Collective Memory as Tool of Identity Assimilation:
Case Study - Glodok, Jakarta
Kasyfiyullah
Universitas Islam Negeri Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta, Indonesia
Keywords: Ethnicity, Identity, Chinese ethnic, Collective memory
Abstract: Identity issues become one of the political campaign tools especially to the ethnic issue of Chinese
descendants that goes along with religious issue in the process of local leader election in Jakarta. In this
paper, the study examines the process of identity assimilation that occurred in the Glodok area as an effort
to anticipate the possible conflicts between local Muslims as the majority in the majority area of ethnic
Chinese. The case study employs symbolic interactionist paradigm as the theoretical framework. The result
is that the process of identity accommodation and assimilation occurring in Glodok is primarily based on
collective memory and shared experience. The awareness of the resident that Glodok as familiar territory
needs to be preserved, furthermore, the identity as a part of Glodok society becomes an alternative identity
to overcome the diversity that occurred in Glodok. The awareness of this alternative identity affects the
process of assimilation while forming shared experience.
1 INTRODUCTION
Ethnic-based politic has a long story in Indonesia.
Since the Dutch colonization era, Ethnicity has been
used as the state ideology especially toward Chinese
ethnic that divide into other with ethnic
consciousness through social stratification and by
encouraging the development of ethnic-based parties
(L. Suryadinata, 2011). Even though in New-Order
era of Indonesia ethnic-based parties were banned,
however, ethnic-based politic shifted to
Indonesianisasi” (to make something or someone
to become Indonesian) the minority,especially
toward Chinese ethnic. Suharto depoliticized the
Chinese ethnic by restricting their activity to
economic-field. In the fall of Suharto, Chinese-
Indonesian becamethevictim of the conflict. Their
shop was ransacked, looted, and burned down; many
were attacked; and numerous ethnic Chinese women
tortured, raped, and killed (L. Suryadinata, 2011).
Glodok area in Jakarta was one of the Chinese ethnic
areas that affected by the chaos.
Nowadays in the post-reform era, Issue of ethnic
identity is still becoming one of the socio-political
issues in Jakarta. One of the closest is the ethnicity
issue that promotes to be campaign material for the
local leader election of Jakarta. Ethnic identity and
religious is the most common issue happened in the
elections process. The issue of ethnic identity is
widely heard as one of the socio-political issues in
Jakarta lately. One of the closest is the ethnics issue
that is used as campaign material for the Jakarta
regional head election. Ethnic and religious identity
is the most common issue in Jakarta regional head
elections process. Indigenous ethnic and Chinese
ethnic issues are part of the political campaign that
has been going on.
It is an exciting topic to discuss the contestation
of ethnic identity in Jakarta. Glodok becomes an
area known as a region with a majority of ethnic
Chinese descent, and non-Chinese became a
minority in the Glodok environment. Unlike in other
cities like Semarang which has Chinatown, Glodok
can be the Chinatown in Jakarta. The existence of
Chinese descendants in Jakarta has passed a long
history. Onghokham writes that the presence of
ethnic Chinese community has started from the
colonial period where J.P. Coen at the time captured
several hundred Chinese and took him to Batavia
which was just built at that moment (Onghokham,
1983). Currently, ethnic majority in Indonesia are
indigenous and Muslim, while the outside of these
two identities is considered to be a minority.
Historically, there was the assimilation of identity
from ethnic Chinese towards ethnic majority until
the term of crossbreed came into existence. The
Chinese community in Indonesia is slowly following
the majority life until the term "Cina Cukur"
Kasyfiyullah, .
Collective Memory as Tool of Identity Assimilation: Case Study - Glodok, Jakarta.
DOI: 10.5220/0009933316511658
In Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Recent Innovations (ICRI 2018), pages 1651-1658
ISBN: 978-989-758-458-9
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS – Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
1651
emerged (Onghokham, 1983). So what if the
opposite happens? Indigenous Muslims who are
considered the majority become a minority in the
Glodok area.
Glodok is one of the areas in Jakarta that is part
of the "Old City". Since the reign of the Dutch East
Indies, this area is also known as the largest
Chinatown in Batavia. The majority of Glodok
residents are of Chinese descent. Today Glodok is
known as one of the electronic sales centers in
Jakarta, Indonesia. Administratively, this area is a
sub-district included in the Taman Sari sub-district,
West Jakarta.
