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page 1 of 5 curriculum vitae Jeffrey Hadler Associate Professor, Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY address Jeffrey Hadler DSSEAS, 7233 Dwinelle Hall phone (510) 642-8538 U.C. Berkeley fax (510) 643-2959 Berkeley, CA 94720-2520 e-mail [email protected] employment fall 2009-, Associate Professor, DSSEAS, U.C. Berkeley fall 2001-spring 2009, Assistant Professor, DSSEAS, U.C. Berkeley 2000-2001, Fulbright Senior Scholar at the State Islamic University Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta. Taught courses on historical theory and methodology, and on violence and memory in Indonesia. Continued research on anti-minority discourse and violence in colonial and modern Indonesia. education Cornell University, Department of History Ph.D. dissertation, “Places Like Home: Islam, Matriliny, and the History of Family in Minangkabau.” Special committee: David Wyatt (chair), Benedict Anderson (comparative politics), Paul Gellert (rural sociology). Degree date 28 May 2000. M.A. May, 1994, Southeast Asian History. Professor Takashi Shiraishi, advisor. Minor fields: African- American history, comparative politics. Yale University B.A. 1990, cum laude, distinction in the major, Comparative Literature and Southeast Asian Studies; Professor James C. Scott, advisor. honors and fellowships 2011 Harry J. Benda Prize from the Association for Asian Studies (given annually to an outstanding newer scholar for a first book in the field of Southeast Asian Studies). 2009 Mellon Research Grant for newly tenured faculty. 2008 Faculty Research Grant from the UCB Committee on Research for a publication subvention. 2008 Berkeley nominee for the Carnegie Scholars Program for the project, “Particular Heresies: Debating Muslim Matriliny in Indonesia.” summers 2006 and 2007, Faculty Research Grant from the UCB Committee on Research for fieldwork in Indonesia, “Night Letters: Art and Ambiguity in the Early Years of Soeharto’s New Order (1966-1974).” 2006, Humanities Research Fellowship sabbatical semester to finish book revisions for Muslims and Matriarchate: Colonial Society After Jihad. 2003-04, Townsend Center Fellow. 2003-04, Freeman Grant to revamp the undergraduate curriculum in Southeast Asian Studies, new courses offered in 2004-2005. summer 2003, UC Berkeley Mellon Library/Faculty Fellow for Undergraduate Research. 2002-03, COR research assistantship grant for developing a critical translation of a 19C Hebrew traveler’s account of Southeast Asia. 2002-03, Co-Principal Investigator for Pac Rim funded project: “Developing a Digital Research Infrastructure for Southeast Asia,” initial workshop held in Siem Reap, Cambodia, in January 2003. 1999-2000, Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Grant, “Translations of Antisemitism: Jews and Violence in Indonesia.” 1999, Vidal Sassoon Center for the International Study of Antisemitism pilot grant (declined). 1997-98, Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellowship from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. 1994-96, Fulbright Doctoral Research Award, SSRC International Dissertation Fellowship to conduct research in Indonesia (West Sumatra, Jakarta, and Yogyakarta) and the Netherlands.

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curriculum vitae Jeffrey Hadler

Associate Professor, Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY address

Jeffrey Hadler DSSEAS, 7233 Dwinelle Hall phone (510) 642-8538 U.C. Berkeley fax (510) 643-2959 Berkeley, CA 94720-2520 e-mail [email protected]

employment fall 2009-, Associate Professor, DSSEAS, U.C. Berkeley fall 2001-spring 2009, Assistant Professor, DSSEAS, U.C. Berkeley 2000-2001, Fulbright Senior Scholar at the State Islamic University Syarif Hidayatullah Jakarta. Taught

courses on historical theory and methodology, and on violence and memory in Indonesia. Continued research on anti-minority discourse and violence in colonial and modern Indonesia.

education Cornell University, Department of History Ph.D. dissertation, “Places Like Home: Islam, Matriliny, and the History of Family in Minangkabau.”

Special committee: David Wyatt (chair), Benedict Anderson (comparative politics), Paul Gellert (rural sociology). Degree date 28 May 2000.

M.A. May, 1994, Southeast Asian History. Professor Takashi Shiraishi, advisor. Minor fields: African-American history, comparative politics.

