Monday, March 30, 2015

Recollecting my memory of the summer school

Hi everyone! This is Elween from Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM). Wherever you are right now, I hope all of you are doing fine.

I would like to briefly share what I have learned throughout the programme. My knowledge on history is basically built upon the foundation of the phrase ‘history is constructed’. It was from the reading of journals on historiography, or writing of history, that has helped me to acquire knowledge on the subject. The journal article by Lorenz (2010) has particularly provided clear explanations on how nationalist historians highlighted certain aspects of Germany’s and Quebec’s past to contribute to the endeavours of nation-building as opposed to contesting historiographies that are developed from the other paradigms. 

My understanding of historiography has paved the way for me to have a better grasp on various discourses on memory. I believe the argument presented by Olick and Robbins (1998) has constructed a meaningful yet to a certain extent controversial linkage between history and memory -“History is dead memory, a way of preserving pasts to which we no longer have an “organic” experiential relation” (p.110). While some scholars concurred that the history loses its halo because of its constant epistemological assertions as compared to memory, which they perceive has less rigid specificities, there are also others who argued that even (collective) memory is just as problematic because of its selective nature.


One of the Sungai Batu excavation sites
The ambiguity here, I suppose, has also opened up our mind, in one way or another, to make sense of certain problematic aspects we discovered during our fieldwork at the archaeological museum and the Sungai Batu excavation site in Bujang Valley, Kedah. For instance, there are moments when Dieka, Lara, Lissi and I struggled to decide on our research question due to lack of knowledge about Bujang Valley. The biggest concerns we had was: What exactly is Bujang Valley? Is it a settlement where we can obtain bits and pieces of collective memory from the museum and other aspects of its collective memory at excavation sites, or an ancient civilisation with literary evidence that could provide us a glimpse into its constructed history? Is there a way to identify the respective elements that could potentially be ‘collective memory’ and the officially recognised ‘history’? How do we analyse them? All these unanswered questions have led us to agree to set our research question as broadly as possible – What is the significance of Bujang Valley?

From left to right: Dieka, Lara and Lissi
busy preparing presentation slides
Moving forward, several lectures on the idea of ‘embodiment’, which I think was introduced during Brook’s lecture, have also been an eye-opening experience. The idea of looking at rituals, gestures and monuments as forms of embodiment, which, I learned from my further reading, is associated with inscribed memory, is rather new to me. Dr Margana too has shed light on how embodiment is related to monuments and various cultural movements to put an end to the stigmatization of the Banyuwangi people even though he did not dwell specifically into the theoretical concept. Embodiment piqued my interest because I find it to be relevant to my master’s thesis research topic - on gender identity (M2F/F2M) in cosplay/crossplay.

I am fond of the lecture, or rather sharing session, on the Indo-Dutch community and their identity formation in the Netherlands by Prof Vincent, and was intrigued by Dr Soon’s lecture on how politicians in the Philippines utilised the social memory of massa (people) on past heroes, whom they are affiliated with, to gain political mileage. Threading the trails of the indigenous people such as Batek and Penan during Dr Lye’s lecture has helped me to learn what the phrase ‘other ways of remembering’ really means (thanks Lara for the further explanation during our mini discussion^^).

I wish to express my gratitude to Prof Bambang for raising some complicated issues with regard to Indonesia’s independence during its early post-colonial era, Li Feng for sharing her research findings in the Georgetown UNESCO site with us, and Dr Mahani for introducing us to the history of Lebuh Acheen. A special thanks to Yaya for being our ‘on-site lecturer’ throughout our fieldwork in Bujang Valley. Last but not least, a big thank you to Aleah, who always showed concern on our work progress, helped us to arrange transport to get to Bujang Valley and gave us useful tips on research methods.

To all the German, Indonesian and Malaysian students, I wish all of you the best in your future endeavours. It has been a pleasure being in this two-week summer school with you. Take care!  

P/S: I would also like to thank Ms Chiok Phaik Fern and Dr Adrian Lee for encouraging me to take part in this educational programme.


References
Lorenz, Chris. (2010). Double trouble: A comparison of the politics of national history in Germany and Quebec. In Stefan Berger, and Chris Lorenz (Eds.), Nationalizing the past: Historians as nation-builders in modern Europe. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.

Olick, Jeffrey, and Joyce Robbins. (1998). Social memory studies: From “collective memory” to the historical sociology of mnemonic practices. Annual Review of Sociology, 24(1), pp.105-140.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Thank you note from Sakiinah

Hi I'm Sakiinah from Universiti Sains Malaysia (USM), a Masters student in Political Science. Initially I joined this program to fill my time while waiting for my viva since I just submitted my thesis a few weeks before that. My interest has always been on history so the summer school helped me to learn more about my heritage and the community I live in.

The class started with an intensive understanding on memory making and its relation to the way we interact and relate to our heritage. To some, history might be boring, but to me its a way to discover about our own roots and heritage.