In "Hikayat Jakarta" (1998) by Willard Hanna in
Tionghoa dalam pusaran kekuasaan (Setiono,
2008), the governor-general of the VOC who ruled
until 1929, Jan Pieterszoon Coen, believed that
Chinese people were "... a resilient nation, diligent
and likes to work ... There is no energy that is more
suitable for our purposes or that can be mobilized
equally easily than the Chinese. "So, no wonder
many Chinese communities then lived around the
south of the Dutch fortress (now the Old City of
Jakarta). the Chinese had lived in Glodok in the mid-
17th century based on the conclusions of Heuken
referring to the Chronicle of Kai-ba-li-dai shij
(Chinese Chronicle in Batavia) compiled in the 18th
century, saying, "Around 1650, Chinese Lieutenant
Guo Xun Guan established a temple to honor the
Guan-Yin in the Glodok area (Heuken, 1997).
"After Baron van Imhoff became Governor
General in Batavia, ethnic Chinese were
concentrated in one place outside the Citadel of the
city which is now called Glodok," wrote Hembing
Wijayakusuma in Pembantaian massal, 1740:
tragedi berdarah Angke. the cause the rebellion
known as Geger Pacinan. The chinese fought the
colonial government in 1740. There are around
20,000 Chinese who are victims. Even because of
the incident, the river flow that was not far from the
Glodok area turned into a blood red color. As a
result of this incident, to facilitate the detainees
against Chinese ethnicity, since then the Dutch East
Indies Government issued a regulation called
Wijkenstelsel, in which the Chinese ethnicity is only
allowed to stay in the Glodok area and prohibited
from living inside the city walls. But precisely
because of this regulation the business life in the
Glodok area is growing rapidly. At Glodok, they
make buildings stronger than before. This area then
has a crowded market, and the port is not too far
from Glodok (Wijayakusuma, 2005).
There are four temples that are 300 years old and
still stand firm, like the economic strength of the
Chinese in Indonesia. Dozens of sinshe have opened
down and practice and countless traders of Chinese
medicine are sold freely at kiosk shops, and
shopping centers. Statistical data shows that the
population composition of Glodok is around 82
percent of the 12 thousand residents in their urban
areas of Chinese descent. So, the non-chinese is
much smaller than the chinese in Glodok and
become the minority.
This paper shows the relationships of ethnic in
the Glodok area, especially in the Petak Sembilan
area and how each ethnic group relates to each other
without losing their respective identities, using
symbolic interactionist paradigm as the theoretical
framework and qualitative fieldwork research as the
method of the field observation and in-depth
interview. Furthermore, this study presents the
process of identifying each other as individual and
groups that each of them is different without
harming the harmony or causing the conflict
especially,the emergence of prejudices against
ethnic Chinese by those who identify themselves as
part of the indigenous majority.
2 LITERATURE REVIEW:
IDENTITY ASSIMILATION
Identity is a must. Every individual in this world has
unique identity based on their unique personality
trait. An it’s a nature to human to construct their
own uniqueness whenever they interact with other in
social life. This uniqueness was the identity of each
individual and has their social aspect as the identity
show up in coexistence with other individual.
Current studies shows that ethnicity refers to the
identification of a group based on a perceived
cultural distinctiveness that makes the group into a
group of “people”. And this identification make us
to admit that we live in diversity of identities and
ethnics.
Mohd Yusof Bakar (Bakar, 2013) wrote that in
this ethnic diversity can lead to identity conflict. So,
to avoid the conflict and preserve pace. A country
choose their collective identity like Indonesia with
Indonesia Raya or Malaysia with 1Malaysia
Concept. The two country mentioned was the
country with multi-ethnic identity that live
coexistence and assimilating the various ethnic to
one national identity. His study was discuss about
the assimilation process and the discourse of the
needs of assimilation or preserve local identities.
Assimilation describe with the term ‘melting pot’
as the popular concept beside pluralism and
multiculturalism. But the popular audience prefers to
identify assimilation as a process of melting pot,
where all identities and cultures blends together as
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1652
another unique identity. thereafter the process of
assimilation that happens in nation like Indonesia,
Malaysia, and Thailand as “that process of
adjustment or accomodation which occurs between
the members of two (or more) different races, if their
contact is prolonged and if the necessary psychic
conditions are present” with the result being “group
homogeinity to a greater less degree” just as stated
by Sarah Simon. Furthermore Bakar wrote that he
agreed with the concept Peter Kivisto (2004) that
assimilation boiled down to finding ways to live
cooperatively, playing by common rules that define
the parameters of intergroup conflict. It entailed the
creation of a shared national identity, which of
necessity required certain commonalities, such as
shared language and core cultural values. However,
it also permitted the persistence of ethnic identities
and affiliations. Assimilation was thus not construed
as antithethical to amulticultural society; it did not
require cultural homogeneity.
