Houses of difference and glass: Dutch feminisms in the context of colonial exhibitions (1883–1898)
Feminism—as a term, movement, and discourse—has often been met with resistance in Southeast Asia, as illustrated by the recent special issue on feminism and art histories of the journal Southeast of Now. Tracing such contentious relationships to the rise of feminism in the Netherlands in the late...
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Format: | Thesis-Master by Coursework |
Language: | English |
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Nanyang Technological University
2022
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Online Access: | https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157105 |
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Institution: | Nanyang Technological University |
Language: | English |
Summary: | Feminism—as a term, movement, and discourse—has often been met with resistance
in Southeast Asia, as illustrated by the recent special issue on feminism and art
histories of the journal Southeast of Now. Tracing such contentious relationships to the
rise of feminism in the Netherlands in the late 19th century, particularly in relation to
two landmark exhibitions in 1883 and 1898, this dissertation questions the colonial
incentives embedded in Dutch feminist practice as well as the resistance the emerging
field of discourse received. While critical breaks in 20th and 21st century feminist
practice are well documented in the works of scholars like bell hooks, Audre Lorde
and Chandra Mohanty, the ways in which feminism itself was intertwined with
colonialism from its inception in the Netherlands in the late 19th century are less
studied. Yet the creation of a particular type of exhibition space—meant to represent
an Indonesian kampong and ‘inhabited’ with Indonesian workers—at the International
Colonial Exhibition (1883) and subsequent migration of this space to the National
Exhibition of Women’s Work (1898) resists that gap in recent studies of intellectual
histories. Understanding this phenomenon as a 19th century “augmented reality”—
defined in this thesis as a fabricated space wherein imagination and reality morphed: a
site where time, commodity and the Dutch East Indies became equated with
ideological activism—this study puts forward a complex, multifaceted account of early
feminisms in the Netherlands and their relationship with colonialism in Southeast
Asia. In doing so, this thesis repositions such early intellectual histories via a close
reading of physical manifestations and affective encounters in a specific exhibition
space. |
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