Title: 「熟悉的陌生人:印尼都市裡的空間與種族」專書寫作計畫
Intimate Strangers: Race and Space in Urban Indonesia
Authors: 蔡晏霖
tsai yen-ling
國立交通大學人文社會學系
Keywords: cultural encounter;social intimacy;ethnic politics;urban studies
Issue Date: 2011
Abstract: 過去數年我持續研究印尼華裔與非華裔個體因互動而生的群我疆界,本計畫即希望統
整過去研究成果,將其改寫出版為一英文專書。學界普遍認為印尼人與華人間的緊張
肇因於兩個群體缺少互動。但受惠於歐美學界近年強調的文化遇合理論,我主張在群
我意識生產劃界的過程中,「接觸」與「距離」至少扮演同等重要意義。本書因此觀
察印華與非華裔個體在物理、社會、情感距離上高度接近的跨族群情境,企圖闡明文
化遇合到底如何生產認同。在方法上我深入家戶、社區圍籬、私家轎車等空間,探求
這些親密場域中物理、社會、與主體三個邊界間的複雜構連,藉此把握族裔邊界生成
的動態過程與當代意義。本計畫有三個具體的修改重心:首先,我將補充部分民族誌
段落,針對(1)印尼全國性反貪污政經改革(2)日益顯著的回教公共性(3)隔鄰亞齊省的重
建(4)棉蘭華裔從政者的地方政治參與等四大面向追蹤並更新從2005年至今的變化。其
次,我將寫作一個全新章節,闡明新自由主義下的空間治權如何在印尼城市裡控制身
體、情感、認同的流動並剖析其相應的族裔政治。最後,我將重新寫作全書導論,發
展一套以「親密劃界」為中心的理論語彙,為當代都市情境中微觀政治與宏觀政經脈
絡交叉影響下的族裔主體生成過程做出分析。
Based
on
my
dissertation,
I
propose
to
write
an
ethnography
of
the
everyday
paradoxes
and
politics
of
race
between
Indonesian
citizens
of
Chinese
descent
and
their
non-­‐Chinese
counterparts,
focusing
specifically
on
the
ways
in
which
“Chinese
Indonesians”
are
racialized
and
ethnicized
at
intimate
spaces
of
interracial
exchange
in
urban
Indonesia.
Concerned
to
eschew
popular
uncomplicated
assertions
of
“Chineseness”
in
Indonesia
and
Southeast
Asia
in
general
as
either
a
self-­‐proclaimed
ethnic
identity,
a
state-­‐imposed
racial
category
or
simply
a
class
privilege,
this
manuscript
introduces
a
new
approach
to
understanding
“Chinese
Indonesian”
as
the
product
of
a
long
historical
process
as
well
as
everyday
cross-­‐racial
interactions
through
which
Chinese
cosmopolitan
practices
have
gradually
become
congealed
either
in
“diasporic”
or
“ethnic”
spaces.
It
does
so
by
examining
the
everyday
politics
of
race
and
its
intersection
with
class,
ethnicity,
nation,
and
gender
formation
in
contexts
such
as
the
urban
traffic
flows,
security
industry,
domestic
service,
as
well
as
state
administered
displacement
and
programs
of
assimilation,
finding
in
them
a
common
formation
of
what
this
manuscript
calls
“intimate
exclusion”
that
both
produces
and
challenges
ethno-­‐racial
difference
and
hierarchy
between
the
Chinese
and
the
non-­‐Chinese
in
contemporary
urban
Indonesia.
Besides
rewriting
and
reorganizing
my
dissertation
for
the
manuscript,
I
have
identified
three
additional
revision
objectives:
first,
I
will
conduct
a
1-­‐
month-­‐long
follow-­‐up
fieldwork
research
in
Medan,
Indonesia,
with
the
goal
of
gathering
the
most
up-­‐to-­‐date
data
for
the
aforementioned
analysis.
Second,
I
will
write
a
new
chapter,
which
addresses
the
way
in
which
Chinese
Indonesians
interact
with
their
non-­‐Chinese
drivers
and
fellow
Medan
city
dwellers
in
urban
traffic
flows
that
are
increasingly
reorganized
under
the
neolibearl
socio-­‐spatial
regime.
Finally,
I
will
write
a
new
introduction
for
the
manuscript,
with
the
aim
of
developing
a
fresh
theoretical
framework
that
considers
inter-­‐racial
intimacies
and
processes
of
exclusion
as
an
entangled
whole,
thus
allowing
researchers
to
better
get
at
the
paradoxes
and
politics
that
the
oxymoronic
figurations
of
Chinese-­‐Indonesians
(e.g.
Prameodya
Toer’s
“strangers
who
are
not
foreign”)
and
overseas
Chinese
in
general
(e.g.
Anthony
Reid’s
“essential
outsiders”)
currently
seek
to
mediate,
on
the
one
hand,
while
on
the
other
hand
expanding
feminist
and
postcolonial
studies’
insights
on
the
exercise
of
power
in
and
through,
rather
than
outside
of,
social
intimacies.
Gov't Doc #: NSC99-2410-H009-074-MY2
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11536/99087
https://www.grb.gov.tw/search/planDetail?id=2218651&docId=355439
Appears in Collections:Research Plans