Indonesian Literature vs New Order Orthodoxy

The Aftermath of 1965-1966

by Anna-Greta Nilsson Hoadley

  • Published: 2005
  • Pages: 174 pp.
  • illustrated
  • Series: NIAS Monographs
  • Series number: 101
Available from NIAS Press worldwide
ISBN Hardback: 978 87 91114 61 8, £30.00 (June 2005)

About the book

• First book-length study presenting the alternative version found
in Indonesian literature of the events of 1965-1966.

• Demonstrates that the concerns and perceptions of Indonesian writers differ sharply from those of Westerners.


Perhaps we shall never know the truth about Indonesia’s failed (supposedly Communist) coup of 1965. But the consequences were clear: the fall of President Sukarno and rise to power of General Suharto plus violent suppression of all ’Communist’ organizations. In the process a half million lives were lost. Open discussion of these events - especially the killings - was impossible during the period of Suharto’s rule except in one area, Indonesian literature. Here it was possible to portray the events in fictional form at the human level. As a result, a number of Indonesia’s best-known authors wrote on the subject. This book analyses Indonesian literature produced during the New Order period dealing with the events of 1965-1966 and its consequences. It examines the political coercion that people were subjected to and how the authors deal with the taboo subject of the killings; it also considers how the Communist Party was seen and discusses the underlying reasons for why the fictional characters act as they do. Crucial here is the influence of Javanese culture and the significance of President Sukarno’s political concept of Nasakom.

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Reviews

by Pam Allen
From journal:
Inside Indonesia, No. 84, October-December 2005

This book is  auseful contribution to the very small body of scholarly work in English on Indonesian literature.  Its particular strengths are its accessibility, and breadth of material making it a useful resource for undergraduate students of Indonesian literature.

This book is  auseful contribution to the very small body of scholarly work in English on Indonesian literature.  Its particular strengths are its accessibility, and breadth of material making it a useful resource for undergraduate students of Indonesian literature.