正的批评并非不言自明,博斯尝试了不同的方法,包括组织荷兰第一批压力团体之一。威廉·博斯的故事启发了一位有印度血统的荷兰音乐家恩斯特·扬斯,他创作了一首歌曲(“De ballade van Sarina en Kromo”)。这首歌是对马来西亚一首古老的“krontjong”歌曲的诠释,Jansz把它变成了一首抗议歌曲,让听众想起了20世纪60年代和70年代的抗议歌曲。在他的歌词中,Jansz为这个项目增添了一种本土的视角。他在2016年的Voice4Thought音乐节上演唱了这首歌,这是一个旨在反思当今时代移民和流动的聚会。电影制作人Sjoerd Sijsma将恩斯特·扬斯(Ernst Jansz)的表演、对马尔特·扬斯(Maartje jansse)的采访和殖民时期的历史影像结合在一起制作了视频“pamplet”。安妮-洛特·霍克将威廉·博斯与一系列20世纪的反殖民批评家联系在一起,如荷属印度公务员Siebe Lijftogt、印度尼西亚民族主义者苏丹·萨赫里尔、拉赫迈德·科索姆布罗托、荷兰作家鲁迪·库斯布鲁克和印度尼西亚活动家杰弗里·庞达格。她认为,几十年来,在战后关于殖民主义及其遗产的辩论中,反对的声音一直没有得到充分的代表,其中一个主要原因是,客观历史学家的概念在很长一段时间内没有得到有效的质疑。http://dissentingvoices.bridginghumanities.com/
Dissenting Voices: Challenging the Colonial System
This publication emerges from a process of co-creation in which
historian Maartje Janse and research journalist Anne-Lot Hoek challenge the
dominant national narrative about the colonial experience in the Dutch East
Indies (present-day Indonesia). In combining journalistic and academic writing
with musical performance by musician Ernst Jansz they amplify the critical
voices that have spoken out against colonial injustice and that have long been
ignored in public and academic debate. Even though it is often suggested that
the mindset of people in the past prevented them from seeing what was wrong with
things we now find highly problematic, they argue that there was indeed a
tradition of colonial criticism in the Netherlands, one that included the voices
of many ‘forgotten critics’ whose lives and criticism are the subject of this
publication. The voices however were for a long time overlooked by Dutch
historians. The publication is organized around the biographies of several
critics (whose lives Janse and Hoek have published on before), the historical
debate afterwards and includes reflective videos and texts on the process of
co-creation.
Maartje Janse started the process by tracing the life history of an outspoken
nineteenth-century critic of the colonial system in the Dutch East Indies,
Willem Bosch. The authors argue that it was not self-evident how criticism of
colonial injustices should be voiced and that Bosch experimented with different
methods, including organizing one of the first Dutch pressure groups.
The story of Willem Bosch inspired Ernst Jansz, a Dutch musician with Indo roots,
to compose a song (‘De ballade van Sarina en Kromo’). It is an interpretation of
an old Malaysian ‘krontjong’ song, that Jansz transformed into a protest song
that reminds its listeners of protest songs of the 1960s and 1970s. Jansz, in
his lyrics, adds an indigenous perspective to this project. He performed the
song during the Voice4Thought festival in 2016, a gathering that aimed to
reflect upon migration and mobility in current times. Filmmaker Sjoerd Sijsma
made a video ‘pamplet’ in which the performance of Ernst Jansz, an interview
with Maartje Janse, and historical images from the colonial period have been
combined.
Anne-Lot Hoek connected Willem Bosch to a series of twentieth-century
anti-colonial critics such as Dutch Indies civil servant Siebe Lijftogt,
Indonesian nationalists Sutan Sjahrir, Rachmad Koesoemobroto, Dutch writer Rudy
Kousbroek and Indonesian activist Jeffry Pondaag. She argues that dissenting
voices have been underrepresented in the post-war debates on colonialism and its
legacy for decades, and that one of the main reasons is that the notion of the
objective historian was not effectively problematized for a long time.
http://dissentingvoices.bridginghumanities.com/