The Mute's Soliloquy: A Memoir

by Pramoedya Ananta Toer

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An Indonesian novelist's autobiography written from prison. In a collection of essays and letters, smuggled during his 14-year sentence for human rights activity, he describes various stages of his life and how he lost his hearing from beatings by guards.

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2 reviews
This volume is the largely unstructured memoir of Pramoedya Ananta Toer, an Indonesian writer who became a political prisoner on Buru Island in the mid-1960s. Most of this book was written in prison, and it is essentially a compilation of diverse writings composed at different times. Toer writes about his experiences in prison, as well as the fates of some of his fellow prisoners; he also writes about his own life and the evolution of his political ideas. Most of all, he writes about Indonesia, both as an ideal to strive for and as a country he loves despite its shortcomings.

This book was required reading for a class that I’m taking. As a memoir, it’s not great; there’s no real structure to it, and many sections are quite show more digressive and too long. Parts of it are interesting, but other sections are very dull. However, it was an extremely interesting book to me because of what I was able to learn about Indonesia, a country I about which I knew basically nothing. It was fascinating to become immersed in another culture and another way of thinking about the world. I also think that this book is universally important because it gives a voice to the political prisoners who suffered and died on Buru Island. The most important and moving part of book is the last chapter, the “Table of the Dead and the Missing,” which catalogs (as thoroughly as was possible at the time) Toer’s fellow prisoners who died or vanished from Buru. For that chapter alone, I’m glad that I read this book. show less
An excellent biography although constructed from scant notes and letters that is in fact two volume edition in Indonesian.

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76+ Works 2,947 Members
One of Indonesia's most prominent authors, Toer spent most of his adult life in prison; his works have frequently been banned by the government. Toer's first novel, The Fugitive (1950), was written during his internment by the Dutch. Toer became a leading figure in the Marxist literary group Lekra and was again incarcerated after the 1965 show more overthrow of Sukarno, joining thousands of other left-wing artists on the prison island of Buru. The author of over 30 works of fiction and nonfiction, Toer is best known for his Buru tetralogy, which traces the birth of nationalism in Indonesia. Most of the work was composed as narration to fellow prisoners, then later recorded and published after Toer's release in 1979. Although the events of the tetralogy take place in the past, they must be understood in the context of his experiences at Buru. In 1988 Toer received the PEN Freedom-to-Write Award. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Original title
Nyanyi tunggal seorang bisu, catatan-catatan pribadi Pramoedya Ananta Toer dari dehanan Pulan Buru
Alternate titles*
Lied van een gevangene
Original publication date
1988
Important places*
Buru, Indonesië
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genre
Biography & Memoir
DDC/MDS
899.22132Literature & rhetoricAsian LiteratureLiteratures of non-Austronesian languages of Oceania, of Austronesian languages, of miscellaneous languagesMalay and Austronesian languagesIndonesian languagesIndonesian (Bahasa Indonesia)Indonesian fiction1900–2000
LCC
PL5089 .T8 .Z4713Language and LiteratureLanguages and literatures of Eastern Asia, Africa, OceaniaLanguages of Eastern Asia, Africa, OceaniaLanguages of OceaniaMalayan (Indonesian) languages
BISAC

Statistics

Members
140
Popularity
231,310
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.89)
Languages
Dutch, English, German, Indonesian
Media
Paper
ISBNs
9
ASINs
2