Maluku: the History, Societies, and Cultures of an Indonesian Province

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Maluku: the History, Societies, and Cultures of an Indonesian Province MALUKU: THE HISTORY, SOCIETIES, AND CULTURES OF AN INDONESIAN PROVINCE A BmLIOGRAPHY OF TEXTS IN THE ENGLISH-LANGUAGE Compiled by Patricia Horvatich Southeast Asia Paper No. 37 Center for Southeast Asian Studies School of Hawaiian, Asian and Pacific Studies University of Hawai'i at Manoa October 1993 --~- ~ ---". ----------~--~----~~ PREFACE When I was hired two years ago as a visiting assistant professor by the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Hawai'i at Manoa, the director of the Center requested that I offer a course on Maluku. P. Bion Griffin explained that the Center for Southeast Asian Studies had been awarded generous grants to support, in part, faculty research, improve library acquisitions, and offer courses on the province of Maluku. I learned that there were ten faculty members at the University of Hawai'i who have research experience in Maluku, a group of five professors who were currently engaged in an interdisciplinary and cooperative research project with their colleagues at Pattimura University, and a significant number of graduate students planning to conduct fieldwork in Maluku. P. Bion Griffin assured me that I could call upon other professors to deliver occasional lectures and that I would not be teaching in an empty classroom. He was right. The course was both fascinating and popular, if a little unusual in its focus on a single Indonesian province. In accepting this position, the challenge for me was to deliver lectures on the history, cultures, and societies of Maluku. Though I have traveled to and studied in many places in Indonesia, I never had the opportunity to visit Maluku. My own research as an anthropologist is in the Sulu Archipelago of the southern Philippines. I thus could not rely upon my own research experience in preparing lectures, but had to depend upon materials available to me through the Hamilton Library's Asian Collection at the University of Hawai'i. Due to the relative dearth of material on the history and societies of Maluku, I had to expend quite a bit of energy locating relevant texts. My efforts were rewarded by the general good quality of the work cited within this bibliography. One result of my endeavor to offer a course on Maluku is this bibliography. Students of Maluku will find it a useful resource on social science materials and secondary historical sources in the English language. Though reasonably comprehensive, this bibliography should not discourage searches for additional readings, especially those tucked away among the pages of more general works and those in Dutch and Indonesian languages. This bibliography is presented in two parts. Part One is organized by topics. The subjects are not library of congress headings, but are categories I have found most useful in studying Malukan histories, societies, and cultures. Part Two is organized by area. The major divisions are those of northern, central, and southern Maluku. These regions have been further divided into islands or groups of islands. The large and populous island of Halmahera has been subdivided into ethnic groups. An author index follows the bibliographies and lists all references to the works of authors presented in alphabetical order. I would like to thank those subscribers of Cakalele: Maluku Research Journal who responded to my request to learn more about their work. I am particularly grateful to Fridus Steijlen for providing me with many references to work on Malukans in the Netherlands. I would also like to thank the Center for Southeast Asian Studies for its financial support of this project, and Florence Lamoureux, the program coordinator of the Center, for soliciting this bibliography and encouraging its timely completion. I am also grateful to Lan Hiang Char, Alice W. Mak, and Shiro Saito of the Asian Collection for their courteous and informed assistance with this and all my research endeavors. I am, of course, solely responsible for any shortcomings and inaccuracies of this work. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS PART ONE: TOPIC BmLIOGRAPHY Entries Subject Headings 1-23 Overview, Collections, and Bibliographies 24-36 Archaeology 37-78 History 79-94 Post-Colonial History and Politics 95-99 Ethnicity and Identity 100-140 Subsistence Activities, Economics, and Development 141-162 Kinship, Marriage, and Social Organization--Bilateral Societies 163-180 Kinship, Marriage, and Social Organization--Unilineal or "House" Societies 181-182 Gender Conceptions and Relations 183-218 Ritual and Religion--Traditional Ritual Practices 219-221 Ritual and Religion--Islam 222-232 Ritual and Religion--Christianity 233-264 Cognitive Models, Symbolic Systems, and Ethnobotany/zoology 265-272 Art, Dance, Music, and Textiles PART TWO: AREA BmLIOGRAPHY Entries Subject Headings 273-290 NORTHERN MALUKU--General 291 Bacan 292-294 Halmahera--The Galela III 295-296 Halmahera--The Giman 297-303 Halmahera--The Sahu 304 Halmahera--The Tobaru 305-315 Halmahera--The Tobelo 316 Halmahera--The Tugutil 317-319 Makian 320-321 Raja Ampat Islands 322-323 Sula Islands 324-335 Ternate and Tidore 336-344 CENTRAL MALUKU--General 345-381 Ambon 382-384 Banda 385-387 Bum 388-432 Seram 433-436 SOUTHERN MALUKU--General 437-443 Am 444-445 Babar 446-451 Darner 452-459 Kei 460-471 Tanimbar 472-499 MALUKANS IN THE NETHERLANDS AUTHOR INDEX iv MALUKU: THE HISTORY, SOCIETIES, AND CULTURES OF AN INDONESIAN PROVINCE PART ONE: TOPIC BIBLIOGRAPHY OVERVIEWS, COLLECTIONS, AND BIBLIOGRAPHIES 1. Ballard, Chris 1992 Aru: An Annotated Bibliography. Unpublished manuscript. Prehistory Department, Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University. 