Abstract

This article explores post-colonial memories about street traders among individuals who lived in the former colony of the Dutch East Indies. It argues that these narratives romanticize the relationship between Europeans and indigenous peoples. Street vendors are also used to differentiate between periods within colonial and post-colonial history. The nostalgic representation of interracial contact between Europeans and traders is contrasted with representations of other figures such as the Japanese and the nationalist. A recurring feature of these representations is the ability of Europeans to speak with street traders and imagine what they wanted and needed. The traders are remembered as a social type that transgressed politics and represented the neutrality of the economic sphere as a place for shared communication. The article concludes that the figure of the street vendor contributes to the nostalgic reinvention of the colony but is also used in narratives to differentiate between and mark changes across the colonial and post-colonial periods.

Highlights

  • Memories of the colonial era have been examined with great interest in the fields of history and anthropology, with scholars analyzing what is remembered, why and how the ‘colonial experience’ is located in popular memory

  • This article focuses on memories that Dutch/IndoEuropeans shared about Indonesian street vendors

  • Street vendors are among the few Indonesians that European and Indo-European husbands, wives and children regularly encountered in the Dutch East Indies

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Summary

Introduction

Memories of the colonial era have been examined with great interest in the fields of history and anthropology, with scholars analyzing what is remembered, why and how the ‘colonial experience’ is located in popular memory. This article focuses on memories that Dutch/IndoEuropeans shared about Indonesian street vendors. Her narrative celebrated the activities of the street traders, not as individuals, but as a social type that was part of everyday life in the Dutch East Indies.

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