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1 ABSTRACT

This paper analyzes Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk using feminist theory of the second sex as Simone de Beauvoir described. The analysis is focused on the minor women characters that Srintil, the dancer, meets. Through the minor

women characters’ ideologies, the existence of patriarchal system will be analyzed. There are two ideologies found. Firstly, the myths in Dukuh Paruk lead the women to sexual freedom. Secondly, the dependency of women to men make them feel and believe themselves to be incomplete

without men. These ideologies result in men’s domination on sexual,

economic, and voice factors.

Keywords; Feminism, Patriarchy, Ideology INTRODUCTION

Ronggeng Dukuh Parukand the English version The Dancer, with Srintil as the woman major character and the minor women characters’ attitudes toward her, inspire this paper to analyze patriarchal system in the novel. The minor women characters here are women in DukuhParuk, women in Alaswangkal hamlet, women sellers in Dawuan Market, and

officials’ wives.

For all married women in DukuhParuk, their husbands’ sexual relationship with other

women is not considered as problems, especially if they have itwith Srintil – the dancer. Indeed, Dukuh Paruk women are proud of their husbands’ relationship with Srintil because it

shows their husbands’ masculinity and the families’ wealth. The similar thing happens to the

Alaswangkal women, they are feeling satisfied when a ronggeng is playing with men’s sexual desire. In fact, what happen to them is the opposite. Alaswangkal women see Srintil as a

woman who sexually has a power over men’s. Another thing happens to women in Dawuan

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women, driven by their ideology, do not hate their husbands’ relationship with other women. For some women, their husband relationship with other women is a problem. Both of the

women’s attitudes show that they believe that they need men. All the attitudes of those

women indicate that the women are afraid to lose their husbands. These are the evidences of

patriarchal attitudes underlying by women’s ideology. According to Beauvoir (16), women

cannot think of themselves without men, but men can think of theirselves without women. This ideology is part of the patriarchal system.

Ideology, according to Goldstein as cited in Barry’s Beginning Theory an Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory (110), is a system of a way society thinking, that is represented

by images, myths, ideas, or concepts that historically exist in the society. With different

images, myths, ideas, and concepts of thinking, women act different way in attract men’s

attention in order to keep the men by their side. Therefore, like Beauvoir’s concept of

women’s ideology saying that women cannot live without men (16), women try to be

attractive to get men’s attention. Women tend to do everything, such as making the men’s

happiness as a priority, and becoming angry to show their fear of losing them. As a result, some women hate other women who are more attractive, some give full freedom for their husbands, and some others make men’s happiness as priority. This ideology reflects that women allow men to rule their lives, and then it leads to patriarchal attitudes.

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patriarchal system. The third is women sellers in Dawuan market. They are also kind to Srintil because they do not worry that their husbands will have affair with Srintil. They have no worry because their husbands do not have enough money to do it. In the other hand, the

officials’ wives will hate if their husbands have sexual relationship with Srintil or other

women. However, these four women’s attitudes show the men’s power over them. The men’s

power develops ideologies that support the existence of patriarchal system. The women’s attitudes show that their ideologies are influenced by patriarchal attitudes that make women believe they cannot live without men (Beauvoir, 16).

Based on minor women characters’ attitudes in Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk, I am interested to analyze the ideology of Javanese society that is affected by patriarchal system. Usually novel analysis focuses in the main character. However, this analysis will focus on the minor women characters. It is because the minor women characters reveal the ideology of the Dukuh Paruk residents, Alaswangkal residents, Dawuan market people, and the officials’ wives. Using Second Sex by Simon de Beauvoir, I will analyze the patriarchal ideology that is showed by the minor women characters in Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk. I attempt to analyze patriarchal system through the characterization of minor women characters and the ideas expressed through their dialogues, monologues, and action toward the main as stated in The Dancer.

