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The Lion and the Gadfly book cover
The Lion and the Gadfly
Dutch Colonialism and the Spirit of E.F.E. Douwes Dekker
2007
First Published
4.50
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888
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This political biography reveals the turbulent life of Ernest Francois Eugene Douwes Dekker, son of a Dutch father and a German-Javanese mother, born on Java in 1879. Vignettes flow in novel-like fashion from the battle fields of South Africa and internment camp in Sri Lanka to a career in journalism in Java. Radical thoughts then enter Douwes Dekker's mind, such as demands for racial equality and national independence. These made him write presciently that this road might take him to the executioner's hand or to the victory of revolution. In exile from 1913 on, his bravado allowed him to enter a doctoral program at the University of Zurich but also to entanglement with Indian revolutionaries operating from Berlin. Returning to Java at the end of World War I, he once again propagated the virtues of nationalism, but soon was forced to relinquish his efforts and start a teaching career. Even here constant surveillance and eventual internment in Surinam were his lot. Within a decade, the Republic of Indonesia had been proclaimed and Douwes Dekker emerged to acclaim as a close friend and political adviser to President Soekarno."
Avg Rating
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Author

Paul W. van der Veur
Author · 1 books

Dr. Paul Willem Johan van der Veur was Professor Emeritus of political science at Ohio University. Born to Dutch parents in the Netherlands East Indies (now Indonesia), he attended school in Surabaya, Java, where his father practiced as a physician (he also briefly attended a lycée in Hilversum, in the Netherlands). He fought against the Japanese in World War II, was captured and spent part of his imprisonment in the infamous Changi prison in Singapore. After the war, having obtained a scholarship to attend Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, Pennsylvania), he moved to the U.S.A. He later earned a master’s degree from the University of Minnesota, and received his Ph.D. in political science from Cornell University in 1955. He taught at Yale University, the University of Hawaii, the Australian National University and Northern Illinois University. In 1967, Professor van der Veur became the founding director of the Southeast Asia Program at Ohio University. He retired from the classroom in 1991, but remained active as a scholar to the end of his life.

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