I particularly like the quote that one of the group presented which is:

A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.- Marcus Garvey

The quote summarized what the whole programme is about, which to me is to learn about our past history, origin and culture that we may have slowly lose touch of. Little did I know that what started as something I do for fun, which is making my own lil Penang tour in Georgetown would enable me to relate with the lectures that was taught in class and our group assignment.  Both the lectures and my personal experience kind of compliment with each other, so it was a good opportunity to apply what I experience with what I learn in class.

Although I was born in Penang, I was not really raised here so I did not know much about Penang until I studied in USM. The programme helped me to reconnect with my past and helped me learn about Penang. Apart from that I learnt a lot from other students' culture and experience. I was surprised to discover that at least 3 of the German students, Lara, Eva, and Sandra can speak Malay although in Indonesian but it was still a lovely surprise. Sometimes, I even forget that they are Germans because of how fluent they are speaking in Malay. So there wasn't much difference at all even though we have different culture, nationality and language.

Our group, myself, Fabian, Oanh and Makrus is probably one of the best group I have ever collaborated with. At first, I was quite afraid of Fabian and his tall, non-smiling German-ness, and I'm pretty sure other Asian student in our group was a little scared as well. But once we started working on our assignment, things worked out pretty well especially after treating ourselves with ice cream by the end of our fieldwork. It was great to see how much Makrus & Oanh improved in their presentation after our practice, everyone pretty much contributed their own part in the assignment so it's just a matter of how you use your potential in the task given. Below are a photo of our group

For those interested to join the summer school program, I really recommend you to join this program. Its a good exposure and an opportunity to get to know people outside your own comfort zone. English shouldn't be much of a problem, some of us didn't speak fluently but it was a good opportunity for them to practice their english. Also, we get to pick up a few Vietnam, German, Indonesian word as well. 

In fact, we had a good time making our own movie night watching 'Sepet' , a malaysian film by the late Yasmin Ahmad. We also had a good discussion on a documentary of the Dutch and Indo Dutch who returned to Netherland after the Second World War in Indonesia ended (Contractpensions - Djangan Loepah).

In between the class and after the class ends, we hung out for lunch or dinner so it's not just about going to class only. Most of the foreign students are already so good taking a bus to Georgetown on their own to find souvenirs to bring back home.

Anyway, thank you to all the lecturers, namely Professor Vincent Houben, Dr Lye Tuck Po, and Dr Soon for organizing this program also for the lecture and experience shared. Also to our coordinator, Aleah for her hard work in ensuring the success of the program, good luck on your PhD!

Lastly to all my classmates, thank you for the memories! :)
Best wishes,
Sakiinah

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Class of 2015

Here are the students taking part in the 2015 summer school: 

From USM
Elween Loke Wei Jie 
Kien Wee Lai 
Lam Yat Kuan 
Mohammad Hazizi 
Sakiinah Hakimi 

From HU Berlin 
Andreas Betcher 
Elisa Ahrens-Heimer 
Eva Adams 
Fabian Hempel 
Lara Hofner 
Sandra Portenschlager 

From UGM 
Budi Gustaman 
Dieka Mahyudha 
M. Makrus Ali 
Rina Rahayu 
Riris Purbasari 

From VNU 
Dang Thi Oanh 
Nguyen Ngoc Thanh

What's taught at our summer school (2014)


In 2014, the summer school was conducted at the Fakultas Ilmu Budaya (Faculty of Cultural Knowledge) of Universitas Gadjah Mada.


UGM local organiser Widaratih Kamiso
and HU lecturer Dr. Olivia Killias
Photo (c) Lye Tuck-Po
The first week of the summer school was lecture-driven. These lectures illustrated important sources of meaning and various ways of forming social memory and prepared the students for their field research projects in the second week.

The five days of classes covered the following topics:
  • "Memory and the national canon of Indonesian historiography" by Prof. Dr. Bambang Purwanto (UGM); deconstruction of nationalist historiography.
  • "Memory, memory making and heritage: Some fundamental considerations" by Prof. Dr. Vincent Houben (HU); introduction to the central concepts and theories important to memory studies.
  • “Legitimacy, lost heroes, and memory,” Dr. Soon Chuan Yean (USM): emerging politics in the Philippines; memory repackaged; memory ruptured; memory sustained.
  • “Other ways of remembering” by Dr. Lye Tuck-Po (USM): bodily practices; landscape as a source of meaning, social memory based on experience; differences with inscribed memory
  • “The battle goes on: debates on (negative) memory in post-authoritarian and post-colonial societies” by Joszef Berta (HU guest lecturer): transnational genealogies of negative memory; Indonesia and Germany compared; roles of victims and rehabilitation
  • “Memory, monument and national hero” by Dr. Sri Margana (UGM): memory contestation; construction and deconstruction of monuments; competition between government, local populations, people from Bali
  • “The resonance of silence: Remembering Indië in the post-colonial Netherlands” by Dr. Olivia Killias (HU): remembrance of the Indies in Holland; collective amnesia; absence of a postcolonial debate; decolonisation by means of the culturalisation of memory; subaltern memories; diversity in memory of communities
  • “The uses and abuses of memory” by Dr. Budiawan (UGM): comparison between Cambodia, Singapore, and Indonesia; empty signifiers; move beyond discourse of innocence and victimhood
  • “Memory, violence and emotions” by Rosa Castillo (HU): subaltern formats of memory making; social memory of violence; role of emotions; context in memory making
  • "Philosphical and practical considerations in field research", by Aleah Connley (HU), Rosa Castillo (HU), and Uji Nugroho (UGM).