The analysis will answer two questions which become the focus of this study. The first question is: what are minor women characters’ ideologies that influenced by patriarchal system in Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk? After finding out minor women character’s ideology, I

will attempt to analyze how the minor women characters’ patriarchal ideologies in Ronggeng

Dukuh Paruk correlate with the patriarchal ideologies which are explained in the Second Sex

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This paper attempts to reveal some evidences of patriarchy found in Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk. The minor women characters’ ideology will be analyzed to see how powerful

patriarchy determines these women’s point of view. From analyzing this novel, I hope

women will realize that gender inequality happens in many different ways. In Indonesia, even though many people have been against it, in reality patriarchy is still take place. It is due to

sometimes, as Beauvoir (19) wrote, women’s effort against the inequality just ended in the

symbolic affirmation from men. This paper tries to show gender inequality in the 1960s. The expectation is people will know whether women have gained real equality or just symbolic affirmation from men by comparing the gender inequality in the past to today similar practices using literary works. This paper tries to show to Javanese women what happened to

women in Java in 1960s, so they can compare it to today’s women treatment and attitudes

around them, such as; in literary work, social media, or environment. Through this paper, I also attempt to make women recognize Javanese ideology which is also linked to patriarchal ideology as Simone de Beauvoir describes. By recognizing Javanese ideology hopefully it makes women realize how big the impact of patriarchal ideologies in their lives. Since in

Indonesia, especially in Central Java, women are still under men’s rules, this paper is

expected to inspire women in making themselves free from patriarchal ideology. It is hoped that they can start to make a choice for themselves. Therefore, they can change the way they

think and get the position, right, and chance in their lives are equal as the men’s.

LITERATURE REVIEW NOVEL AS A POP CULTURE

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such as novel, (Williams: 1961). So novels are worthy to be analyzed because they contain thoughts, experiences, languages, and conventions of a society.

As one of the cultural products, a novel reflects the culture of a specific place. Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk indeed reflects Central Java, especially north coastal area, cultural life in the 1960s era. This novel is worthy to analyze because it reflects many values of the Central Java culture on how women see and live their lives. Central Java cultures and values are reflected in Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk through its dialogues, monologues, and prologues that describe its language, experience, social relationship and social structure. This paper challenges the readers to explore Central Javanese women experiences in the past and in the present through novel as literary work.

IDEOLOGY

This paper will focus on some definitions of ideology, according to Eagleton. Those definitions are “a body of ideas characteristics of a particular social group or class, idea or false idea which legitimate a dominant political power, format of thought motivated by social interests, socially necessary illusion, and action-oriented set of belief” (Eagleton, 1-2). Ideology then is an illusion of social necessity that develops format of thought or idea, in order to legitimate a dominant political power. The idea determines an action-oriented of a particular social group or class that believes it. So, ideology makes social groups or classes different one to another because they have different set of ideas which makes them act differently.

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legitimating the men’s power toward women. Eagleton (6) also said that all the ideologies are

oppressive and legitimating dominant political power. In feminism ideology, women are oppressed through the ideology of social group history and beliefs, or religious view. More over in Indonesia religious views and state are strengthen the patriarchal ideologies (Hellwig, 17).

Since this paper using the feminism theory according The Second Sex by Simone de Beauvoir, feminism ideology is used. The reason is because the feminism theory describes women oppression as the result of the patriarchal ideology. Further more Ideologies have important role in the literature works, since it is not only reflected and described but it also can be strengthen or weaken by literature works (Hellwig, 16).

A FEMINIST LOOK at PATRIARCHY

In this paper patriarchy is the focus. Patriarchy is when the men rule everything, from the family, region, until the whole country. According to Young, “Patriarchy starts with the role of father in a family that develops into oppression by men in all of life’s aspects to the

feminine” (417). In a simpler way, patriarchy is a domination of men in the leader position.

When the leaders are dominated by men, it leads to men’s domination over the women’s

lives. The domination makes women’s positions are below men. Figes (23) also says, for

centuries, men pass down the idea that women are intellectually inferior and men are the superior ones. As the superior and the intellectual ones, men do not consider women as important as them. Beauvoir (15) states that from the beginning, the masculine is believed as the absolute human type. If only masculine is considered as the absolute one, then the

feminine one is not absolute. It means that men’s position is higher than women’s position.

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feel that they need men. Then to attract men’s attention, women have a tendency to be what men want them to be.

