{"title":"Hidden Facts and The Representation of Indonesia within Mamiya Mosuke’s “Kichi no Seikatsu”","authors":"Dewi Anggraeni","doi":"10.14710/izumi.10.2.278-291","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Despite witnessing modernization in Indonesia, nanpōchōyōsakka (South-dispatched writers) depicted Indonesians as people who remain undeveloped because of Western colonialism. This article argues that there must be “hidden facts” behind the representation of Indonesia within the writers’ works due to a mission of disseminating the idea of the Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere. Using Mamiya Mosuke’s military essay “Kichi no Seikatsu” as the object of study, this article seeks to explain what kind of “Indonesia” Mamiya represents and the impact of such representation on “Indonesia” as a spatial concept by illuminating “hidden facts” behind his expressions. This article employs the concept of contact zone (Mary Louise Pratt) to view Indonesia as a social space already shaped by Dutch colonialism and uses sakuhinron method to analyze Mamiya’s expressions in representing Indonesia. Through analysis, Mamiya portrays Indonesians as reliant people and blames such conditions on the Dutch colonial policy while leaving local intellectuals and nationalist movements out of his narrative. This article concludes that Mamiya justifies the notion of the Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere by denying Indonesian agency, gives an impression that Indonesians need Japanese guidance to stand on their own. Keywords: Contact Zone; Kichi no Seikatsu; Mamiya Mosuke; Nanpōchōyōsakka; Representation ","PeriodicalId":30867,"journal":{"name":"Izumi","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-11-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Izumi","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14710/izumi.10.2.278-291","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract
Despite witnessing modernization in Indonesia, nanpōchōyōsakka (South-dispatched writers) depicted Indonesians as people who remain undeveloped because of Western colonialism. This article argues that there must be “hidden facts” behind the representation of Indonesia within the writers’ works due to a mission of disseminating the idea of the Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere. Using Mamiya Mosuke’s military essay “Kichi no Seikatsu” as the object of study, this article seeks to explain what kind of “Indonesia” Mamiya represents and the impact of such representation on “Indonesia” as a spatial concept by illuminating “hidden facts” behind his expressions. This article employs the concept of contact zone (Mary Louise Pratt) to view Indonesia as a social space already shaped by Dutch colonialism and uses sakuhinron method to analyze Mamiya’s expressions in representing Indonesia. Through analysis, Mamiya portrays Indonesians as reliant people and blames such conditions on the Dutch colonial policy while leaving local intellectuals and nationalist movements out of his narrative. This article concludes that Mamiya justifies the notion of the Greater East Asia Co-prosperity Sphere by denying Indonesian agency, gives an impression that Indonesians need Japanese guidance to stand on their own. Keywords: Contact Zone; Kichi no Seikatsu; Mamiya Mosuke; Nanpōchōyōsakka; Representation
尽管见证了印尼的现代化,但南派作家南派作家将印尼人描绘成因西方殖民主义而仍未发展起来的人。本文认为,由于传播大东亚共同繁荣圈理念的使命,作家作品中印尼的表现背后一定有“隐藏的事实”。本文以马米娅·莫苏克的军事散文《Kichi no Seikatsu》为研究对象,试图通过揭示马米娅表达背后的“隐藏事实”,来解释马米娅代表了什么样的“印度尼西亚”,以及这种代表对“印度尼西亚”这一空间概念的影响。本文运用玛丽·路易斯·普拉特(Mary Louise Pratt)的接触区概念,将印度尼西亚视为一个已经被荷兰殖民主义所塑造的社会空间,并运用sakuhinron方法分析马米亚在代表印度尼西亚时的表达。通过分析,马米亚将印尼人描绘成依赖的人,并将这种情况归咎于荷兰的殖民政策,同时将当地知识分子和民族主义运动排除在他的叙述之外。这篇文章的结论是,Mamiya通过否认印尼的代理权来证明大东亚共同繁荣圈的概念是正确的,给人的印象是印尼人需要日本的指导才能自立。关键词:接触区;Kichi no Seikatsu;Mamiya Mosuke;南浦县;代表