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Communication and Production in Indonesian History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2011

A. E. Sokol
Affiliation:
Stanford University
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Extract

It is a well-known fact that the world significance of Indonesia, or the Dutch East Indies as it was formerly called, is based mainly on two factors: its geographical location and its natural resources. These factors are of vital importance today, but they have existed all along and have had a profound influence on the shaping of the Indonesian past. Naturally, their relative importance did not remain constant throughout the centuries, and it is the very interplay between these two controlling elements which helps to explain or clarify some of the actual events, crises, and changes in the history of the archipelago. In fact, a careful study of that interplay might lead to a new periodization of Indonesian history, which would serve to supplement the traditional division according to the dominant cultural influence.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 1948

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References

1 Among the more recent publications on Indonesian history in English, the following may be mentioned particularly: Furnivall, J. S., Netherlands India: a study of plural economy (Cambridge, 1939)Google Scholar; Hyma, A., The Dutch in the Far East (Ann Arbor, 1942)Google Scholar; de Klerck, E. S., History of the Netherlands East Indies (Rotterdam, 1938)Google Scholar; Vlekke, B. H. M., Nusantara, a history of the East Indian Archipelago (Cambridge, 1945).Google Scholar

2 Vlekke, Nusantara, p. 13.