The Domestication of Desire: Women, Wealth, and Modernity in Java

The Domestication of Desire: Women, Wealth, and Modernity in Java

by Suzanne April Brenner
ISBN-10:
0691016925
ISBN-13:
9780691016924
Pub. Date:
07/21/1998
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
ISBN-10:
0691016925
ISBN-13:
9780691016924
Pub. Date:
07/21/1998
Publisher:
Princeton University Press
The Domestication of Desire: Women, Wealth, and Modernity in Java

The Domestication of Desire: Women, Wealth, and Modernity in Java

by Suzanne April Brenner

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Overview

While doing fieldwork in the modernizing Javanese city of Solo during the late 1980s, Suzanne Brenner came upon a neighborhood that seemed like a museum of a bygone era: Laweyan, a once-thriving production center of batik textiles, had embraced modernity under Dutch colonial rule, only to fend off the modernizing forces of the Indonesian state during the late twentieth century. Focusing on this community, Brenner examines what she calls the making of the "unmodern." She portrays a merchant enclave clinging to its distinctive forms of social life and highlights the unique power of women in the marketplace and the home—two domains closely linked to each other through local economies of production and exchange. Against the social, political, and economic developments of late-colonial and postcolonial Java, Brenner describes how an innovative, commercially successful lifestyle became an anachronism in Indonesian society, thereby challenging the idea that tradition invariably gives way to modernity in an evolutionary progression.


Brenner's analysis centers on the importance of gender to processes of social transformation. In Laweyan, the base of economic and social power has shifted from families, in which women were the main producers of wealth and cultural value, to the Indonesian state, which has worked to reorient families toward national political agendas. How such attempts affect women's lives and the meaning of the family itself are key considerations as Brenner questions long-held assumptions about the division between "domestic" and "public" spheres in modern society.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691016924
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 07/21/1998
Series: History E-Book Project
Pages: 320
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Suzanne April Brenner is Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, San Diego.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Acknowledgments

A Note on the Use of Foreign Terms and Proper Names

Introduction 3

Ch. 1 A Neighborhood Comes of Age 24

Ch. 2 Hierarchy and Contradiction: Merchants and Aristocrats in Colonial Java 52

Ch. 3 The Specter of Past Modernities 87

Ch. 4 Gender and the Domestication of Desire 134

Ch. 5 The Value of the Bequest: Spiritual Economies and Ancestral Commodities 171

Ch. 6 The Mask of Appearances: Disorder in the New Order 206

Ch. 7 Disciplining the Domestic Sphere, Developing the Modern Family 225

Notes 255

Glossary 281

Bibliography 283

Index 295




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