Indonesia’s Communists Helped Forge Its National Identity

Review of Communication against Capital: Red Enlightenment at the Dawn of Indonesia by Rianne Subijanto (Cornell University Press, 2025).

In Communication against Capital, Rianne Subijanto tells the story of how socialists in 1920s Indonesia mobilized against colonialism. With rallies and journals, strikes and education, their movement introduced new ways of looking at the world and helped to bring the Indonesian nation into being.

Communication against Capital focuses on the first half of the 1920s and what Subijanto calls the pergerakan merah, the “red movement” that spread across what was then called the Dutch East Indies. After the military coup of 1965, the crucial role of the Indonesian left was suppressed and declared taboo. Subijanto’s book sheds new light on the extent of left-wing organizing, not only against Dutch colonialism but also against restrictive customs and traditional forms of exploitation.

Key to this is what Subijanto calls a process of “red enlightenment.” The participants in the pergerakan merah viewed emancipation as “coming not from the transcendental — God or mystical spirits — but rather from something that was immanent: believing in the human capacity to both understand the world and to change it.”

Theirs was an enlightenment aiming at universal emancipation — communism. A red thread running through the book is the interplay between the particular situation the pergerakan merah found itself in as members of a newly emerging Indonesian nation opposing Dutch…

La suite est à lire sur: jacobin.com
Auteur: Alex de Jong

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