This paper agreed with he view about
assimilation as attempt to find a way of living
together but Bakar not clearly explain the process an
tools to make assimilation happens.
In the study of Peter swift about Kuy people of
Cambodia that different from Khmer as majority of
Cambodian and assimilate to khmer identity. Swift
wrote that Kuy people has extremely similar with
khmer in term of ohysical appearance and material
culture but differently in languange. The
assimilation that happen in Cambodia was like
shifting identities as Kuy or as Khmer. It happens
because the stigmatization of Kuy identities and
trend to be Khmer (Swift, 2013).
As the process of assimilation, Cambodian Kuy
shifting their identitiy as Khmer and speak as khmer
in Khmer language. Swift argued that languange loss
was the important aspect of the assimilation process
of Cambodian Kuy to be a Khmer. In other word,
the process assimilation that happen in Cambodia is
a melting process. Not like melting pot concept that
tend to make a new identity, in this study,
Cambodian Kuy melt in Khmer identity an lost the
only differentiator of Kuy to Khmer that was
language. With the similiarity of physical
appearance of Cambodian Kuy and Cambodian
Khmer and similiarity in languange, The
coexistence identity become one as Khmer.
In another study about identity assimilation, Yuki
Ooi discussing about chinese migrant in Chicago.
Ooi argued that chinese’s migrant in Chicago
maintain their ties to their original country not
because the failure of assimilating in the current
country. But doing the assimilation with chinese
identity consiousness and build an ethnic
organization Chinese Equal Rights League in 1892.
The process of identity assimilation attempt
together with transnationalism. They are chinese in
one side and american in other side, or in other word
they construct chinese-american as an new identity
without loosing their ties with their origin country.
This chinese american was chinese who life and
behave as an american. It defined assimilation by
referring to activities such as cutting off queues,
wearing Western clothes, speaking English, making
the United States one’s permanent home, and
refraining from smoking opium, prostitution, and
gambling (Ooi, 2008).
Ooi study was discuss how assimilation with the
melting pot concept happen. With chinese-american
rising as a new identity for chinese migrant. This
identity also overcome clan identity.
Ajrouch and Jamal have study about identity of
arabic-americans. Unlike chinese-american that take
american lifestyle as process of assimilation, arab-
american carefully chose the aspect of white identity
to adopt for their life.
Our findings illustrate that a white racial
identity is negotiable based on a variety of ethnic
traits, helping us to better understand the process
of assimilation. Whereas immigrants are ascribed
an ethnic or racial identity at their arrival, the fact
is that they actively restructure or reconstruct
these identities to suit their particular national
and religious profile as well as their everyday
needs(Ajrouch & Jamal, 2007).
Deniz N. Duru (2016) studied about coexistence
of identities and collective memory in Turkey. The
study was held ind Burgaz, Turkey with
antropological point of view and partisipative
research as the method.
I chose Burgaz as my fieldwork site because of
its diverse population and because it was one of
the rare places where people collectively resisted
the 1955 riots, one of the most signifi cant events
of Republican Turkish history in that it resulted
in a mass migration of remaining Greek
Orthodox from Istanbul, primarily to Greece. I
aimed to understand the diversity that still exists
in Burgaz, and how persons who consider
themselves “Burgazlı” understand that diversity
(Duru, 2016).
Duru argued that The Lausanne Treaty of 1923
provided the framework for this coexistence/
toleration in turkey include Burgaz as well. But as
logical consequence of coexistence/toleration led to
homogenization processes: the construction of ethnic
and national differences led to violence; forced
Collective Memory as Tool of Identity Assimilation: Case Study - Glodok, Jakarta
1653
migrations; oppression towards “minorities;
conflicts over territory, shared space, and borders;
and changed demographics of the region.
