Abstract

Indonesia has a large number of overseas workers varying from professional workers to the unskilled, legal and illegal who take up work across the globe. In the public consciousness this group is characterized as taking considerable risk but can gain considerable financial reward. This paper will examine the theme of Indonesian migrant workers’ risks and rewards and a sense of belonging as represented in contemporary Indonesian short stories from 1992 to 2015. The paper draws upon the theory of narratology to analyze the representation of Indonesian migrant workers in six Indonesian short stories, three from the New Order Period and three from the Reformation era period. The stories themselves have been published in newspapers, magazines and anthologies. The sample has been chosen to represent a range of migrant worker experiences both in Indonesia and abroad, male and female, and skilled and unskilled. The paper finds that the representations of migrant worker’s sense of belonging is particular marked by gender and class differences. Women are depicted over the two periods as the victims of a patriarchal ideology and unregulated capitalism which leads to exploitation, abuse and alienation of working-class women. While the representation of migrant worker experiences is largely similar there are changes over the two periods in terms of contesting the ideologies of patriarchy and New Order developmentalism.

Highlights

  • The Indonesian migrant workers’ narrative in the public consciousness can be characterized as risk taking for financial rewards

  • This study focuses on the representation of the migrant narrative in Indonesian short stories including their sense of belonging

  • The purpose of this paper is to examine the representation of different Indonesian migrant workers in Indonesian short stories over the period 1990 to the present

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Summary

Introduction

The Indonesian migrant workers’ narrative in the public consciousness can be characterized as risk taking for financial rewards. This public narrative has arguably been shaped by the Indonesian media headlining horrific cases of the abuse in particular, of female domestic workers. The narrative contains the aspect of financial reward illustrated by the public appellation of Indonesian migrant workers as “pahlawan devisa” (“foreign exchange heroes”) because of their remittances sent back home. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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