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Visible and Invisible Realms: Power, Magic, and Colonial Conquest in Bali
 
 
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Visible and Invisible Realms: Power, Magic, and Colonial Conquest in Bali [Paperback]

Margaret J. Wiener (Author)

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Book Description

April 15, 1995 0226885828 978-0226885827 1
In 1908, the ruler of the Balinese realm of Klungkung and more than 100 members of his family and court were massacred when they marched deliberately into the fire of the Dutch colonial army. The question of what their action meant and its continued significance in contemporary Klungkung forms the basis of Margaret Wiener's complex anthropolological history.

Wiener challenges colonial and academic claims that Klungkung had no "real" power and argues that such claims enabled colonial domination. By focusing on Balinese discourses she makes clear the choices open to Balinese, both at the time of the Dutch conquest and in its narration. At the same time, she shows how these discourses, which revolve around magical weapons acquired from invisible agents such as gods, spirits, and ancestors, offer an alternative understanding of Klungkung's power.

Moving between Balinese and Dutch narratives and between past and present, Wiener critiques colonial accounts by recounting Balinese memories and interpretations. Her attention to history and local situations illuminates the ways in which colonialism and orientalist scholarship have obscured the power of indigenous rulers and shows how Klungkung, once Bali's paramount realm, was relegated to a peripheral corner of the Indonesian nation-state. Both as a fascinating story and as a rich example of interdisciplinary scholarship, this book will interest students of colonialism, anthropology, history, religion, and Southeast Asia.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On the morning of 28 April 1908, four companies of the Netherlands Indies army marched north from the sea toward the capital of Klungkung, the paramount realm on the island of Bali Hostilities between the Dutch and Klungkung, one of only two Balinese realms still independent of colonial rule, had broken out barely two weeks earlier when a Dutch lieutenant was shot during a routine march through the town of Gelgel Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
royal keris, heirloom keris, kanda mpat, niskala forces, powerful keris, ritual leftovers, buana alit, main purl, pivotal ancestor, heirloom weapons, secondary king, spiritual overlord, regalia weapons, spirit siblings, colonial descriptions, royal clan, core line, mail report, colonial reports, large rituals, royal compound, colonial accounts, state temples
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Déwa Agung, Huskus Koopman, Babad Dalem, Déwa Manggis, Governor General, Bloemen Waanders, Tanda Langlang, Bangawan Canggu, Goa Lawah, Kusamba War, Gajah Mada, Dalem Ketut, Mount Agung, Netherlands Indies, Betara Dalem, Durga Dingkul, Pedanda Gedé Kenitén, Pura Dalem, Sri Kresna Kapakisan, Gusti Ngurah Kesiman, Brahmana Buda, Bruyn Kops, Puri Anyar, Balian Batur, Cokorda Anom
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