Book contents
- The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia
- Asian Connections
- The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Towards a Mobile History of Heritage Formation in Asia
- 1 Site Interventions, Knowledge Networks, and Changing Loyalties on Java, 1800–1850s
- 2 Exchange, Protection, and the Social Life of Java’s Antiquities, 1860s–1910s
- 3 Great Sacred Majapahit: Biographies of a Javanese Site in the Nineteenth Century
- 4 Greater Majapahit: the Makings of a Proto-Indonesian Site across Decolonisation, 1900s–1950s
- 5 The Prehistoric Cultures and Historic Past of South Sumatra on the Move
- 6 Resurrecting Siva, Expanding Local Pasts: Centralisation and the Forces of Imagination across War and Regime Change, 1920s–1950s
- 7 Fragility, Losing, and Anxieties over Loss: Difficult Pasts in Wider Asian and Global Contexts
- Epilogue: Heritage Sites, Difficult Histories, and ‘Hidden Forces’ in Post-Colonial Indonesia
- Bibliography
- Index
6 - Resurrecting Siva, Expanding Local Pasts: Centralisation and the Forces of Imagination across War and Regime Change, 1920s–1950s
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 December 2019
- The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia
- Asian Connections
- The Politics of Heritage in Indonesia
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface and Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction: Towards a Mobile History of Heritage Formation in Asia
- 1 Site Interventions, Knowledge Networks, and Changing Loyalties on Java, 1800–1850s
- 2 Exchange, Protection, and the Social Life of Java’s Antiquities, 1860s–1910s
- 3 Great Sacred Majapahit: Biographies of a Javanese Site in the Nineteenth Century
- 4 Greater Majapahit: the Makings of a Proto-Indonesian Site across Decolonisation, 1900s–1950s
- 5 The Prehistoric Cultures and Historic Past of South Sumatra on the Move
- 6 Resurrecting Siva, Expanding Local Pasts: Centralisation and the Forces of Imagination across War and Regime Change, 1920s–1950s
- 7 Fragility, Losing, and Anxieties over Loss: Difficult Pasts in Wider Asian and Global Contexts
- Epilogue: Heritage Sites, Difficult Histories, and ‘Hidden Forces’ in Post-Colonial Indonesia
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This chapter explores the transformations of Chinese and Balinese sacred objects into heritage, against the background of centralisation efforts and the state-supported reconstruction of the Siva temple at Prambanan (Central Java) across regime changes. It explains the relation between stronger centralisation and the strengthening of local heritage dynamics. Next, it discusses the impact of the Pacific War and decolonisation on local and centralised heritage practices, as well as on long-term foreign engagements with sites located in Indonesia. Gauging the colonial nature of post-colonial heritage politics, it shows how in colonial times professional and state-supported archaeology led to the consolidation of certain structures and methods of heritage formation in such a way that subsequent regimes could easily take over. An important related topic is the way in which research, collecting, conservation, and reconstruction activities were intimately connected to the development of social hierarchies and processes of (racial) marginalisation.
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- Information
- The Politics of Heritage in IndonesiaA Cultural History, pp. 194 - 233Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020