Performing Power illuminates how colonial dominance in Indonesia was legitimized, maintained, negotiated, and contested throughthe everyday staging and public performance of power between the colonizer and colonized.Arnout Van der Meer's Performing Power explores what seemingly ordinary interactions reveal about the construction of national, racial, socialreligious, and gender identities as well as the experience of modernity in colonial Indonesia. Through acts of everyday resistance, such as speaking adifferent language, withholding deference, and changing one's appearance and consumer behavior, a new generation of Indonesians contested thehegemonic colonial appropriation of local culture and the racial and gender inequalities that it sustained. Over time these relationships of dominationand subordination became inverted, and by the twentieth century the Javanese used the topes of Dutch colonial behavior to subvert the administrativehierarchy of the state.Thanks to generous funding from the Sustainable History Monograph Pilot and the Mellon Foundation the ebook editions of this book are available asOpen Access (OA) volumes from Cornell Open (cornellopen.org) and other Open Access repositories.
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History Political Science Politics & Social Sciences Social Science Social Sciences