您的瀏覽器不支援 JavaScript喔,請開啟 Javascript 功能。
跳到頁面主要內容區
:::
SEARCH
CLOSE
MENU
CLOSE
Tamkang University
Home
SiteMap
繁體中文
Login
Latest News
Department Announcement
Upcoming Events
Admissions Information
Scholarships
Honorable Deeds
About Department of GPE
Introduction
Department introduction
Undergraduate (English-Taught Program)
Master's Program in Japanese Political and Economic Studies
In-service Master's Degree in Digital Learning in Asia-Pacific and Latin American Studies
Vision and Goals
Location
Admissions
Undergraduate (English-Taught Program)
Apply for Admission
Exam Distribution
Numerous Stars Recommendation
Master's Program in Japanese Political and Economic Studies
Overseas Students
Foreign Students
Overseas Chinese Students and Students from Hong Kong and Macao
Members
Faculty
Full-Time Teachers
Adjunct Teachers
In Charge of Administrative
Course Introduction
Undergraduate (English-Taught Program)
Curriculum Planning
Annual Compulsory Subjects Chart
Minor Courses List
Flexible Educational
Master's Program in Japanese Political and Economic Studies
Curriculum Planning
Study Requirements
Dual Degree Program
In-Service Master's Degree in Digital Learning in Asia-Pacific and Latin American Studies
Course Information
Going Abroad in Junior Year
Experience Sharing
2022~2023 LIN, SI-TANG
2023~2024 WANG,WEI-ZHEN
2023~2024 TU, CHIH-JOU
Postcard from junior year abroad
Study Abroad List
Tutoring Notification and Credit Recognition System
Study Abroad Duration
Going-Abroad Statistics
GSIP
Project Introduction
Achievements
Media Coverage
Downloads
Rules and Regulations
Rules Formulate
Graduation Regulations
Scholarship
Undergraduate
Master Program
Pre-Master's Degree
Alumni
Alumni
2005~2009
2010~2014
2015~2019
2020~2024
Alumni Statistics
Undergraduate (English-Taught Program)
Master's Degree in Latin American Studies
Master's Program in Japanese Political and Economic Studies
GPE Alumni Association Facebook
Career/Further Studies
Event Highlights
Albums
Seminar for Junior Year Abroad
Postcards From Junior Year Abroad
Industry Teacher's Speech
Off-Campus Visits
Foreign Guests Visiting
Department Activities
Media Reports
Related Links
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, ROC(Taiwan)
Overseas Community Affairs Council, ROC(Taiwan)
Taiwan External Trade Development Council
Taiwan External Trade Development Council
Taiwanese Political Science Association
Intellectual Property Rights
Brief Introduction
Propaganda
Contact Us
Contact Us
Facebook
Instagram
Home
Members
Faculty
Adjunct Teachers
Back
:::
Adjunct Teachers
Faculty
In Charge of Administrative
Full-Time Teachers
Adjunct Teachers
Title
Speaking Across the Lines: 1965, the Family and Reconciliation in Indonesia
Year
110
Semester
1
Publish Date
2021/08/31
Journal Name
Speaking Across the Lines: 1965, the Family and Reconciliation in Indonesia
Journal Name Other
All Author
Kar-Yen Leong
Unit
Publisher
Volume
Kritika Kultura 37, p.6-26
Summary
In the aftermath of the 1965 killings, Suharto’s New Order regime in Indonesia initiated a series of policies and ideological programs that sought to turn the Southeast Asian nation into an “integral state.” The family unit then became institutionalized and idealized as an object providing the state with the necessary discursive language to maintain then-president Suharto’s three-decade long rule. His regime, however, continued to demonize hundreds of thousands of former political detainees, denying their families access to basic rights. Branded as having come from “unclean environments,” the descendants of the Suharto regime’s political detainees continue to face discrimination even after the New Order’s end in 1998. Nevertheless, in the years following reformasi (“reformation”), Indonesia’s increased democratic space provided an opportunity for the voices of former political detainees and their children to emerge. This paper will utilize biographies and oral historical records to understand how the family provided a cocoon-like environment, allowing alternative or discordant narratives to form and coalesce. The author aims to show how the New Order’s repressive policies affected these families with one generation passing onto the next its “tainted DNA.” The author posits that given the lack of a public sphere in discussing the most momentous event in Indonesia, it is the private sphere of the family instead that would serve as an outpost of memory, reminding Indonesia of its “original sin.” It is hoped that this paper would be able to showcase the ability of the narratives from below to sow the seeds of historical and generational reconciliation.
Keyword
Indonesia;1965;history;human rights;generations;historical reconciliation
Use Lang
English
ISSN(ISBN)
1656-152x
Journalnature
國外
Level
,Other,Other
UniversityCooperation
CorrespondingAuthor
Reviewsystem
是
Country
菲律賓
Open Call for Papers
PublicationStyle
電子版