Colonial figures; Memories of street traders in the colonial and early post-colonial periods

IF 0.5 Q1 HISTORY Public History Review Pub Date : 2012-12-29 DOI:10.5130/PHRJ.V19I0.2870
S. Gibbings, F. Steijlen
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This article explores post-colonial memories about street traders among individuals who lived in the former colony of the Dutch East Indies. It argues that these narratives romanticize the relationship between Europeans and indigenous peoples. Street vendors are also used to differentiate between periods within colonial and post-colonial history. The nostalgic representation of interracial contact between Europeans and traders is contrasted with representations of other figures such as the Japanese and the nationalist. A recurring feature of these representations is the ability of Europeans to speak with street traders and imagine what they wanted and needed. The traders are remembered as a social type that transgressed politics and represented the neutrality of the economic sphere as a place for shared communication. The article concludes that the figure of the street vendor contributes to the nostalgic reinvention of the colony but is also used in narratives to differentiate between and mark changes across the colonial and post-colonial periods.
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殖民的数据;殖民时期和后殖民时期早期街头商贩的记忆
本文探讨了生活在荷兰东印度群岛前殖民地的人们对街头小贩的后殖民记忆。它认为这些叙述浪漫化了欧洲人和土著人民之间的关系。街头小贩也被用来区分殖民时期和后殖民时期的历史。欧洲人和商人之间跨种族接触的怀旧表现与日本人和民族主义者等其他人物的表现形成鲜明对比。这些表述的一个反复出现的特征是,欧洲人有能力与街头小贩交谈,想象他们想要什么、需要什么。商人被认为是一种超越政治的社会类型,代表了作为共享交流场所的经济领域的中立性。文章的结论是,街头小贩的形象有助于对殖民地的怀旧改造,但也被用于区分和标记殖民和后殖民时期的变化。
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审稿时长
52 weeks
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