
Banditry in West Java : 1869-1942 (Paperback)
(No ratings yet)
Key item features
Banditry was rife around Batavia (modern Jakarta) during the late colonial period, with at least one major robbery committed every day. Banditry in West Java identifies the bandits and describes their working methods and their motives, which often went beyond simple self-enrichment. It also explores the world of the robbers' victims, city-dwellers for whom the robbers were the antithesis of civilization, convenient objects onto which respectable citizens projected their own preoccupations with sex, violence, and magic.
The colonial police force in the Dutch East Indies was reformed in the early 1920s, and banditry was subsequently brought under control. However, the bandit tradition lived on in Javanese popular imagination and folk culture, not least in tales of Si Pitung, a Robin Hood figure who flourished in nineteenth-century Batavia.
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia.
Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
The colonial police force in the Dutch East Indies was reformed in the early 1920s, and banditry was subsequently brought under control. However, the bandit tradition lived on in Javanese popular imagination and folk culture, not least in tales of Si Pitung, a Robin Hood figure who flourished in nineteenth-century Batavia.
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia.
Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
Specs
- Book formatPaperback
- Fiction/nonfictionNon-Fiction
- GenreHistory
- Publication dateJanuary, 2011
- Pages292
- PublisherNus Press Pte Ltd
Current price is USD$60.46
Price when purchased online
Out of stock
How do you want your item?
Out of stock
About this item
Product details
First published: Amsterdam: Aksant Publishers, 2006. Banditry was rife around Batavia (modern Jakarta) during the late colonial period, with at least one major robbery committed every day. Banditry in West Java identifies the bandits and describes their working methods and their motives, which often went beyond simple self-enrichment. It also explores the world of the robbers' victims, city-dwellers for whom the robbers were the antithesis of civilization, convenient objects onto which respectable citizens projected their own preoccupations with sex, violence, and magic. The colonial police force in the Dutch East Indies was reformed in the early 1920s, and banditry was subsequently brought under control. However, the bandit tradition lived on in Javanese popular imagination and folk culture, not least in tales of Si Pitung, a Robin Hood figure who flourished in nineteenth-century Batavia.
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia. Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia. Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
Banditry was rife around Batavia (modern Jakarta) during the late colonial period, with at least one major robbery committed every day. Banditry in West Java identifies the bandits and describes their working methods and their motives, which often went beyond simple self-enrichment. It also explores the world of the robbers' victims, city-dwellers for whom the robbers were the antithesis of civilization, convenient objects onto which respectable citizens projected their own preoccupations with sex, violence, and magic.
The colonial police force in the Dutch East Indies was reformed in the early 1920s, and banditry was subsequently brought under control. However, the bandit tradition lived on in Javanese popular imagination and folk culture, not least in tales of Si Pitung, a Robin Hood figure who flourished in nineteenth-century Batavia.
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia.
Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
The colonial police force in the Dutch East Indies was reformed in the early 1920s, and banditry was subsequently brought under control. However, the bandit tradition lived on in Javanese popular imagination and folk culture, not least in tales of Si Pitung, a Robin Hood figure who flourished in nineteenth-century Batavia.
The author argues that banditry in Batavia was closely linked with the modernization process, particularly the ready availability of firearms and the rise of a money economy. However, her findings do little to support suggestions that banditry should be seen as part of the revolutionary struggle for independence in Indonesia.
Banditry in West Java is a translation of 'Batavia bij Nacht: Bloei en ondergang van het Indonesisch roverswezen in Batavia en de Ommelanden, 1869-1942. (Amsterdam: Uitgeverij Aksant, 2006).
info:
We aim to show you accurate product information. Manufacturers, suppliers and others provide what you see here, and we have not verified it. Â
Specifications
Book format
Paperback
Fiction/nonfiction
Non-Fiction
Genre
History
Publication date
January, 2011
Warranty
Warranty information
Please be aware that the warranty terms on items offered for sale by third party Marketplace sellers may differ from those displayed in this section (if any). To confirm warranty terms on an item offered for sale by a third party Marketplace seller, please use the 'Contact seller' feature on the third party Marketplace seller's information page and request the item's warranty terms prior to purchase.
Similar items you might like
Based on what customers bought
A Grammar of Southern Pomo, (Paperback) $42.07
$4207current price $42.07A Grammar of Southern Pomo, (Paperback)
Princeton Legacy Library Physics of Elementary Particles, Book 2298, (Paperback) $38.98
$3898current price $38.98Princeton Legacy Library Physics of Elementary Particles, Book 2298, (Paperback)
Security Architecture (Paperback) $42.57
$4257current price $42.57Security Architecture (Paperback)
The Care Economy, (Paperback) $26.15
$2615current price $26.15The Care Economy, (Paperback)
Townmania: Marcus Winchester and the Making of Memphis, (Paperback) $19.99
$1999current price $19.99Townmania: Marcus Winchester and the Making of Memphis, (Paperback)
Amite County, (Paperback) $37.46
$3746current price $37.46Amite County, (Paperback)
From Clients to Citizens (Paperback) $37.44
$3744current price $37.44From Clients to Citizens (Paperback)
The Book of Flaco: The World's Most Famous Bird, (Paperback) $19.92
$1992current price $19.92The Book of Flaco: The World's Most Famous Bird, (Paperback)
ECOPHYSIOLOGIE DE Mesosphaerum suaveolens (L.) Kuntze SOUS SALINITÉ DE, (Paperback) $47.00
$4700current price $47.00ECOPHYSIOLOGIE DE Mesosphaerum suaveolens (L.) Kuntze SOUS SALINITÉ DE, (Paperback)
On the Nature of Genocidal Intent, (Paperback) $58.95
$5895current price $58.95On the Nature of Genocidal Intent, (Paperback)
British System of Government, (Paperback) $43.99
$4399current price $43.99British System of Government, (Paperback)
The Howard Gossage Show (Paperback) $39.10
$3910current price $39.10The Howard Gossage Show (Paperback)
Classrooms and Barrooms: An American in Poland, (Paperback) $48.95
$4895current price $48.95Classrooms and Barrooms: An American in Poland, (Paperback)
Big Millions Juega a Ganar, Book 1, (Paperback) $7.99
$799current price $7.99Big Millions Juega a Ganar, Book 1, (Paperback)
Thomas Jefferson: A Strange Case of Mistaken Identity, (Paperback) $17.70
$1770current price $17.70Thomas Jefferson: A Strange Case of Mistaken Identity, (Paperback)
Technology and the End of Authority: What Is Government For?, (Paperback) $40.18
$4018current price $40.18Technology and the End of Authority: What Is Government For?, (Paperback)
Political Power and Communications in Indonesia, (Paperback) $64.98
$6498current price $64.98Political Power and Communications in Indonesia, (Paperback)
City-building In America, (Paperback) $45.75
$4575current price $45.75City-building In America, (Paperback)
Customer ratings & reviews
0 ratings|0 reviews
This item does not have any reviews yet
Related pages
- Louis Cahusac
- Pepper Jackie
- Victor Hugo Salguero
- Georges Vitoux
- Napoleon Bonaparte Hat
- Georges Rose
- Caribbean & Latin American Drama Books
- Caribbean & Latin American Poetry Books
- Cuban History Books
- Australian & Oceanian Poetry Books
- Tudor & Elizabethan Era Great Britain History Books
- Turkey & Ottoman Empire History Books


