and she is well shaped and dressed. All of a sudden
this event shocked many people she meets but she
does not care, instead she goes ahead to her home,
where her youngest daughter lives. This daughter
names Si Cantik (beauty), which is a very paradox
name because of her physical appearance that is not
beautiful in any sense at all. Then the story goes
flash back to the era of nearly the end of Dutch
colonialism, when Dewi Ayu was a girl. She is a
granddaughter of Ted Stammlers, a Dutch old man
living in Java Island in the Dutch colonial era, in
1930s.
The end of Dutch colonialism is approaching.
It is chaotic situation for Dutch government, people
and families, who have been in this Javanese land
for several generations have to escape or return back
to Europe after Japan military occupy Java in the
early 1940s. Most of Dewi Ayu’s family, Stammler
family, went back to Europe, but Dewi Ayu decided
to live and stay in her home in Java. She feels at
home in Java island, beside that she is aware that she
was born here in Java, inherited Javanese blood, and
her name is Javanese name instead of Dutch. Her
Javanese identity is strongly built in her although
she inherits European face and eyes that make her
beautiful and different both from many Javanese
girls and Dutch girls.
Dewi Ayu’s identity is a kind of hybridity in
which her phisical appearance is European look,
while her name is Javanese and she is haunted by the
ancestor (her Javanese grandmother) misery life.
The hybridity of the female character is enabled by
her grand parents’ inter-racial sexual relationship, in
which her grandmother is Javanese and her
grandfather is Dutch. This miscegenation brings
many problems as the consequence of the unequal
social political position between the Dutch and
Javanese. As stated by Young (1995) that the
centrality of colonial not only brings about economic
consequences, but also concerns about
miscegenation (inter-racial marriage) and
“hybridity”.
The occupation of Japanese military in Java
Island brings misery for Dutch people who are still
living in Java, which Japanese army collect all of
them and bring them to an empty small island, as
prisoners. All of the Dutch girls and women as well
as children are brought to the prison island,
Bloodenkamp. Dewi Ayu, a half Dutch is included
in the prison Bloodenkamp with all her friends and
neighbours who live in their village and
surrounding. The Japanese army not only bring
them to prison but the military also starts the
prostitution business to serve them. The Dutch girls
in the prison, including Dewi Ayu, are selected to be
prostitute for Japanese military, based on their
beauty and healthy body. In this case, the healthy
young women, especially Dutch, become the
preference for male Japanese military. As a smart
girl, Dewi Ayu knows how to deal with the men.
Instead of screaming and getting depressed, Dewi
Ayu prefers to keep aware and think how to control
her own body (Wiyatmi, 2009).
The new female image of Dewi Ayu presented in
this novel gives us the idea that she is totally
different from traditional types. Moreover, she takes
the attitude against the social norms. Dewi Ayu’s
rebellious spirit, self-reliance, and strong mind make
her the ideal new female image.
According to Wang (2010), there are two types
of female images in the traditional culture. The first
type is the discriminated femaleness where men are
always considered to have rational mind, superior
intelligence, and their capability of leadership, while
women are considered as inferior to men in all
aspect. Moreover, they maintain their roles in
society as their nurturance role, and considered as
not capable of reasoning and organization. The
second type is the praise worthy femaleness. This
second type implies that there are women who are
praised because of anything related with her
femaleness.
Guan (2004) states that during the Middle Ages,
men no longer attack women, they begin to flatter
women’s ability and achievement. Women are
praised as wives to support husband and they
sacrifice for family. However, these ideal female
images did not put down the existing sexism.
Instead, it is justification for men to limit women
within the circle of family life. Power and reason
still belong to men and the only thing that became
women possessions are their beautiful bodies and
frail minds.
The two types of women mentioned above are
designed to maintain the stability of men social
status. Shang (2000) asserts that women are
dependents towards their father, and then their
husband and because of the possibility of
widowhood, then women are dependent to their son
if they any, or any surviving males relatives. The
two of women are forever under control of men and
never have their right of independence.
Dewi Ayu, the major characters in Cantik Itu
Luka, does not fit within those two types of
traditional women according to Wang and Guan,
thus, the writer refers to this as the new female
image. The description of new female images is
expected to be an inspiration for the women