Duru’s approach to “conviviality,” on the other
hand, highlighted the cohesions and tensions that
emerge from shared lifestyles and class difference,
and how these tensions are managed in daily life and
create a sense of place and belonging. This
conviviality constructed in shared memory of people
of Burgaz as part of their daily life. In 1955 riot,
Burgaz islanders collectively resisted the riots and
protected their island from being invaded by
outsiders. The shared memories of daily life and
conviviality had created such a strong Burgaz
identity that it overcame ethnic and religious
identities in times of crisis. The discursive effect of
these memories is a type of “Burgaz ideology,” a
sense of belonging to Burgaz that is also infused
with a moral discourse about how a “real” Burgazlı
should behave, both in everyday life and in times of
crisis (Duru, 2016).
In Duru’s Study of Burgaz, shared memory
become one of most important aspect of identity
assimilation. Conviviality become the core of
memories that shared and construct the solidarity
that rise over the differences in Burgaz and this
construction of memories highlighted in shared
lifestyle that happens in Burgaz daily life. The
difference between what happened in Burgaz and
Glodok is that highlighted shared lifestyle.
Contrasting for Burgaz, in Glodok, social interaction
tend to be rational relation. Glodok as one of
economic activities center in Jakarta tend to
construct rational and economical relation in social
daily life.
3 IDENTITY, RACE, AND
ETHNICITY: THE PROCESS
OF IDENTIFICATION
Identity has been an important issue in everyday life,
for example,an identity that social interactions in
daily life such as nicknames, addresses, religions,
tribes and other personal identities. The example
shows that identity is the aspect to interrelate
individuals in the social world. Then, the further
question arises, does identity exist as an individual
differentiator? The answer may not be as simple as
the question, but it is just the process of identifying
an individual as part of the social community. The
process occurs in the classification and individual
association to a particular social community, the
differences, and the similarities make up the
individual identity.
Identity, whether personal or collective, is about
staying (partially) the same in the context of others.
Thus, identity is always related to difference and
demarcation. In both personal as well as collective
identity dynamics, both inclusion and exclusion,
and often also discrimination, are principally
implied. Ethnicity is an aspect or variant of
collective identity (Antweiler, 2015).
The mentioned identity is one of the basic
identities in the process of becoming. Thus, Jenkins
stated that identity could only be understood as a
process of identification (R. Jenkins, 2008). So,
identity is an entity of the continualprocess, the
system of formation and self-meaning of the
individual to his interaction with other individuals.
This process occurs openly and continuously to both
the social world of distinction and self-affirmation as
well as individual associations with the social world.
What about race and ethnicity? Some of the
debates about these two concepts are in either a
deterministic or innate identity position. A, as a
Chinese descent determined by blood or genetic
links as well as other individuals such as B who
were born from native parents. Does an identity
form in the process of social interaction? The
deterministic concept seems to lead to an answer
that race and ethnicity as fixed identities whereas
one's race and ethnicity also undergo the process of
negotiation. This paper concludes that identity is an
identification process, so the implications for racial
and ethnic become a concept and also a process of
being. It is undeniable that innate identity also
affects the process of self-identification. In its
interaction, the individual continues to experience
the process of negotiating to the identity that has
been built. Social context, such as social, political,
and economic conditions, influences negotiations on
racial and ethnic identification processes. The racial
and national symbol can take on specific forms
within a particular spatial and historical context
(Solomos & Back, 1995). In the same argument,
Karner also explained that While 'race' is primarily
associated with physical characteristics, it is now
widely acknowledged that 'races' are social
constructs rather than biological givens; the choices
of physical markers are assumed to be racial
characteristics and historically and culturally
variables (C. Karner, 2007).
The concept of identity, race, and ethnicity at this
stage moves into identification, radicalization, and
racialism. Social context influences and affects these
three concepts as an open process. The three
concepts also impact the social behavior associated
with it. The process includes negotiation with the
social context that occurs, for instance, when people
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1654
interact with other people, they need to know about
each otherto make the conversation running, just like
a student will act with gender, race, or religion.
Therefore, identity as the whole concept connects
the act and behavior of peoples in social interaction.
Ethnicity tend to known as a form of cultural
identity. That isThat is, culture provides the content
and meaning of ethnicity, such as a shared history,
ideology, shared symbols, and system of meaning.
At the same time, ethnicity is also understood as a
political identity that, in some cases, may be coupled
with ethnic nationalism or conflict (Yuan, 2015).
Banton wrote that ethnic was an adjective as
improvement of the uses of term ‘race’. It was a
practical classification to identifying a distinctive
people with a common culture evident in their
shared history, language and other characteristics
(Banton, 2018).