Yale University B.A. 1990, cum laude, distinction in the major, Comparative Literature and Southeast Asian Studies;

Professor James C. Scott, advisor.

honors and fellowships 2011 Harry J. Benda Prize from the Association for Asian Studies (given annually to an outstanding newer

scholar for a first book in the field of Southeast Asian Studies). 2009 Mellon Research Grant for newly tenured faculty. 2008 Faculty Research Grant from the UCB Committee on Research for a publication subvention. 2008 Berkeley nominee for the Carnegie Scholars Program for the project, “Particular Heresies: Debating

Muslim Matriliny in Indonesia.” summers 2006 and 2007, Faculty Research Grant from the UCB Committee on Research for fieldwork in

Indonesia, “Night Letters: Art and Ambiguity in the Early Years of Soeharto’s New Order (1966-1974).” 2006, Humanities Research Fellowship sabbatical semester to finish book revisions for Muslims and

Matriarchate: Colonial Society After Jihad. 2003-04, Townsend Center Fellow. 2003-04, Freeman Grant to revamp the undergraduate curriculum in Southeast Asian Studies, new

courses offered in 2004-2005. summer 2003, UC Berkeley Mellon Library/Faculty Fellow for Undergraduate Research. 2002-03, COR research assistantship grant for developing a critical translation of a 19C Hebrew traveler’s

account of Southeast Asia. 2002-03, Co-Principal Investigator for Pac Rim funded project: “Developing a Digital Research

Infrastructure for Southeast Asia,” initial workshop held in Siem Reap, Cambodia, in January 2003. 1999-2000, Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation Grant, “Translations of Antisemitism: Jews and Violence

in Indonesia.” 1999, Vidal Sassoon Center for the International Study of Antisemitism pilot grant (declined). 1997-98, Charlotte W. Newcombe Fellowship from the Woodrow Wilson Foundation. 1994-96, Fulbright Doctoral Research Award,

SSRC International Dissertation Fellowship to conduct research in Indonesia (West Sumatra, Jakarta, and Yogyakarta) and the Netherlands.

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books Sengketa Tiada Putus: Matriarkat, Reformisme Islam, dan Kolonialisme di Minangkabau, Jakarta: The

Freedom Institute and the Friedrich Naumann Stiftung, 2010. This is a fully revised and expanded translation of Muslims and Matriarchs with a new introduction by me and a preface by Taufik Abdullah.

Muslims and Matriarchs: Cultural Resilience in Indonesia through Jihad and Colonialism, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, September 2008. Published as a corrected paperback, Muslims and Matriarchs: Cultural Resilience in Minangkabau through Jihad and Colonialism, Singapore: NUS Press, 2009.

Co-editor and project historian, Indonesia in the Soeharto Years, Jakarta: Lontar Foundation, 2005. Second edition Leiden: KITLV, 2007. (Download sample chapter.)

academic articles “A Historiography of Violence and the Secular State in Indonesia: Tuanku Imam Bondjol and the Uses of

History,” Journal of Asian Studies, 67.3, August 2008. refereed “Translations of Antisemitism: Jews, the Chinese, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Indonesia,”

Indonesia and the Malay World 32.94, November 2004, pp. 291-313. refereed “Rusli Amran and the Rewriting of Minangkabau History,” Kyoto Review of Southest Asia 3, March 2003. “Home, Fatherhood, Succession: Three Generations of Amrullahs in 20th Century Indonesia,” Indonesia

65 (April 1998), pp. 122-154. refereed “Remus Orthography: The History of the Representation of the African-American Voice,” Journal of

Folklore Research 35.2 (August 1998), pp. 99-126. refereed “Membongkar Minangkabau,” Genta Budaya 1.1 (1995), pp. 60-77.

solicited reviews and additional publications Entries on “Hamka,” “Oto Iskandardinata,” and “Parada Harahap” for The Encyclopedia of Indonesia in the

Pacific War: Netherlands Institute for War Documentation (Handbook of Oriental Studies/Handbuch Der Orientalistik), edited by Peter Post, Amsterdam: Brill, 2010.

“’Sumatran Sultanate and Colonial State: Jambi and the Rise of Dutch Imperialism, 1830-1907’ by Elsbeth Locher-Scholten,” Journal of Asian Studies 67.1 (February 2008), pp. 346-47.

