Free spaces, collective identity and political consciousness: Student activism and repression on West Java, Indonesia, 1920--1979
Item
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Title
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Free spaces, collective identity and political consciousness: Student activism and repression on West Java, Indonesia, 1920--1979
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Identifier
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d_2009_2013:43c58c659d4d:11382
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identifier
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11568
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Creator
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Sapiie, Stephanie,
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Contributor
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Irving L. Markovitz
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Date
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2012
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Language
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English
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Publisher
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City University of New York.
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Subject
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Political science | Asian studies | Higher education | Pacific Rim studies | Indonesia | Political Activism | University Students
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Abstract
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Whereas previous studies of the Indonesian student movement have been limited to studies of single episodes of activism of student protests, this work focuses on the narratives, and repertoires that, together with crucial external events of political and economic realignments created both pressures and opportunities that produced contentious identities of Indonesian student activism.;This study reveals the development of a particular type of contentious student activism was driven by private frustrations, grievances and intellectual concerns, and that led to particular forms of collective action that became institutionalized in two ways: (1) as a repertoire relied on by students; and (2) more generally, as a culturally acceptable mode of expressing opposition. However, the development of student's political consciousness did not reflect only political grievances and frustrations. Student activism was the result of many different resources and opportunities. To be successful, student movements required both the physical and conceptual space in which they could construct political opposition.;This dissertation challenges the assumption that free spaces must always be local, free and participated in by groups from below. Free spaces may be as important for highly-visible privileged groups as they are for an invisible subaltern. This may force activists to seek free spaces in places far from local settings supported by transnational actors and social networks. This study finds this phenomenon in fields as different as the anti-European anti-colonial student movements of the 1920s to the post Indonesian independence movements of the 1950s down to the present.;By focusing on the claims and contentious identities of the study movement and of the student movements, this study reorients the study of Indonesian student activism from analysis of protest to the analysis of the specific spaces created through their reliance on the powerful narratives that shaped each decade of student activism.
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Type
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dissertation
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Source
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2009_2013.csv
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degree
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Ph.D.
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Program
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Political Science