Uji Nugroho (UGM) lecturing on methodology
Photo (c) Lye Tuck-Po

(extracted from the summer school Final Report and Prof. Houben's summing-up notes)

Wednesday, March 18, 2015

Memory, memory making and heritage: Some fundamental considerations



An introduction to memory studies: Notes from Prof. Vincent Houben 


Memory is infused in individuals, groups, and societies; it is the object of national and supranational institutions. Memory can be characterised as a system of reference in order to allow for its positioning in a spatio-temporal order. It gives a sense of direction, a sense of purpose, and it reworks past events in such a way that these become meaningful. Memory is therefore fundamental to identity formation. 

Memory is also a social phenomenon. Maurice Halbwachs has underlined the social conditioning of memory, because it mirrors the system of reference people use in their society. Collective memory means that memories can only be generated by communication and interaction within social groups. We remember not only what we know, but also what others tell us and confirm as being important. 

Memories, as Jan Assmann argued, depend on sensuousness in that they must be figured and attached to concrete moments, places, concepts, thereby creating ”memory figurations“ (Erinnerungsfiguren). These figurations reflect reconstructivity, i.e. what a society, or actors within a society, at a given time believe it is meaningful to keep. Collective memory is therefore the result of a changing and active social process of memory making. Communicative memory consists of memories which refer to the recent past. Cultural memory on the other hand, is aimed at fixed points in the past and is connected to socially differentiated formats of participation. 

When institutions get involved in memory making they seek to create history. History aims to override diffuse memories and potentially conflicting practices of memory making through the creation of order. This entails creating order in terms of time and place (what came where, what before and what after), as well as creating order with regard to the broader meaning of what happened in the form of cause-effect relationships. History has thus become the instrument of statehood, since nation-states need to legitimise their existence through the creation of an official narrative. The culmination of history is in heritage, i.e. something material or immaterial which is transmitted down through the generations, exemplifying the core of memory, memory making and history alike. 

However, the field of memory and history is highly contested, since remembering is, as Roxana Waterson and Kwok Kian-Woon pointed out, a dimension of social relations, if not a political matter. Selection and distortion, the politics of forgetting, are as much part of memory, history and heritage as is setting the record straight. 

 In this summer course we will address all these dimensions of memory making and heritage in the region of Southeast Asia, allowing for critical comparisons as well as theoretical and empirical insights. The course will also give participants the opportunity to "do memory studies" by going into the field, visiting sites, having discussions with collective memory experts and getting impressions of how ordinary citizens visiting history sites interpret and accommodate what they have heard and seen into their personal world views.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

Memory sites we examined

Students in the summer school conducted field exercises at various memory sites in and outside Penang. Fieldwork, though brief and intense, is an important part of the learning process, that participants generally identify as one of the most rewarding aspects of the summer school. They get to know problems and issues from local perspectives, learn to apply concepts from the lectures, work with other students collaboratively in an international setting, receive methodological tutoring from lecturers, and acquire first-hand experience of the joys and frustrations of doing fieldwork.

Here are the sites they examined this year:

1. Lembah Bujang monument complex

2. George Town World Heritage Inc. (GTWHI)

3. Tua Pek Kong temple

4. Masjid Kapitan Keling

5. Teochew Puppet and Opera Museum




On our summer school in Penang


Photo (c) Lye Tuck-Po
The 2015 international summer school on “The Return of the Past: Memory Making and Heritage in Southeast Asia” (held at Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, from 9th to 20th March) is the fifth in our series of schools. For background information on the programme, click here

Post-colonial states in the Southeast Asian region have been described as being strongly oriented towards the future, prioritizing modernisation and development. In recent years however, the past seems to have taken on a renewed relevance. The summer school brings together experts from Berlin, Penang, Yogyakarta, and Australia to discuss memory and its transmission as a social, cultural and political phenomenon. Hegemonic state-centred narratives on the past are compared with bottom-up popular memories in order to understand how multiple identities are constituted as well as contested and modified. 


Eric Loh, a George Town resident, shares his
memories with tourists on a heritage
"walkabout," 2012. Photo (c) Lye Tuck-Po
This intensive course in Penang draws postgraduate students from Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Universitas Gadjah Mada, and Vietnam Free University. In the first week of the programme, lecturers of various disciplinary backgrounds (history, political science, and anthropology) introduced the students to some of the main theories on memory and heritage and gave them insights into important research that has been done on these issues in Southeast Asia. During the second week, participants form small groups and conduct field research at various pre-colonial, colonial and contemporary memory sites, including the Teochew Puppet and Opera House, George Town World Heritage Inc., Kapitan Keling Mosque, and Tua Pek Kong (all in the core heritage zone of the George Town World Heritage Site in Penang) and Bujang Valley ancient monument complex (in Kedah). 


Keep an eye on this blog to find out more about our research on these memory sites!