4 ETHNICITY IN SYMBOLIC
INTERACTIONISM
Malesevic defines ethnicity as noncitizen who
inhabits 'our land' (S. Malesevic, 2004). so did
Giddens say that ethnicity is all about differentiating
a group from other. He said that ethnicity is an idea
that purely social in meaning. Ethnicity refers to the
cultural practices and outlooks of a given
community of people that set apart from the others
(A. Giddens, 2006). Also, the usual distortions that
occur were prejudice and discrimination. These two
social concepts become part of the exclusion of
certain groups by other groups, especially the
majority. This distinct ethnic identity receives
different treatment in social interaction. In the
context of this paper, what about indigenous
minorities in the Glodok against the majority of
Chinese ethnicity? As a note, the use of the word
ethnic itself is a form of exclusion to the identity of a
particular group.
According to Park and Burgess in Malesevic,
there are at least four stages that will occur in ethnic
interactions, contact/competition, conflict,
accommodation, and assimilation. The two stages
mentioned earlier describe the interaction.
Competition is considered to be a natural thing in
interaction. Awareness of the identity competition
occurs in this social interaction which brings the
interaction into the circle of conflict. When the
conflict determines the individual position within the
community, the conflict confirms that position in the
society. In this conflict comes to renegotiate the
position of each identity such as community
position, strength, and dominance respectively. As a
further process in addressing the conflicts and
accommodation occurs, restructuring social
hierarchy and renegotiation of power relationships
between identities continue in this process through
social interaction.
Furthermore, re-interpreting the meaning of
symbols or even re-symbolizing occurs in social
interaction. This process involves memory,
tendencies, sentiments, and individual behavior in
society that affects the identity of the interaction
process. At this stage, there is the assimilation of
identity between each other, each of it determines
the position of identity.
Throughout the process of identity interaction,
the individual interprets the experience of each of it
and bring it to the experience. Prejudice, tendency,
and suspicion of existing ethnicity become the media
of the negotiation process as well as a means of
putting dominance between one another. The
prejudices in the socialization process also influence
the interpretation of individuals involved in the main
of conflicts that exist.
5 ADDRESSING IDENTITY
CONFLICTS IN GLODOK
Petak Sembilan area in Glodok is a region with a
majority of Chinese ethnicity, so the indigenous
Muslim who is considered the majority in Indonesia
become a minority in that area. As the majority, the
social life in Glodok applies Chinese culture on a
daily basis. Indigenous peoples recognize that their
position in the area as a minority, therefore in the
process of socialization as minority communities
make conscious efforts to strengthen the
sustainability of life in the area, also, toanticipate
conflict among ethnic which are based in the
Glodok. Although an inherent identity conflict
persists, at least there are two prominent issues of
identity that are ethnic and religious.
The relation of these two issues, prejudices
against each other form a hegemony between one
another. For example, is the assumption that Chinese
ethnic as the ethnic who tend to be greedy and
stingy, especially in economic activities, and for the
Indigenous Muslims who are considered to be noisy,
especially in the process of worship. In this context,
there are contact and competition between identities
in the Glodok. Each group maintains the identity and
continues to socialize with each other.
The center of this conflict proceeds to the
process of socializing values and identity to each
other until they accommodate others. Some values
are raised as a unifying value in the essence of the
neighborhood, tolerance of existing differences and
common memory form, the basis of this assimilation
Collective Memory as Tool of Identity Assimilation: Case Study - Glodok, Jakarta
1655
process. Stets and Burke write that identity has a
procedure in the process of interaction of the identity
establishment (J.E Stets, P.J Burke, 2000).
According to Stets and Burke, the identity of the
individual is a system that consisting of multiple
identities, whether the identity that comes from
individual associations or their social community.
Self-identification (internal) activation procedure is
similar to a switch on and off the lights. Human will
choose to activate a particular identity in a social
situation consciously. It means that individual
identities tend to be constructed depending on the
context of the current situation. As the consequences
of identity activation, the identity that activated
affect the behavior of human. Identity is activated
relate to the situation but individu’s manners tied to
identity.
In the Glodok community, as an effort to
accommodate the identity conflict that occurred, the
individuals involved in social interaction bring an
appropriate identity with the social conditions. Some
of the identities raised at this stage of territorial
identity and as a neighborhood. Thus, it became the
concept of brotherhood (with basic neighborhood) as
residents of Glodok Petak Sembilan area. The
application of this identity is one form to influence
behavior and increase the effect of the social
environment. In other words, the process of
activation of identity occurs based on what they
need as an individualwho is facing the ongoing
social conditions.
