Identification.
The Republic of Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous
nation, has 203 million people living on nearly one thousand permanently
settled islands. Some two-to-three hundred ethnic groups with their own
languages and dialects range in population from the Javanese (about 70
million) and Sundanese (about 30 million) on Java, to peoples numbering in
the thousands on remote islands.
The nature of Indonesian national culture
is somewhat analogous to that of India—multicultural, rooted in
older societies and interethnic relations, and developed in twentieth
century nationalist struggles against a European imperialism that
nonetheless forged that nation and many of its institutions.
The national
culture is most easily observed in cities but aspects of it now reach into
the countryside as well. Indonesia's borders are those of the
Netherlands East Indies, which was fully formed at the beginning of the
twentieth century, though Dutch imperialism began early in the seventeenth
century. Indonesian culture has historical roots, institutions, customs,
values, and beliefs that many of its people share, but it is also a work
in progress that is undergoing particular stresses at the beginning of the
twenty-first century.
The name Indonesia, meaning Indian Islands, was coined by an Englishman,
J. R. Logan, in Malaya in 1850. Derived from the Greek,
Indos
(India) and
nesos
(island), it has parallels in Melanesia, "black islands";
Micronesia, "small islands"; and Polynesia, "many
islands." A German geographer, Adolf Bastian, used it in the title
of his book,
Indonesien
, in 1884, and in 1928 nationalists adopted it as the name of their
hoped-for nation.
Most islands are multiethnic, with large and small groups forming
geographical enclaves. Towns within such enclaves include the dominant
ethnic group and some members of immigrant groups. Large cities may
consist of many ethnic groups; some cities have a dominant majority.
Regions, such as West Sumatra or South Sulawesi, have developed over
centuries through the interaction of geography (such as rivers, ports,
plains, and mountains), historical interaction of peoples, and
political-administrative policies.
Some, such as North Sumatra, South
Sulawesi, and East Java are ethnically mixed to varying degrees; others
such as West Sumatra, Bali, and Aceh are more homogeneous. Some regions,
such as South Sumatra, South Kalimantan, and South Sulawesi, share a
long-term Malayo-Muslim coastal influence that gives them similar cultural
features, from arts and dress to political and class stratification to
religion. Upland or upriver peoples in these regions have different
social, cultural, and religious orientations, but may feel themselves or
be perforce a part of that region. Many such regions have become
government provinces, as are the latter three above. Others, such as Bali,
have not.
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