Kritika Kultura
Volume 2020, Issue 33-34, 2019, Pages 65-87

Identities in exile: Re-membering identities, re-membering the nation in laksmi pamuntjak’s amba (Article)

Ahmad S.N.*
  • a Department of English Language and Literature, International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia

Abstract

Laksmi Pamuntjak’s first novel, Amba (2012) is one of several contemporary Indonesian novels by the post-1965 generation that breaks the silence on the violent suppression of the Indonesian left in the mid-1960s. Like other recent creative responses and initiatives by Indonesian artists and civil society, Amba represents the “postmemory” of the 1965-66 events. This paper examines the modes of internal exile triggered by 1965 as portrayed in three characters in Amba and how exile disrupts and delays identity formation across different generations of Indonesians—hence, exiled identities. The history of Moluccan exile post-1950 is also crucial to the novel’s representation of people whose identities were displaced, ruptured, or in limbo as a result of political violence. The depiction of internal exile in Amba is examined based on work done by scholars on Indonesian exile narratives (Hill, Hearman) and concepts of transgenerational trauma (Schwab) and postmemory (Hirsch). This paper then discusses the various acts of “re-membering” to recover a coherent sense of self and of the nation depicted in Amba, such as through literal and figurative journeys, re-establishing kinship ties, narrating personal memories of the traumatic past, and the role of art in revealing suppressed memories of the 1965 event. © Ateneo de Manila University.

Author Keywords

Contemporary Indonesian fiction Literature and memory Literature and postmemory Indonesia 1965-66 Exile in fiction Laksmi Pamuntjak

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85073280645&partnerID=40&md5=88f841bd08b5d397baf166f6d393d1c3

ISSN: 1656152X
Original Language: English