Accommodation and assimilation in the Glodok
community are supported by collective memory as
well as interaction experience among individuals.
Collective memories are widely shared from
individual memories, or memories which initially
held a few individuals in a community. That is the
commonality of memories held by the members of a
society (W. Hitst, G. Echterhoff, 2008). Garagozov
adds that collective memory formed by the shared
stories of the past accepted by all members and
developed into something called “common sense”
that the majority has accepted (R. Garagozov, 2009).
In other concept, collective memories called by
social memory
social memory here designates all products that
result from the operation of transindividual
relations. I take the term transindividual from
Simondon, who saw all involvement with
technical objects ‒whether invention or use ‒as a
fundamental form of communication. The
‘technical object taken according to its essence,
that is to say the technical object as it is invented,
thought and wanted, assumed by a human
subject, becomes the support and the symbol of
the relation that we would like to call
transindividual (Hui, 2017).
One of the strongest memories affecting the
process of identity assimilation was defending the
Glodok area during the riots and looting in 1998, in
which ethnic Chinese became the most
disadvantaged group at that moment. Chinese ethnic
communities were the primarytarget, and Glodok as
one of the centers of ethnic Chinese economic
activity was also the target of the perpetrators.
According to some sources, although the Chinese
were victimized, all of the community of plot nine
Glodok especially Non-Tionghoa helped to protect
their area from the riots. Some of the problems
become the reason for the cooperation; similarities
of residence, territory, and colleagues in conducting
economic activities. The term that emerges is "we do
not want our homes ransacked by people."
Garagozov argue that traumatic experience and
stress accompanied by strong emotions leave the
deepest scars in the collective memory: eyewitnesses
tend to share their strong emotions with others (R.
Garagozov, 2009). So did the riot in 1998 that leave
traumatic and emotional memories to chinese in
Glodok as the victim. So, the help of the neighbor of
non-chinese did leave an strong memory as deep as
the trauma because related to the emotion. The
similairy of teritory as the rational reason for the
non-chinese to prevent the perpetrators go into their
teritory.
Just like Duru’s study in Burgaz. The similiarity
in teritory and the preventing of rencaking teritori
can become something called conviviality that
become shared memory.
Restructures system, values, and social identity
influenced the similarities in each category of
identities, such as residential similarity, economic
interests, and equal values in their respective beliefs,
resulting assimilation. Malesevic defining
assimilation as a process of inter-penetration and
fusion in which persons and groups acquire the
memories, sentiments, and attitudes of other persons
or groups, and, by sharing their experiences and
history, are incorporated with them in a shared
cultural life (S. Malesevic, 2004).
5 CONCLUSION: NATIONALISM
AS ALTERNATIVE
The process of assimilating identity becomes a
resolution to identify conflicts and prevents it.
Construct an alternative identity through the
equations contained in the identity of interacting.
The identification process works along the
interaction between individuals or groups.
Nationalism becomes the hybrid identity of
assimilation occurred between ethnic identities.
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1656
Different from the notion of nationalism in Andrain
and Apter's writings stated that nationalism is an
extension of ethnicity because nationalism has a
primordial identity (C.F. Andrain, D.E. Apter,
1995). Values, memories, and shared experiences
form a new interpretation of the social interactions
while forming a shared identity become part of the
process of identifying the individuals.
Nationalism is an identity that inherits from
previous ethnic identity. It does not mean that ethnic
identity is lost or gone into the same identity, but
nationalism becomes an alternative identity that can
be used in constant interaction. Back to the idea of
identity, that identity, race, ethnicity, or even
nationalism is the process. Thus, in the interaction of
individuals and groups, to prevent the conflict, we
need the construction of identity as a solution, for
instance, the interaction between ethnic Chinese and
indigenous in the Glodok area. Nationalism as
identity also have consequence that nationalisme
was process of identification and constructed with
social context. So the collective memory that
attached by emotion can be an aspect that activate
nationalism as identity. As Stets & Burkes argued
that identity consiously activated in some social
situation and affect the behavior of person that tied
to the identity. As part of social individu called
nation, individu will behave like the social identity
that activated.