Being as men want, women become the man’s puppets. As Figes (15) defines, “The types

of women that society has produced in the past, the roles women have played and failed to play, sprang from the dictates and expectation of men. Women have been largely man-made, even today numerous psychological studies have revealed that women and girls are still more

dependent on social approval than men.”In patriarchal society, social approval means men’s

approval. To be approved by men, women are likely to be what men want. Following the social approval, women seem to treat men as the one they need. These women attitudes lead women to be ruled by men, which belongs to patriarchal system.

The Second Sex defines feminism as the result of the patriarchy that makes women and

men not in the equal position. Beauvoir (171) shows the women positions in patriarchal system are as “the other” and “the dependent”. Keeping the women’s position to be “the

other” and “dependent”, men set up the world by setting up codes and laws against them.

This condition makes women definitely to be “the other” from the men who define the world,

because women live in the men’s world. As Beauvoir says that, in the patriarchal society,

men’s products are all represented in the world. Men describe the world from their point of

views, so it makes women confuse with the absolute truth (194).Since the world represents

men’s point of view, women know a truth only by what men describe as the truth. Women do

not really know the truth about the myths. As the result of men’s descriptions of the world,

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women become the object. In other words, women are just “the other”, because women lack

of dignity, and their relation to men have been defined by men.

As “the other”, women are not as important as men. As the subject, men regard women as

the object (Beauvoir, 173). Therefore, women are the object and men are the subject in many things, such as sexual, economic, and also social. Normally, women can be taken by the man for sex at any time, whereas men take women only when they want to (Beauvoir, 395). Here women are the object of sexual activities, because the ones who have the choice to do the sexual activities are men. Therefore, men decide whether they are going to have sex or not, without any consideration of women’s want. This is one of the reasons how women become the sexual object of the men.

Women in patriarchal civilization dedicate themselves to men’s sexual freedom, but sexually women are limited by marriage (Beauvoir, 395).So men’s sexual freedom are not

limited by marriage. Since a wife is man’s property, a man can naturally has sex with many

women. This is also the reason of women being the sexual object. Facing this condition, women can choose between two solutions; either continuing the values of women as their grandmother inherited, or no longer recognizing any values (Beauvoir, 127). It is a big possibility that the past generation pass on these values to the next generation. Society tells us that as the women, we should please the men, fulfill the men’s wants, or agree with men’s sexual freedom. In the patriarchal society, women have to accept the men’s sexual freedom.

When women recognize no values, women will no longer accept men’s sexual freedom.

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9 FEMINISM THEORY

Feminism happens because of the patriarchal system that leads to the unequal treatment

between genders. Feminism can be defined as “Set of beliefs, values, and attitudes centered

on the high valuation of women as human beings. Women are not valued for attributes imposed on them by others, but for those that exist in and are chosen by women their selves”

(Bates, 4). Feminists’ goal is to value women as human beings, not like the definition of

patriarchal society toward women. Therefore, feminism is an idea that working on equality and freedom for women as human beings. Some cultures consider women as weak creatures, the ones who cannot do something important, the ones who are in the second position and the

ones who have to obey men’s rule. In other words, women are not as important as men. For

men, what women do is simply not very important, so that men always control what women do (Bates, 8).

In patriarchal societies women unfairness and oppression under the men happens in almost all aspects of life. According to French (10), in the past, women possessed almost no human rights- to a political voice, to inherit, to own property, and to do business on their own. They even lacked right over their own bodies. It means that the movements, rights, and liberation of women are limited. The condition of women makes the feminists concern on

many social aspect of women’s life, such as: political, cultural, educational, and sexual

issues. According to Bates (4), feminists reject the assignment of social roles according to whether a person is male or female. Some feminists see women and men as one kind of species that is human beings. As human beings, they all have the same opportunity, right, and freedom. They are not differentiated by gender and sex.

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women in literature by men and women (Barry, 92). The purpose of the examination of the women positions through literary works is important in order to make women realize whether there are socially constructed or essentially different. Since men and women are actually the same as human beings, they should have the same right and chance to have full liberation to be happy in this life.

