Matthew Joseph Minarchek (Author)
Tagliacozzo, Eric (Advisor)
This dissertation analyzes the historical production of the southern highlands of Aceh (Indonesia) into the Leuser Ecosystem; a dialectical space of nature imagined to be both pristine and imperiled. The Dutch began to imagine Leuser as a space of nature following more than forty years of war (1873–1913) with the people of Aceh. Officials viewed both the colonial institution and the ecologies of Leuser to be under threat due to local resistance and the wildlife trade. Militarization, scientific practices, and environmental conservation are examined together to show that Leuser was a center of state-making and empire during the colonial period. It was a space where military leaders, conservationists, and scientists collaborated in attempts to physically, discursively, and legally erase Indigenous peoples from the land. Through this inquiry, I argue that military leaders in Aceh appropriated conservation as a tactic for counterinsurgency. With this in mind, I ask what might the relationships between militarization and conservation tell us about colonialism? How can a history of Leuser, as a region, revise the narrative of Aceh’s history? When, and how, did Leuser become a space of nature with “universal value” on a global scale, to be secured with militarization? What does the historical construction of Leuser tell us about the production of the Nature/Society binary? In offering answers to these questions, I contend that the erasure of Indigenous histories, the transformation of Leuser into a space of imperiled nature and militarized ecologies, and an enduring environmental crisis have served to legitimize and facilitate dominant forms of land management since the early twentieth century. This manuscript is organized into five chapters that each tell a history of how Leuser was produced into a space of nature separated from society. The chapters interrogate legacies of militarization, scientific exploration and bioprospecting, the origins of primatology and the violence of field science, the wildlife trade and the West’s obsessions with Sumatran species (most notably the orangutan), and the rise of the international nature protection movement. The construction of nature is examined at different scales and from different perspectives and brought together in a woven narrative.
...More
Article
Protschky, Susie;
(2008)
Seductive Landscapes: Gender, Race and European Representations of Nature in the Dutch East Indies during the Late Colonial Period
Book
Leo van Bergen;
(2019)
The Dutch East Indies Red Cross, 1870–1950: On Humanitarianism and Colonialism
Book
Leo van Bergen;
(2018)
Uncertainty, Anxiety, Frugality: Dealing with Leprosy in the Dutch East Indies, 1816-1942
Article
Junaidi;
(2023)
Smallpox vaccination in Nias Island, Indonesia, 1854-1915
Book
Heather Law Pezzarossi;
Sheptak, Russell N.;
(2019)
Indigenous persistence in the colonized Americas: material and documentary perspectives on entanglement
Article
Hans Pols;
Warwick Anderson;
(2018)
The Mestizos of Kisar: An Insular Racial Laboratory in the Malay Archipelago
Article
Maat, Harro;
(2007)
Agricultural Sciences in Colonial Indonesia
Book
Hans Pols;
(2018)
Nurturing Indonesia: Medicine and Decolonisation in the Dutch East Indies
Book
Moon, Suzanne;
(2007)
Technology and Ethical Idealism: A History of Development in the Netherlands East Indies
Article
Junaidi;
Pennina Simanjuntak;
Junita Setiana Gintig;
Maulana Affandi;
(2024)
Dutch Colonialism and Role of Zending in Healthcare Services in Nias Island, 1865-1915
Article
Palomares, Maria Lourdes D.;
Heymans, Johanna J.;
Pauly, Daniel;
(2007)
Historical Ecology of the Raja Ampat Archipelago, Papua Province, Indonesia
Book
Goss, Andrew;
(2011)
The Floracrats: State-Sponsored Science and the Failure of the Enlightenment in Indonesia
Book
Hesselink, Elisabeth Quirine;
(2011)
Healers on the Colonial Market: Native Doctors and Midwives in the Dutch East Indies
Thesis
Goss, Andrew M.;
(2004)
The Floracrats: Civil Science, Bureaucracy, and Institutional Authority in theNetherlands East Indies and Indonesia, 1840--1970
Book
Augustus J. Veenendaal;
(2022)
Narrow gauge in the tropics : the railways of the Dutch East Indies, 1864-1942
Article
Christophe Bonneuil;
(2019)
Seeing nature as a ‘universal store of genes’: How biological diversity became ‘genetic resources’, 1890–1940
Article
Ford, Caroline;
(2008)
Reforestation, Landscape Conservation, and the Anxieties of Empire in French Colonial Algeria
Chapter
Moon, Suzanne M.;
(2005)
Development and the Dual Economy: Theories of Colonial Transformation in the Netherlands East Indies, c. 1920
Book
David H. Price;
(2016)
Cold War Anthropology: The CIA, the Pentagon, and the Growth of Dual Use Anthropology
Book
Fiona Williamson;
(2025)
Imperial Weather: Meteorology, Science, and the Environment in Colonial Malaya
Be the first to comment!