Contrary from Durus argument that nationalism
led to homogenization and crystallization of ethnic
and religious identities, nationalism that constructed
by collective memories can be alternative identites
that overcome the differences in hetergenous society
and in Duru’s term can become ‘ideology’ that
coexist with multi-identities in any society and
strengthen solidarity.
Finally, Park and Burgess argue that ethnic
group solidarity can lose its grip over individual
migrants (S. Malesevic, 2004) in colonial times,
Chinese immigrants lived in Jakarta and slowly form
their life and their new social identities. Otherwise,
in Glodok, natives as subordinated identities
construct an identity as a form of fulfillment of the
social interaction processes.
REFERENCES
A. Giddens. 2006. Sociology (5th ed.). Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Ajrouch, K. J., & Jamal, A. 2007. Assimilating to a White
Identity: The Case of Arab Americans. International
Migration Review, Vol. 41, No. 4, 860-879.
Antweiler, C. 2015. Ethnicity from an anthropological
perspective. Dalam U. o. Forum, Ethnicity as a
Political Resource: Conceptualizations across
Disciplines, Regions, and Periods. Transcript Verlag.
Bakar, M. Y. 2013. Identity Assimilation: Sustaining the
Identity or Sustaining the Aspiration. Procedia -
Social and Behavioral Sciences (hal. 316 - 321).
Penang: Elsevier.
Banton, M. 2018. Ethnic Origin and Ethnicity. Dalam M.
Banton, What We Now Know About Race and
Ethnicity (hal. 96 - 122). Berghahn Books.
C. Karner. 2007. Ethnicity and Everyday Life. Routledge.
C.F. Andrain, D.E. Apter. 1995. Political Philosophies,
Ideologies, and the Quest for Meaning. London:
Palgrave Macmillan.
Duru, D. N. 2016. Memory, Conviviality, and
Coexistence: Negotiating Class Differences in
Burgazadasý, Istanbul. Dalam R. Bryant, Post-
Ottoman Coexistence: Sharing Space in the Shadow of
Conflict. New York: Berghahn Books.
Heuken, A. 1997. Tempat-Tempat Bersejarah di Jakarta.
Jakarta: Cipta Loka Caraka.
Hui, Y. 2017. On the Synthesis of Social Memories:
Archives, Technology and the Social. Dalam I. B. Eds,
Memory in Motion. Amsterdam: Amsterdam
University Press.
J. Solomos, L. Back. 1995. Race, Politics, and Social
Change. New York: Routledge.
J.E Stets, P.J Burke. 2000. Identity Theory. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
L. Suryadinata. 2011. Chinese Politics in Post-Suharto's
Indonesia. Beyond the Ethnic Approach? Asian
Survey, 502-524.
Onghokham. (1983). Rakyat dan Negara. Jakarta: Sinar
Harapan.
Ooi, Y. 2008. Becoming Transnational Through
Assimilation: Emergence of National/Ethnic Identity
Among Chinese Migrants in Late Nineteenth-Century
Chicago. International Journal of Japanese Sociology,
77-92.
R. Garagozov. 2009. Collective Memory and National
Identity in The Globalization era (Empirical Study of
the Azery Youth).
R. Jenkins. 2008. Social Identity. Routledge.
S. Malesevic. 2004. The Sociology of Ethnicity. London:
SAGE Publication.
Setiono, B. G. 2008. Tionghoa di Putaran Kekuasaan.
Jakarta: TransMedia.
Solomos, J., & Back, L. 1995. Race, Politics and Social
Change. New York: Routledge.
Swift, P. 2013. Changing ethnic identities among the Kuy
in Cambodia: Assimilation, reassertion and the making
of Indigenous identity. Asia Pacific Viewpoint, Vol.
54, No. 3, December 2013, 296308.
W. Hitst, G. Echterhoff. 2008. Creating Shared Memories
in Conversation. New York: The Johns Hopkins
University Press.
Collective Memory as Tool of Identity Assimilation: Case Study - Glodok, Jakarta
1657
Wijayakusuma, H. 2005. Pembantaian massal, 1740:
tragedi berdarah Angke. Jakarta: Yayasan Obor
Indonesia.
Yuan, L. X. 2015. Ethnicity or nationality ? Minority
policy and ethnic conflict in contemporary China.
Dalam L. X. Yuan, Ethnicity as a Political Resource:
Conceptualizations across Disciplines , Regions , and
Periods (hal. 152 - 168). Transcript Verlag.
ICRI 2018 - International Conference Recent Innovation
1658