今日ようやく取りに行った本

随分前にamazon.comに注文して、二週間前に郵便局から関税持って取りに来いという書類を受け取っていた本を、ようやく郵便局に取りに行けた。関税タカッ!

  • Jun Honna. Military Politics and Democratization in Indonesia. London and New York: Routledge Curzon, 2003. [ISBN: 0-415-27228-9]

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  • Keith Foulcher and Tony Day (eds.). Clearing A Space: Postcolonial Readings of Modern Indonesian Literature. Leiden: KITLV Press, 2002. [ISBN: 90-6718-189-7]

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    • Tony Day and Keith Foulcher, “Postcolonial readings in modern Indonesian literature.” pp.1-18.
    • Doris Jedamski, “Popular literature and postcolonial subjectives; Robinson Crusoe, the Count of Monte Christo, and Sherlock Holmes in colonial Indonesia.” pp.19-48.
    • Paul Tickell, “Love in a time of colonialism; Race and romance in an early Indonesian novel.” pp.49-60.
    • Henk Maier, “Stammer and the creaking door; The Malay writings of Pramoedya Ananta Toer.” pp.61-84.
    • Keith Foulcher, “Dissolving into elsewhere; Mimicry and ambivalence in Marah Rusli’s Sitti Nurbaya.” pp.85-108.
    • Thomas Hunter, “Indo as other; Identity, anxiety, and ambiguity in Saleh Asuhan.” pp.109-144.
    • Barbara Hatley, “Postcoloniality and the feminine in modern Indonesian literature.” pp.145-182.
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    • Goenawan Mohamad, “Forgetting; poetry and the nation, a motif in Indonesian literary modernism after 1945.” pp.183-212.
    • Tony Day, “Between eating and shitting; Figures of intimacy, storytelling, and isolation in some early tales by Pramoedya Ananta Toer.” pp.213-236.
    • Melani Budianta, “In the margin of the capital; From Tjerita Boedjang Bingoeng to Si Doel anak sekolahan.” pp.237-272.
    • Marshall Clark, “Smells of something like postmodernism; Emha Ainun Nadjib’s rewriting of the Mahabharata.” pp.273-292.
    • Michael Bodden, “Satuan-satuan kecil and uncomfortable improvisations in the late night of the New Order; Democratization, postmodernism, and postcoloniality.” pp.293-324.
    • Will Derks, “Sastra pedalaman; Local and regional centres in Indonesia.” pp.325-348.
    • Ward Keeler, “Durga/Umayi and the postcolonialist dilemma.” pp.349-370.
  • Benedict R. O’G. Anderson (ed.). Violence and the State in Suharto’s Indonesia. Ithaca: Cornell Southeast Asia Program, 2001. [ISBN: 0-87727-729-X]

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    • Benedict R. O’G. Anderson, “Introduction.” pp.9-19.
    • Joshua Barker, “State of Fear: Controlling the Criminal Contagion in Suharto’s New Order.” pp.20-53.
    • Jun Honna, “Military Ideology in Response to Democratic Pressure during the Late Suharto’s Era: Political and Institutional Contexts.” pp.54-89.
    • James T. Siegel, “Thoughts on the Violence of May 13 & 14, 1998, in Jakarta.” pp.90-123.
    • Loren Ryter. “Pemuda Pancasila: The last Loyalist Free Men of Suharto’s Order?” pp.124-155.
    • Douglas Kammen, “The Trouble with Normal: The Indonesian Military, Paramilitaries, and the Final Solution in East Timor.” pp.156-188.
    • Danilyn Rutherford, “Waiting for the End in Biak: Violence, Order, and a Flag Raising.” pp.189-212.
    • Geoffrey Robinson, “Rawan is as Rawan Does: The Origines of Disorder in New Order Aceh.” pp.213-242.