Entries on “Sumatra,” “Java” and “Bali” for the World Book Encyclopedia, 2007. “The Future of Scholarly Research Trends in Southeast Asian Studies,” CORMOSEA Bulletin 29 (June 2006),

pp. 7-11. “Hamka, Antara Bayang-bayang Bung Haji Rasul dan Kungkungan Adat Minangkabau,” Panjimas 1.19

(Jakarta), October 2003. “’From Rebellion to Integration’ by Audrey Kahin,” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 33.1 (Feb 2002), pp.

177-8. “A Historian among the Anthropologists: Post-Fieldwork Rantings,” SEAP Bulletin (Fall 1998), pp. 2-5. “‘To Live As Brothers’ by Barbara Andaya,” Journal of Asian Studies 57.1 (February 1998), pp. 269-71. “‘Central Pillars of the House’ by Joke van Reenen,” Indonesia 63 (April 1997), pp. 205-7. Cohen PL, Cheek RL, Hadler JA, Yount WJ, Eisenberg RA, “The Subclass Distribution of Human IgG

Rheumatoid Factor,” Journal of Immunology 139.5 (September 1987), pp. 1466-71.

recent projects Pacific-Rim Grant, with Henk Maier (UCR): Southeast Asian Voices: Developing an Online Bibliography for

Southeast Asian Materials in Translation. First workshop held Sept. 21-22, 2007, at UCB. With Christina Maslach, Robert Jacobsen, and Ingrid Seyer-Ochi I am developing an on-line pilot course

for incoming freshmen called “Doing Research: Critical Inquiry at Berkeley.” Organized two symposia: Muslim Societies of Southeast Asia: Perspectives from Anthropology, History

and Literature, UC Berkeley, Nov. 15, 2003; and Islam and Southeast Asia: Local, National, and Transnational Studies, UCLA, May 15, 2006.

Co-editor and historian for book, Indonesia in the Soeharto Years, Jakarta: Lontar Foundation, 2005; KITLV and NUS Presses, 2007. Conceptualized, organized, edited and checked for accuracy a history book featuring forty-six separate essays by historical actors and scholars. I carried out interviews, wrote much of the extraneous text, translated documents, and often re-wrote particularly eccentric essays.

Co-Principal Investigator for Pac Rim funded project: “Developing a Digital Research Infrastructure for Southeast Asia,” initial workshop held in Siem Reap, Cambodia, in January 2003.

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selected conference papers and seminars “Balinese Culture in the 21st Century,” a presentation for a moderated panel on Bali: Art, Ritual,

Performance, Asian Art Museum, San Francisco, 26 February 2011. “Transitional Modernity and Autoethnography in 19th Century Minangkabau,” invited lecture for SEATRiP

colloquium series, U.C. Riverside, 26 February 2010. “The Syncretic Archipelago: Colonial Anti-Semitism and the Construction of ‘Indonesia’,” invited lecture

for a workshop on Jews in Indonesia: Perceptions and Histories, National University of Singapore, 10 June 2009.

“Antisemitism, Syncretism, and the Definition of ‘Indonesia’,” invited lecture for the Yale Indonesia Forum Conference on Interreligious Relations in Indonesia, 4 April 2009.

“The Roots of Islamic Radicalism in Indonesia,” invited lecture for the National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, Tokyo, Japan, 1 August 2008.

“Transitional Modernity in 19th Century Sumatra,” invited lecture for the Center for Southeast Asian Studies, University of Washington Seattle, 19 February 2008.

“Negotiating Muslim Matriarchy in Indonesia,” invited lecture for the Critical Introductions to Islam and Muslim Politics lecture series at the University of Puget Sound, Seattle, 19 February 2008.

“Moderen Pancaroba Abad ke19: Minangkabau Schoolschriften,” invited lecture for the Puslit Sumberdaya Regional/Center for Area Studies, LIPI, Jakarta, 9 August 2007.

“The Padri War: A Wahhabi Experiment in 19th Century Sumatra,” lecture for the Berkeley CSEAS, 22 September 2006.

“Historiografi Adityawarman dan Menang Kerbau,” invited lecture at Andalas University, Limau Manis, Indonesia, 12 July 2006.

“Imam Bonjol, Wahhabi dan Kekerasan,” invited lecture at the IAIN Imam Bonjol in Padang, Indonesia, 10 July 2006.

“An Historiography of Violence and the Secular State in Indonesia,” paper presented at the symposium Islam and Southeast Asia: Local, National, and Transnational Studies, UCLA, 15 May 2006.

