The year 1945 marked the end of two occupations in the Kingdom of the
Netherlands. The first occurred with the German surrender in May. The
second came about with the sudden surrender of Japan in August. The
ending of World War Two in Asia left the Dutch East Indies in a volatile and
complex situation. The “liberated” Dutch found themselves surrounded by
hostile nationalist forces loyal to the newly founded Republic of Indonesia.
Years of violence and a full-scale war ensued, with the Dutch reluctantly
ceding sovereignty to the new republic in 1949. This study briefly looks at
the situation that unfolded in late 1945 Indonesia and attempts to explain
why the Dutch found the new situation hard to comprehend and to accept.
I suggest that the short stories of Beb Vuyk offer unique insights into the
reservoir of violence that had been expanding prior to 1945, the shift in
violence between 1945 and 1949 and the violence as it was experienced by
Asians and Europeans alike. Accepting that Vuyk's position within the
colonial complex was that of a colonial before the war, I maintain that Vuyk
challenges colonial narratives by drawing out some of the pathologies
engendered by colonial intimacies. By reclaiming local, native and particular
histories, her stories written between the late 1940s and late 1960s reflect
a variety of experiences and do not privilege the experiences of European
victims over Indonesians.
Click here in order read this article of mine, published in the Canadian Journal of Netherlandic Studies, Volume 40, Issue 2, 2020