Third World Internationalism and the Shaping of Modern Motherhood: Francisca Fanggidaej (1925–2013) in Indonesia and China

Key information

Date
Time
12:00 pm to 2:00 pm
Venue
Online (Zoom)

About this event

Speaker

Dr. Taomo Zhou (Nanyang Technological University, Singapore)

Abstract

This presentation traces an Indonesian woman activist’s life trajectory through different parts of the decolonizing world as a diplomat, a political exile and an asylum seeker. Francisca Fanggidaej (1925–2013) [pictured] was a left-wing intellectual and a member of the Indonesian Parliament. She was an activist in the Afro-Asian movements and a mother of seven children. She became a communist exile in China after the mass violence and regime change in Indonesia in 1965–1966 and endured a two-decade separation from her family. Based on a close reading of Fanggidaej’s dairy entries across four decades and more than 180 personal letters, this talk interweaves the public and private lives of Fanggidaej, thereby connecting the history of Third World internationalism to a global history of motherhood. It shows that the decline of Third World internationalism signalled not only a missed opportunity to reframe global geopolitics but also a lost moment to reimagine motherhood and restructure women’s relations with family and work.

Francisca Fanggidaej

Speaker biography

Taomo Zhou teaches modern Asian history at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. Her first book, Migration in the Time of Revolution: China, Indonesia and the Cold War (Cornell University Press, 2019), won a Foreign Affairs “Best Books of 2020” award and an Honorable Mention for the 2021 Harry J. Benda Prize from the Association for Asian Studies. 

Chair: Dr. Soe Tjen Marching (SOAS)

Registration

This event is free and open to public, and will be taking place online only.

If you would like to attend the event online, please register via Zoom.

Organiser: SOAS Centre of South East Asian Studies

Contact email: centres@soas.ac.uk