Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-mlc7c Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-10T08:12:22.007Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Gully Coolies, Weed-Women and Snijvolk: The Sugar Industry Workers of North Java in the Early Twentieth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

G. R. Knight
Affiliation:
University of Adelaide, South Australia

Extract

The issue of who constituted the workforce employed in the Java sugar industry during the late colonial era remains a controversial one. Almost thirty years ago one leading Indonesian scholar made the eminently plausible suggestion that ‘on the whole, those who sought work in the sugar industry… were those who had no land. They were for the greater part recruited from the landless… who were eager to sell their labour to anyone prepared to pay wages’ [Selosoemardjan 1962: 271]. Since that time, however, the waters of debate have become a great deal murkier. In particular, the legend that the industry's workers remained ‘peasants’ is one which dies hard [e.g. Knight 1989]. Indeed, if there can be said to be a single image illustrative of the prevailing orthodoxy concerning the relations between labour and capital in late colonial Java, it is that of the peasant-worker who ‘persisted as a community-oriented household farmer at the same time that he became an industrial wage labourer’ and who ‘had one foot in the rice terrace and the other in the [sugar] mill’ [Geertz 1963: 89]

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1994

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bernstein, H. 1988. ‘Capitalism and Petty Bourgeoise Production: Class Divisions and Divisions of Labour’, Journal of Peasant Studies 15(2).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boomgard, P. 1988. ‘Treacherous Cane: The Java Sugar Industry’, in Albert, B., and Graves, A.The World Sugar Economy in War and Depression, London, Routledge.Google Scholar
Brass, T. 1986. ‘Unfree Labour and Capitalist Restructuring in the Agrarian Sector: Peru and India’, Journal of Peasant Studies 14(1).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breman, J. 1978. ‘Seasonal Migration and Co-operative Capitalism’, Journal of Peasant Studies 6 (1 and 2).Google Scholar
Breman, J. 1983. Control of Land and Labour in Colonial Java, Doordrecht, Verhandelingen van het KITLV no. 101, Floris Publications.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elson, R. E. 1984. Javanese Peasants and the Colonial Sugar Industry, Singapore, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Elson, R. E. 1986. ‘Sugar Factory Workers and the Emergence of “Free Labour” in Nineteenth Century Java’, Modern Asian Studies 20(1).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Elson, R. E. 1989. ‘The Mobilisation and Control of Peasant Labour in Java in the Early Cultivation System’, in May, R. J. and O'Malley, W. J. (eds), Observing Change in Asia: Essays in Honour of J. A. C. Mackie, Bathurst, Crawford House.Google Scholar
Fasseur, C. 1975. Kultuurstelsel en koloniale Baten. De Nederlandse exploitatie van Java 1840–1860 (Leiden).Google Scholar
Fernando, M. R. 1982. ‘Peasants and Plantation Economy: the Social Impact of the European Plantation Economy in Ciribon Residency from the Cultivation System to the end of the First Decade of the Twentieth Century,’ PhD Thesis, Monash University.Google Scholar
Fernando, M. R. 1989. ‘Javanese Peasants and By-Employment at the Turn of the Century’, in May, R. J. and O'Malley, W. J. (eds), Observing Change in Asia: Essays in Honour of J. A. C. Mackie, Bathurst, Crawford House.Google Scholar
Fernando, M. R. 1991. ‘The Growth of Non-Agricultural Sectors of Indigenous Economy in Java 1820–1880’, Paper prepared for First Conference on Indonesia's Modern Economic History,LIPI,Jakarta1991.Google Scholar
Geertz, C. 1963. Agricultural Involution, Berkeley and Los Angeles, University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gray, Robert 1987. ‘Industrialisation in South Africa: Review Article’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 29.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Husken, F. 1989. ‘Cycles of Commercialisation and Accumulation in a Central Javanese Village’ in Hart, G., Turton, A. and White, B. (eds), Agrarian Transformations, Berkeley and Los Angeles, California University Press.Google Scholar
Ingleson, J. 1986. In Search of Justice, Singapore, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Knight, G. R. 1988. ‘Peasant Labour and Capitalist Production in Late Colonial Indonesia’, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 19(2).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, G. R. 1989. ‘Sugar, Peasants and Proletarians: Colonial Southeastern Asia 1830–1940’, Critique of Anthropology 9(2).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, G. R. 1992. ‘The Java Sugar Industry as a Capitalist Plantation’, to appear in Journal of Peasant Studies, 19 (3 and 4).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Koloniaal Verslag 1930.Google Scholar
Leon, C. N. J. 1914. ‘De Suikeronderneming Petaroekan’, Archief voor de Suikerindustrie van N.I. (1).Google Scholar
Levert, P. 1934. Inheemsche Arbeid in de Java Suikerindustrie Wageningen.Google Scholar
Levert, P. 1938. ‘Eenige Gegevens over Absenteisme en loonen bij een Ploeg Taakwerkers op een Europeesche Onderneming met Overjaarige Cultures’, Koloniale Studien 22 (6).Google Scholar
Lucas, A. 1991. One Soul One Struggle, Sydney, Allen & Unwin.Google Scholar
Manderson, L. 1983 (ed.). Women's Work and Women's Roles, Canberra, Australian National University, Development Studies Centre Monograph no. 32.Google Scholar
Mubyarto, 1969. ‘The Sugar IndustryBulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 5 (2).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mulder, J. S. 1929. De Rietsuikerindustrie op Java, Haarlem, Tjeenk Willink.Google Scholar
Musschenbroek, S. C. van 1902. ‘Beknopt Overzicht der Rietcultuur op de Onderneming Tjomal’, Archief voor de Suikerindustrie in N.I. (1).Google Scholar
O'Malley, W. J. 1989. ‘Variations on a Theme: Socio-Economic Development in Four Central Javanese Regencies’ in May, R. J. and O'Malley, W. J. (eds), Observing Change in Asia, Bathhurst, Crawford House.Google Scholar
OMW, Pekalongan 1908. Onderzoek naar de Mindere Welvaart der Inlandsche Bevolking op Java en Madura. Samentrekking … Economie van der Desa in de Residentie Pekalongan, Weltevreden Smits.Google Scholar
Rothstein, F.The New Proletarians: Third World Reality and First World Categories’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 28.Google Scholar
Schaik, A. van 1986. ‘Colonial Control and Peasant Resources in Java: Agricultural Involution ReconsideredProefschrift, Universiteit van Amsterdam.Google Scholar
Selosoemardjan, 1962. Social Changes in Jogjakarta, Ithaca, Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Soetrisno, L. 1980. ‘The Sugar Industry and Rural Development: The Impact of Cane Cultivation for Export on Rural Java: 1830–1934’, PhD Thesis, Cornell University.Google Scholar
Sutter, J. 1959. Indonesianisasi: Politics in a Changing Economy 1940–1955, Ithaca, Cornell University, Department of Far Eastern Studies, Data Paper 36.Google Scholar
Van Niel, R. (Translator) 1956. Living Conditions of Plantation Workers and Peasants in Java in 1939–40, Ithaca, Cornell University, Department of Far Eastern Studies, Modern Indonesia Program, Translation Series.Google Scholar