POWER RELATIONS IN TWO CONTEMPORARY INDONESIAN NOVELS WITH POLITICAL THEMES

Susilawati Endah Peni Adji

Abstract


Since Indonesia began its political reform in 1998, Indonesians have enjoyed increased freedom of expression, and as such it has been possible for long-censored themes such as politics to be freely discussed in contemporary Indonesian literature. This article examines two such novels, (1) Junaedi Setiono's Dasamuka (2017), which deals with Javanese politics during the Diponegoro War; and (2) Arafat Nur's Lolong Anjing di Bulan (Dogs Howling at the Moon, 2018), which deals with Acehnese politics during the Military Operations Era. This article borrows its theoretical framework from Fairclough, Bourdieu, and Gramsci, using the concept of power relations to investigate the novels Dasamuka and Lolong Anjing di Bulan. It finds that such power relations are strongly evident in both novels, particularly in their depictions of: (1) language as capital, (2) dominance and hegemony, and (3) opposition to outside dominance. This study finds that, in these novels, power relations have economic roots. Power is exerted, for instance, through (1) the taxation of civilians by the Yogyakarta Palace and the Dutch colonial government; (2) the land rental system implemented by the British and Dutch colonial regimes, which resulted in all profits flowing to these regimes, the Palace becoming economically dependent on these regimes, and the common people being reduced to laborers, and (3) natural gas exploration in Aceh, with all profits flowing to the Indonesian and American governments. Power relations in these novels, thus, are structured by economic factors, reflecting a Marxist paradigm. This reflects the Marxist view that economic factors are foundational for the class structure of society.


Keywords


power relations, dominance, hegemony, counter-dominance/hegemony, political literature

Full Text:

PDF

References


Adian, D.G. (2011). Setelah marxisme: Sejumlah teori kontemporer. Depok: Koekoesan.

Adji, S.E.P. (2019). Relasi kekuasaan dalam novel Lolong Anjing di Bulan karya Arafat Nur. Jurnal Ilmiah Kebudayaan Sintesis, 13(1), 19-25.

Ajidarma, S.G. (1997). Ketika jurnalisme dibungkam, sastra harus bicara. Yogyakarta: Bentang Budaya.

Baryadi, I. P. (2012). Bahasa, kekuasaan, dan kekerasan. Yogyakarta: USD Press.

Bourdieu, P. (1991). Language and symbolic power. Cambridge: Blackwell.

Dewi, N. (2019). Kemanusiaan dan kesetiaan anjing. Kompas, 19.

Fairclough, N. (1989). Language and power. New York: Longman Group.

Faizah, U. (2015). Kajian sosiologi sastra dan nilai pendidikan karakter novel Dasamuka karya Junaedi Setiyono. Paper presented at the National Seminar on Literature, Character Building, and Creative Industries, Surakarta.

Gramsci, A. (2013). Prison notebooks: Catatan-catatan dari penjara (trans. Teguh Wahyu Utomo). Yogyakarta: Pustaka Pelajar.

Haryatmoko. (2016). Membongkar rezim kepastian: Pemikiran kritis post-strukturalis. Yogyakarta: Kanisius.

Hidayati, F, Suwandi. S., & Slamet, St. Y. (2018). Kepribadian tokoh Willem dalam novel Dasamuka karya Junaedi Setiyono. Jurnal Lingua Didaktika, 2(2), 140153.

Misbakhumunir, M., Kadaryati, K., & Bagiya, B. (2017). analisis strukturalisme genetik novel dasamuka karya Junaedi Setiyono dan rencana pembelajarannya di kelas XI SMA. Surya Bahtera, 5(48).

Muniroh, Z. (2015.). Romance formula pada novel Dasamuka karya Junaedi Setiyono. Jurnal Bahtera-Jurnal Pendidikan Bahasa Sastra dan Budaya, 2(4).

Nur, A. (2018). Lolong anjing di bulan. Yogyakarta: USD Press.

Patria, N., & Arief, A. (2015). Antonio Gramsci, negara, dan hegemoni. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Pelajar.

Ratna, N.K. (2004). Teori, metode, dan teknik penelitian sastra dari strukturalisme hingga postruktural. Jakarta: Pustaka Pelajar.

Rampan, K. L. (2000). Angkatan 2000 dalam sastra Indonesia. Jakarta: Grasindo.

Rosidi, A. (1986). Ikhtiar sejarah sastra Indonesia. Bandung: Binacipta.

Setiono, J. 2017. Dasamuka. Yogyakarta: Ombak.

Suroso. (2015). Sastra dan Kekuasaan di Era Orde Baru. Paper presented at the National Seminar on Language, Literature, and Power, Faculty of Language and Arts, State University of Yogyakarta.

Suwardi, E. (2011). Metodologi penelitian sastra: Epistomologi, model, teori, dan aplikasinya. Yogyakarta: Pustaka Widyatama.

Taum, Y.Y. (2015). Sastra dan politik. Yogyakarta: USD Press.

Taum, Y. Y. (2017). Kritik Sastra Diskursif: Sebuah Reposisi. In Makalah disampaikan dalam Seminar Nasional Kritik Sastra yang diselenggarakan Badan Pengembangan dan Pembinaan Bahasa Kemendikbud, Jakarta (pp. 15-16).

Teeuw, A. (1980). Sastra baru Indonesia I. Ende: Nusa Indah.

Teeuw, A. (1989). Sastra Indonesia modern II. Jakarta: Pustaka Jaya.

Wiyatmi. (2018). Novel Indonesia periode 2000-an. Yogyakarta: Ombak.

Zahro, L.H. (2018). Konflik dan konsensus dalam konstelasi politik keraton Yogyakarta (Kajian Sosiologi Sastra Novel Dasamuka Karya Junaedi Setiyono). Thesis. Department of Indonesian Language and Literature Education, Post-Graduate Program, Muhammadiyah University of Malang.




DOI: https://doi.org/10.24071/ijhs.v4i1.2788

Article Metrics

Abstract view : 1721 times
PDF view: 625 times

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Copyright (c) 2020 Susilawati Endah Peni Adji

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.


Indexed and abstracted in:

 

         

 

IJHS Sinta 3 Certificate (S3 = Level 3)

International Journal of Humanity Studies (IJHShas been nationally accredited Sinta 3 by the Ministry of Education, Culture, Research and Technology of the Republic of Indonesia based on the decree  No. Surat Keputusan 158/E/KPT/2021. Validity for 5 years: Vol 4 No 1, 2020 till Vol 8 No 2, 2024

Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under CC BY-SA.

Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

 

p-ISSN: 2597-470X (since 31 August 2017); e-ISSN: 2597-4718 (since 31 August 2017)

Flag Counter

International Journal of Humanity Studies (IJHS) is a scientific journal in English published twice a year, namely in September and March, by Sanata Dharma University, Yogyakarta, Indonesia.

 

Note: The opinions expressed in this publication are those of the authors. They do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of the editorial team or publishers.