“The Future of Scholarly Research Trends in Southeast Asian Studies,” Keynote Address for the conference Rethinking Southeast Asia Collection Development: First International Colloquium of the Library of Congress Cooperative Acquisitions Program for Southeast Asia, U.C. Berkeley, 4 April 2006.

“Indeterminate Frames: Earthquakes and Uprisings in Sumatran History,” Southeast Asian Studies and Latin American Studies, U.C. Berkeley, 4 May 2005.

“The Discipline of Language in Southeast Asia,” AAS Annual Meeting, Chicago, 1 April 2005. “Islam, Matriliny and the Family in Minangkabau History,” invited lecture for the Department of History,

Northern Illinois University, 30 March 2005. “Adat versus Islam? Customary law and the power of women in Indonesia,” presented on the panel

Negotiating Gender and Community Rights in Asia, ORIAS Summer Teachers’ Institute, UC. Berkeley, 27 July 2004.

“Southeast Asian Studies in the United States: The State of the Field,” lecture for the Peking University Center for Southeast Asian Studies, Beijing, 2 June 2004.

“Translations of Antisemitism and the Jews of Indonesia: Hidden Forces, Lost Histories, and Modern Violence,” invited seminar for the Keio University Department of Political Science, Tokyo, 26 May 2004.

“Translations of Antisemitism: Jews, the Chinese, and Violence in Colonial and Postcolonial Indonesia,” special invited seminar for the Kyoto University Center for Southeast Asian Studies, 24 May 2004.

“The Futures of Matriliny in South and Southeast Asia,” AAS Annual Meeting, San Diego, 6 March 2004. “Immemorial Custom in the Balance: Haji Abdul Karim Amrullah, Datuk Sanggoeno Di Radjo, and Islam

versus Adat in 1919,” paper presented at the conference Muslim Societies of Southeast Asia: Perspectives from Anthropology, History and Literature, UC Berkeley, Nov. 15, 2003.

“Art and Politics in Indonesia: Placing Apotik Komik in Context,” lecture at the Intersection for the Arts in San Francisco, 27 September 2003.

“Will Indonesia Regress or Reform?” panel for the World Affairs Council of Northern California, 17 June 2003.

“Intimate Contention: Matrilineal Islam, Dutch Colonialism, and Political Architecture in Minangkabau, Indonesia,” invited lecture for the Berkeley Architecture and Urbanism Research Colloquium, 4 April 2003.

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“Mothers, Anthropologists, Communists: Legacies of 1910s and ‘20s Minangkabau,” presented with and organized the panel Politics and Matriliny: Comparative Historical and Anthropological Perspectives, AAS Annual Meeting, New York City, 30 March 2003.

“Historical Materials in Indonesia,” for the symposium New Horizons for Southeast Asia’s Past: Global Approaches to Digital Archive Management, Siem Reap, Cambodia, 6 January 2003.

“A World Elsewhere: Indonesia, Islam, and Jews,” the annual Broun Lecture for the Judea Reform Synagogue in Durham, NC, 1 November 2002.

“"Matrilineal Islam and Political Motherhood in West Sumatra, Indonesia,” lecture for the Program in Peace, War and Defense; the University Center for International Studies; and the Curriculum in Asian Studies, UNC-CH, 4 November 2002.

“Islam and Syncretism in the Construction of Southeast Asia,” talk for the Berkeley Faculty Lunch Forum, 7 October 2002.

“Islam, Modernity, and the Education of Children in Minangkabau, West Sumatra (1850-1920),” selected to participate in conference Designing Modern Childhoods, Berkeley, 2 May 2002.

“The Indigenizing Discourses of Indonesian Nationalism,” invited lecture for Indonesia: The Common Ground Symposium, UCLA, 9 November 2001.

Public lecture on “Islam in Indonesia” for the Tradition and Modernity in Southeast Asia series sponsored by the Berkeley Southeast Asianists, 5 October 2001.

Lecture in Indonesian on defining an area studies program, For the Gadjah Mada University Pusat Studi Asia-Pasifik, Yogyakarta, 23 February 2001.

“From Madison to Malino—Federalism in America and Indonesia,” presented in Indonesian with a US Embassy sponsored seminar on Federalism and Regional Autonomy, at Universitas Hasanuddin Makassar (6 June) and Universitas Sam Ratulangie Manado (8 June 2000).

“The Jews of Indonesia: Hidden Forces, Lost Histories, and Modern Violence,” presented with and chaired the panel Hidden Forces: Lost Histories of the Netherlands East Indies, at the AAS Annual Meeting, San Diego, 12 March 2000.

