Racial Science and Human Diversity in Colonial Indonesia
Distributed for National University of Singapore Press
Racial Science and Human Diversity in Colonial Indonesia
In this new monograph, Fenneke Sysling draws on published works and private papers to describe the way Dutch racial scientists tried to make sense of the human diversity in the Indonesian archipelago. The making of racial knowledge, it contends, cannot be explained solely in terms of internal European intellectual developments. It was ‘on the ground’ that ideas about race were made and unmade with a set of knowledge strategies that did not always combine well. Sysling describes how skulls were assembled through the colonial infrastructure, how measuring sessions were resisted, what role photography and plaster casting played in racial science and shows how these aspects of science in practice were entangled with the Dutch colonial Empire.
360 pages | 6 x 9 | © 2016
Asian Studies: Southeast Asia and Australia
Biological Sciences: Evolutionary Biology
History: Asian History, European History
Sociology: Race, Ethnic, and Minority Relations

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