2. Bartels, Dieter [in press] Ambonese; North Moluccans; Southeast Moluccans. In: Encyclopedia of World Cultures. New Haven: HRAF press. 3. Ellen, Roy F. 1975 The Moluccans. Family of Man 5 (part 69): 1912-1915. 4. Ellen, Roy F., editor 1980 Moluccas Number. Special Issue of Indonesia Circle 23. 5. Ellen, Roy F. 1980 Moluccas Research Directory. In: Roy F. Ellen, editor, Moluccas Number. Special Issue of Indonesia Circle 23: 58-62. 6. Ellen, Roy F. 1980 Recent Publications Relating to the Moluccas, 1975-1980. In: Roy F. Ellen, editor, Moluccas Number. Special Issue of Indonesia Circle 23: 63-66. 7. Ellen, Roy F. 1981 A Supplementary Research Directory and Further Recent Publications relating to the Moluccas, 1975-1980. Indonesia Circle 26: 60-62. 8. Fraasen, Ch.F. van 1980 Types of Sociopolitical Structure in North Halmaheran History. In: E.K.M. Masinambow, editor, Halmahera dan Raja Ampat Konsep dan Strategi Penelitian. Jakarta: PT Bhratara Karya Aksara, 87-150. Also published in Roy F. Ellen, editor, Moluccas Number. Special Issue of Indonesia Circle 23: 21-40. 9. Grimes, Charles E. 1991 A Working Bibliography for Social Science Research in Maluku, Eastern Indonesia. Ambon: Universitas Pattimura (Distributed by the Summer Institute of Linguistics). 10. Ishige, Naomichi, editor 1980 The Galela of Halmahera: A Preliminary Survey. Osaka: National Museum of Ethnology, Semi Ethnological Studies, no. 7. 1 11. Jacobs, Hubert Th. Th. M., editor 1970 A Treatise on the Moluccas (c. 1544). Probably the Preliminary Version of Antonio Galvao's Lost "Histona das Molucas". Rome: Jesuit Historical Institute. 12. Leirissa, RZ. 1990 The Study of the History of the North Moluccas: A Personal Experience. Paper Presented at the First Maluku Research Conference. University of Hawai'i at Manoa. Honolulu, March 1990. 13. Lembaga Penelititan Maluku 1974 Bibliografi Maluku, 1950-1973. Jakarta: Lembaga Penelitian Maluku. 14. Masinambow, E.K.M. 1980 Preliminary Theoretical Considerations on the Theoretical Framework of the Halmahera Project. In: E.K.M. Masinambow, editor, Halmahera dan Raja Ampat: Konsep dan Strategi Penelitian. Jakarta: PT Bhratara Karya Aksara, 71-78. 15. Mas inambow, E.K.M. 1990 Halmahera Research and Regional Development. Paper presented at the International Workshop on Indonesian Societies, no. 5, Halmahera Research and its Consequences for the Study of Eastern Indonesia, in particular, the Moluccas. Sponsored by the Royal Institute of Linguistics and Anthropology. Leiden, October 1990. 16. Nanere, J. 1990 The Establishment of the Center for Moluccan Social Sciences at Pattimura University. Paper presented at the first Maluku Research Conference. University of Hawai'i at Manoa, Honolulu, March 1990. 17. Polman, Katrien 1981 The North Moluccas: An Annotated Bibliography. With an Introduction by Ch.R van Fraasen. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. 18. Polman, Katrien 1983 Central Moluccas: An Annotated Bibliography. With an Introduction by Ch.R van Fraasen. Dordrecht: Foris Publications of Holland. 19. Seleky, W.A. 1972 Bibliografi tentang Pendudukan dan Kebadajaannja dan Kepulauan Maluku, 1934-1964. UnpUblished manuscript. 2 20. Taylor, Paul Michael 1985 A Bibliographic Note on Rare and Recently, Locally or Ephemerally Published Monographs and Government Reports on the Moluccas (Maluku Province, Indonesia). Presented as a Supplement to Existing Bibliographies. Southeast Asian Research Materials Group 29: 9-15. 21. Visser, Leontine E., editor n.d. Papers of the Workshop on Halmahera Research and its Consequences for the Study of Eastern Indonesia. Leiden: KITLV. 22. Watuseke, F.S. 1977 The Name Moluccas, Maluku. Asian Profile 3: 307-309. 23. Wouden, F.A.E. van 1968 Types of Social Structure in Eastern Indonesia. The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff. (Translated by Rodney Needham). 3 ARCHAEOLOGY 24. Ambary, Hasan Muarif 1980 Some Notes on the Discovery of the Archeological Evidence at Ternate. Aspect of Indonesian Archaeologie 10. 25. Ballard, Chris 1988 Dudu Mahan: A Rock Art Site in Kei Kecil Southeast Moluccas. Indo­ Pacific PreHistory Association Bulletin. 26. Ballard, Chris 1992 Painted Rock Art Sites in Western Melanesia: Locational Evidence for an 'Austronesian' Tradition. In: 10 McDonald and Ivan P. Haskovec, editors, State of the Art: Regional Rock Art Studies in Australia and Melanesia. Proceedings of Symposium C, "Rock Art Studies in Australia and Oceania" and Symposium D, "The Rock Art of Northern Australia" of the First AURA Congress held in Darwin in 1988. Melbourne: Occasional AURA Publication No.6. Australian Rock Art Research Association. 27.
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