Is there a Batak History?
Loading...
Date
Authors
Reid, Anthony
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore
Abstract
The 8-10 million Bataks of northern Sumatra are one of Indonesia's most important and
intriguing groups. They have clearly been in Sumatra for thousands of years. They have
attracted a large number of studies of religion and missiology, and a few good ethnological
and language studies. Yet they remain a people without history. It seems a classic case of Eric
Wolf’s argument, in Europe and the People Without history, that the neglect of the history of
such stateless people was not just an absence but a distortion.2
Ethnographers and colonial
officials of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries created such categories as highlanders,
primitives, proto-Malays, and indeed Bataks as ethnic categories, and assumed their
unchanging isolation from the currents of world history. But the Bataks, who were forcibly
brought into the scholarly world’s consciousness at that stage were, to follow Wolf’s
argument, already wholly transformed by international influences – their ‘isolation’ was itself
an historical process.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Asia Research Institute Working Paper Series No. 78
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
DOI
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description