Questa saga epica si addentra nella tumultuosa storia indonesiana dei primi del '900, seguendo il viaggio di un giovane di origini non convenzionali che diventa una figura cardine nella lotta per l'identità nazionale. Attraverso i suoi occhi e i suoi pensieri, queste opere esplorano l'oppressione coloniale, l'ascesa del nazionalismo e la ricerca della giustizia in un'epoca di immensi sconvolgimenti sociali. È una narrazione potente di crescita personale e risveglio collettivo, ambientata in un ricco e dettagliato contesto storico.
Minke is a young Javanese student of great intelligence and ambition. Living equally among the colonists and colonized of 19th-century Java, he battles against the confines of colonial strictures. It is his love for Annelies that enables him to find the strength to embrace his world.
Minke, ein adeliger Javaner, beginnt um die Jahrhundertwende unter dem Einfluss europäischen Geistes das Wertesystem seines Volkes und seinen Lebensweg zu hinterfragen. Er begegnet Nyai Ontosoroh, einer javanischen Frau, die als Konkubine an den holländischen Herman Mellema verkauft und gesellschaftlich verachtet, wegen ihrer ungewöhnlichen Bildung und ihres erfolgreichen Geschäftssinns aber gleichermaßen bewundert wird. Minke verliebt sich in ihre Tochter Annelies und wird nun in seinen eigenen Reihen wegen seines \"unmoralischen Umgangs\" verachtet und verfolgt. Ohnmächtig erlebt er die Wirkungen des \"weißen Gesetzes\". Minke is a young Javanese student of great intelligence and ambition. Living equally among the colonists and colonized of 19th-century Java, he battles against the confines of colonial strictures. It is his love for Annelies that enables him to find the strength to embrace his world.
Der Journalist Minke, ein junger Javaner aus adligem Hause, gerät in einen Konflikt, als seine Frau von holländischen Kolonialherren verschleppt und getötet wird. Sein anfänglicher Glaube an die 'Europäisierung' weicht einer wachsenden Skepsis, und er erhebt sich zusammen mit einer Bauernfamilie gegen die Landnahme.
In Child of All Nations, the reader is immediately swept up by a story that is profoundly feminist, devastatingly anticolonialist—and full of heartbreak, suspense, love, and fury. Pramoedya immerses the reader in a world that is astonishing in its vividness: the cultural whirlpool that was the Dutch East Indies of the 1890s. A story of awakening, it follows Minke, the main character of This Earth of Mankind, as he struggles to overcome the injustice all around him. Pramoedya’s full literary genius is evident in the brilliant characters that populate this world: Minke’s fragile Mixed-Race wife; a young Chinese revolutionary; an embattled Javanese peasant and his impoverished family; the French painter Jean Marais, to name just a few.
As the world moves into the twentieth century, Minke, one of the few European-educated Javanese, optimistically starts a new life in a new Betawi. With his enrollment in medical school and the opportunity to meet new people, there is every reason to believe that he can leave behind the tragedies of the past. But Minke can no more escape his past than he can escape his situation as part of an oppressed people under a foreign power. As his world begins to fall apart, Minke draws a small but fervent group around him to fight back against colonial exploitation. During the struggle, Minke finds love, friendship, and betrayal—with tragic consequences. And he goes from wanting to understand his world to wanting to change it. Pramoedya's full literary genius is again evident in the remarkable characters that populate the novel—and in his depiction of a people's painful emergence from colonial domination and the shackles of tradition.