“Houses and Heroes: Indonesia at the Turn of the Century,” invited lecture for the Berkeley Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies, 8 March 2000.

“African-American and Indonesian History,” lecture in Indonesian for African-American History Month, invited by USIS, Jakarta, Taman Ismail Marzuki, 29 February 2000.

“Agama dan Hak Asasi Manusia: Yahudi,” led seminar for the Institut DIAN/Interfidei, Yogyakarta, 29 September 1999.

“Syncretic Fantasy: Philology, Anthropology, Islam, and the Study of Indonesia,” presented in Indonesian at the monthly lecture series for the State Islamic University (IAIN), Jakarta, 19 June 1999.

“Indonesian Reformasi: Rewriting History after the Fall of Soeharto,” lecture at Miyazaki International College, Japan, 21 April 1999.

“Speaking and Moving: Political Women in Early 20th Century Minangkabau,” presented with and chaired the panel, Cause and Form in Political Protest Movements in 20th Century Indonesia, at the Association for Asian Studies Annual Meeting, Boston Mass, 12 March 1999.

“Intimate Contention: Influencing the Home and Family in West Sumatra (1880-1927),” presented with the sponsored panel, Discourses Among the Local, Regional, and National in Indonesia, at the Association for Asian Studies Annual Meeting, Washington DC, 28 March 1998.

“Home, Fatherhood, Succession,” paper presented at the conference Reflecting on the Old and New in Modern Indonesia, Arizona State University, 13 June 1997.

“Alam Minangkabau: an indigenous Southeast Asian diaspora,” paper for the SSRC workshop on Southeast Asian diasporas, National University of Singapore, 9 December 1996.

“Sejarah ‘Suara Hitam’ Amerika Serikat: Kerumitan Penggambaran Orang yang Keturunan Orang Afrika di A.S.” seminar for the faculty of the IAIN Yogyakarta, 22 December 1995.

courses taught undergraduate: Introduction to the Peoples and Cultures of Island Southeast Asia; Islam and Society in

Southeast Asia; Cultures, Texts, and Politics in Southeast Asia; Southeast Asian History through Literature; Self, Representation, and Nation: Reading and Composition

graduate: Indonesia—Theories and Histories of Indonesia; Islam in Southeast Asia; Departmental Methodology Seminar; Southeast Asian History and Historiography; Modernity in Southeast Asia

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service to the profession Southeast Asia Council of the Association for Asian Studies, 2009-2012. Board of Directors, American Institute for Indonesian Studies (AIFIS), 2011-ongoing. Faculty Representative on the Executive Committee of the Southeast Asia Microform Project, Center for

Research Libraries, 2011-2014. Fellowship Selection Committee, Charlotte W. Newcombe Doctoral Dissertation Fellowship, 2009-

ongoing. National selection committee for the IIE Fulbright grants to Southeast Asia, 2004 and 2005. National selection committee for the National Endowment for the Humanities fellowships for South and

Southeast Asia, 2007. External grant application reviewer for the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada,

and the Israel Science Foundation. Steering Committee for the establishment of AORC-Indonesia (American Overseas Research Center),

2010-11. External reviewer for Cambridge University Press, Harvard University Press, Routledge, Kyoto University

Press, Monash Asia Institute, Critical Asian Studies, Indonesia and the Malay World, Comparative Studies in Society and History, Asian Survey and other journals.

Outside reviewer for tenure promotion cases. Outside evaluator for the Voice of America, Indonesian language programming.

service to the university Chair, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, summer 2011-ongoing. Member of the Committee on Research, UC Berkeley, fall 2010- ongoing. Head Graduate Advisor, DSSEAS, fall 2010- ongoing. Faculty Advisor for GSI Affairs, DSSEAS, fall 2009- ongoing. Executive committees of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies and the Group in Asian Studies at UC

Berkeley, 2001- ongoing. Summer Chair of the Department of South and Southeast Asian Studies, 2009 and 2010. Acting chair, Center for Southeast Asia Studies, fall 2010.

relevant languages Indonesian/Malay—excellent Jawi (old Malay in Arabic script), Minangkabau, Dutch—reading ability

memberships and affiliations Association for Asian Studies Koninklijk Instituut voor Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde (KITLV) Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society international advisory board for journal Indonesia and the Malay World (London, SOAS)