
No. 57 January-
March 1999
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Saman,
a sensation!
Ayu Utami,
Saman, Jakarta, KPG (Kepustakaan Populer Gramedia), 1998, ISBN 979-9023-17-3,
208pp.
Reviewed
by MARSHALL CLARK
Saman is said to be merely the first
part of Ayu Utami's forthcoming novel, tentatively titled Laila tak mampir
di New York ('Laila didn't call in New York'). Nevertheless, it is thoroughly
worth considering in its own right.
Saman stands out amongst recent Indonesian
fiction. Ayu's confident storytelling technique adequately carries the
weight of a broad thematic scope, highlighting the full complexity of previously
shunned issues such as female sexuality and the struggle between personal
faith and political action.
Although Saman attempts to present
an intimate psychological portrait of a group of young Indonesian women,
plot-wise it is dominated by the mental and physical challenges faced by
a politically-engaged Catholic priest, Wisanggeni, or Wis, who is assigned
to a parish in South Sumatra. After becoming involved in an armed struggle
between villagers and government-backed developers, Wis is smuggled out
of Indonesia and changes his name to Saman.
At times, Saman is simply impossible
to put down, an unusual experience when reading an Indonesian novel. Perhaps
this goes some way to explaining why between April and August this year
Saman went through six editions. By Indonesian standards, this is a spectacular
turnover.
Elsewhere, for this reviewer at least,
Saman is somewhat confusing, with numerous flashbacks and changes in narrative
voice occurring seemingly at random. Certainly Ayu seems hesitant at times,
most noticably with the deeper psychological motivations of several of
her main characters, particularly male characters such as Wis and Sihar.
Yet minor quibbles such as these may
be easily resolved when Saman appears in its entire form. That is, if it
appears in its entire form. Despite the huge praise for Saman, there has
also been some public doubt about the novel's authorship. Many believe
that Saman is simply too good a novel to be written by a female journalist
not yet thirty years of age with virtually no previous literary output.
Part of the reason for such criticism,
which appears to be largely unfounded conjecture, is that if Ayu really
did write Saman then she must be greeted as one of the most promising young
writers to emerge in Indonesia over the last decade. Furthermore, with
the literary careers of New Order cultural icons such as Pramudya Ananta
Toer, Rendra, Umar Kayam, YB Mangunwijaya and even Emha Ainun Nadjib appearing
to be winding down, Ayu Utami's emergence is a strong reminder that reformasi
should stretch much deeper than politics.
Marshall Clark is a PhD student
at the Australian National University, Canberra.
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