The authors of this book challenge the view that was current among many people in the Netherlands during the period 1945-1949 that the American government and its foreign policymakers unequivocally backed the Indonesian Republic's struggle for independence. The same myth of America's political endorsement of Indonesians' quest for independence continues to reverberate in the United States itself. In fact, ex-President Clinton repeated the story as recently as 1995 when he wrote to ex-President Suharto that in the post-World War II era, President Truman and the U.S. Congress had actively supported Indonesia 'as the nation was being born'. On the basis of research in American, Indonesian, Dutch, and Australian diplomatic records and in the archives of the United Nations, Gouda and Brocades Zaalberg describe and analyze American visions of the Dutch East Indies/Indonesia from the 1920s to December 1949, when the Kingdom of the Netherlands relinquished its sovereignty over the archipelago in southeast Asia to the United States fo Indonesia. Their historical analysis suggests that the American diplomatic establishment was not as ignorant of conditions in the Indonesian archipelago as many Dutch people assumed, both before and after World War II. They also chronicle the unfolding of America's steady but tactic backing of its faithful Dutch ally in northern Europe until early 1949, when U.S. assessments of the regions in the world where the Cold War might ignite into a 'Hot War' began to incorporate the anti-colonial, nationalist struggles in Indonesia and Vietnam.
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Frances Gouda is professor of history and gender studies at the Belle van Zuylen Institute at the University of Amsterdam. Thijs Brocades Zaalberg is a PhD student at the University of Amsterdam.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.
Seller: Second Story Books, ABAA, Rockville, MD, U.S.A.
Softcover. Large Octavo, 382 pages. In Very Good condition. Paperback binding. Spine pictorial red and beige with beige, red and blue lettering. Covers have slight wear including light edge wear. Text block has extremely slight wear including faint age toning and light soiling to the edges. Illustrated. NOTE: Shelved in Locked Annex, Column X. 1406176. FP New Rockville Stock. Seller Inventory # 1406176
Seller: Antiquariaat Spinoza, Amsterdam, Netherlands
Amsterdam, Amsterdam University Press, 2002. 382 pp. Very good copy. Softcover. Seller Inventory # 49327
Quantity: 1 available