Bali Chronicles. Willard A. Hanna
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Published by Periplus Editions (HK) Ltd.
Copyright © 2004 Institute of Current World Affairs
First published as Bali Profile: People, Events, Circumstances (1001–1976) by American Universities Field Staff, New York, 1976 First Periplus edition, 2004
All rights reserved
ISBN: 978-1-4629-0211-8 (ebook)
Printed in Singapore
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Introduction
Those of us who began our research on Bali in the 1970s had only one English source on which to rely for any sense of Balinese history: Willard A. Hanna’s Bali Profile: People, Events, Circumstances 1001–1976, reprinted here as Bali Chronicles. I first came upon it on the shelves of a Balinese scholar, Madé Kanta, and after months of patiently combing the bookstores of Bali came upon a worn copy for the princely sum of Rp 7,000. It still remains one of the favorites that I dip into every now and then for a taste both of a different sense of Bali and for the flavor of the time in which it was produced.
The book that you have before you began life as a series of American Universities Field Staff Reports. Having been published first in that form, where leading anthropologists of Bali such as James A. Boon and Clifford Geertz referred to them, they were then republished in 1976 as a single volume under the title Bali Profile. Not all of the original reports seem to have been incorporated into this single volume, which concentrates on colonial processes by which the Dutch took power over Bali and the neighboring island of Lombok. The fact that the chapters were originally separate reports accounts for the slightly disjointed nature of the whole. With his good knowledge of Dutch, Willard A. Hanna produced a similar set of studies on Ambon that remains one of the key introductions to Eastern Indonesia.
Bali Chronicles contains two types of views of Bali. It is not a history as such—it lacks the footnotes, the archival research and the questioning approach to sources of an historian. Rather, it presents a set of largely Dutch views of the island, as Hanna himself notes in his Foreword, but tied to the view of the early period of the New Order government of President Suharto (president from 1967 to 1998).
What Hanna has done is essentially to produce clear and entertaining summaries of a set of very different Dutch writings on the island, as well as of Balinese control of Lombok. He has not tried to reconcile the discrepancies between these views, let alone to check them against Balinese sources, as shown by the bad spelling of Balinese names taken directly from these sources. Nevertheless, we get a good sense of the different European participants in Balinese history, the Dutch government contract-maker Huskus Koopman, the Danish trader Mads Lange, the Controleur—or district officer—P. L. van Bloemen Waanders, and the parliamentarian H. H. van Kol. Further archival research would have fleshed out the character and motives of these participants: the fraudulent manner in which Huskus Koopman tricked various Balinese rulers into signing over sovereignty, Mads Lange’s involvement in the arms trade, and H. H. van Kol’s advocacy of socialism. And we do not have enough sense of the attitudes and motivations of many of the Balinese actors. Many of them, particularly the members of the Karangasem–Lombok dynasty, remain victims of bad Dutch publicity.
Even for those who can read Dutch, such a compilation is of some value. But then Willard A. Hanna has attempted to reconcile the written views of Bali with the sense of history provided by Balinese and other participants: Bobby Mörzer Bruyns, one of the founders of Bali’s tourist industry; Jimmy Pandy, who helped restart the tourist industry after World War II, the Indonesian Revolution, and the Post-Revolutionary conflicts; former governor I Gusti Bagus Oka and Ibu Gedong, major figures in fixing Bali’s cultural identity; and Ide Anak Agung Gde Agung, former Foreign Minister of Indonesia and head of the royal family of Gianyar.
Through Mörzer Bruyns and other oral sources we get a good sense of the characters involved in the founding of the tourist industry of Bali. Hanna combines his summary of their accounts with useful statistical and social information. His overall account of early twentieth-century Bali is a rosy one, viewed through the nostalgic rose-colored glasses of its participants. Unfortunately, the majority of Balinese, for whom life in the 1930s involved poverty and hardship, would not agree with the view that “Life in Bali in the 1930s was agreeable not only for affluent foreigners but also for the Balinese.”
It is especially through the controversial Ide Anak Agung that Hanna provides an early New Order view of Bali. As a major opponent of former President Sukarno, Ide Anak Agung’s political views shine through this book’s negative account of the Sukarno period, and