Social change in the West Sumatran village : 1908-1945
Date
1977
Authors
Oki, Akira
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This is a study of social change in the West Sumatran village
from the introduction of monetary taxation in 1908 to the end of the
Japanese occupation in 1945. The study begins with the reconstruction
of the pre-Dutch village social structure, characterized as an entity
with a high degree of autonomy and a relatively closed society based
on subsistence economy and led by lineage heads. The nature of the
villages began to be undermined after the introduction of monetary
taxation in 1908; the penetration of a monetary economy; the expansion
of cash crop cultivation; and the emergence of new Islamic and secular
political organizations which challenged the leadership of traditional
lineage heads. The deeper penetration of . Dutch administration also
accelerated the erosion of the old village social and economic system.
The great economic crisis at the end of 1929 and successive
world trade depression in the 1930s slowed down the process of social
change. The economy largely returned to a subsistence one concentrating
on rice on lineage land instead of cash crops on individual land.
There was a notable revival of the influence of traditional leadership
groups In the 1930s based on theĀ· increased importance of lineage heads
for supervising lineage rice fields. However, the development of a
nationalist movement after the beginning of the 1930s intensified the
challenge to traditional leadership. As a result the conflict between
the tradltional leadership and its challengers continued to be heightened
towards the end of Dutch rule. During the Japanese occupation, the
economy was further pushed to subsistence economy and the lineage heads
became the key figures for increasing rice and delivering it to the
Japanese who were trying to accumulate as much rice provisions as possible.
This situation allowed lineage heads to retain their influence at the
village level. The potential for social change was again reduced during
the Japanese occupation. Although the rivalry between traditional leadership
and its challengers did not appear in a violent form under the
Japanese military regime, it erupted violently shortly after the Japanese
surrender.
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