Being Korean in Buton? The Cia-Cia's Adoption of the Korean Alphabet and Identity Politics in Decentralised Indonesia
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Abstract
This study investigates the motives behind the adoption of Hangeul, the Korean alphabet, by the Cia-Cia ethnic group in Baubau, Sulawesi, Indonesia. The import of Hangeul exemplifies how Indonesian peripheries have tried to form their own regions as distinctive entities against the nation. Their attempts to do so expand beyond the nation in hopes of emerging as new centres in a decentralised Indonesia, in which new power dynamics can be negotiated. Furthermore, this case portrays how the local population copes with growing ethnic identities and the mission of modernisation simultaneously.
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Being Korean in Buton? The Cia-Cia’s Adoption of the Korean Alphabet and Identity Politics in Decentralised Indonesia. (2013). KEMANUSIAAN The Asian Journal of Humanities, 20(1), 51–80. https://ejournal.usm.my/kajh/article/view/kajh_vol20-no-1-2013_4
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