PATRIARCHAL SYSTEM IN CENTRAL JAVA SOCIETY IN THE END OF NINETIETH CENTURY UNTIL EARLY OF TWENTIETH CENTURY

In Java, women oppression also happens. Especially in Central Java, there is a common saying among Javanese that women’s responsibilities are only to macak (to put on makeup), masak (to cook), and manak (to give birth). It means Javanese women only have to do family

business; and their activities are limited by society. In patriarchal society, women often experience something because they are women (Logan, 643). Javanese indeed follows

patriarchal system because the women’s experiences are limited. All Javanese women in the

past did not have to be clever or have a good job, but they only had to focus on domestic chores such as; work in the kitchen and cook, to take care of children, and to put on make up to make themselves beautiful. Most women did what society wanted them to do, and put behind whatever else they might want.

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pingitan, she did it. Kartini is one example of Javanese women portrayal. Javanse women

rarely broke the rule because they are afraid of the effect and culture. In patriarchal system, women are oppressed acutely. The oppression even endangers women’s voice, spirit, health, safety, economic, and emotional security (Logan, 643). The condition of patriarchal culture makes women hardly have choices in their lives.

In the past, Javanese women’s choices were very limited by traditions. In the same book

Rosyadi states; Kartini described Javanese women suffer because they are trapped by traditions, abandoned to go to school, alienated, and had to be ready with polygamy(22).Women do not make any defense of their rights, because women rebellion will affect in many vital aspects of their lives. As stated by Mulder, Javanese people are not individualist, they have a high need for social acceptance. They mutually control each other by giving a social punishment for others’ mistakes. The social punishment is in a form of labeling to the ones who do bad things. When they are labeled as a bad person, they will feel embrace and lose their social acceptance (91). In this case, for Central Javanese, women’s rebellion affects their spirit and emotional security. If they make mistake, people will talk behind their back and consider them as bad persons. Even worst, they will lose their social acceptance. For Javanese, others’ opinions are very important. Consequently, they have to behave and follow the social rules in order to keep their social acceptance. The social condition makes the women silence happened in Central Java for a long time. They do not make any defense of their rights because of the social consequences.

The Central Java patriarchal system also can be seen from the Indonesian women

association called “Dharma Wanita”. It explains 5 rules of the women’s tasks: (1) to function

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shown that the Indonesian women generally focuse on their husband, children, and household. Although Dharma Wanita still exist today, the focus is changed to social activities and the 5 rules are omitted. Unfortunately, the change of Dharma Wanita does not mean Javanese women are free from patriarchal system. Nowadays, some hamlets in Central Java are still holding to the patriarchal system.

The information about Javanese women treatment is used to give background aboutthe real social condition at that time when Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk takes place. The social condition gives background information and strong evidence that the novel is one of the products of the social condition at that time.

SUMMARY

Dukuh Paruk is a hamlet with all the people that are impoverished, uneducated, rude, and atheist. When all the other villages around it have known and have followed a particular religion, Dukuh Paruk people still believe that their entire lives depend on the spirit of their ancestor, Ki Secamenggala. What all Dukuh Paruk people do are always based on what Ki Secamenggala said to the previous generation. As Ki Secamenggala told before, a girl that born there with dancing ability have to be a Ronggeng (dancer). Dukuh Paruk people believe that the dancer is not created, but the reincarnation of the previous dancer as blessed by Ki Secamenggala. Srintil, the dancer, makes Dukuh Paruk people proud, because she is the most beautiful dancer Dukuh Paruk has ever had. Women, men, children, and also the elderly are kind to Srintil the Dancer, except Rasus, one of her playmates. Rasus is the only one who does not like Srintil to be a ronggeng.

At a very young age, eleven-year-old Srintil become a ronggeng. Surprisingly, DukuhParuk women feel proud if their husbands sleep with the eleven-year-ronggeng. For them, it is prestigious when their husbands can sleep with the ronggeng. It shows their

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people, the neighborhood villages tend not to like the ronggeng in a way people of Dukuh Paruk do. However, they still treat the ronggeng well and give her respect. These women’s attitudes are contradicting to some of the women characters in the novel; they hate Srintil very much. However there is no minor women’s attitudes that shows their sorry about her, for being a ronggeng at young age.

When Srintil starts to want to have baby and marriage, she asks Rasus to marry her. However, Rasus rejects the proposal. Srintil is broken hearted because she gets hurt from being rejected. After the proposal rejection, she does not want to dance and sleep with men anymore and it makes Dukuh Paruk people sad. All Dukuh Paruk people are disappointed because she does not want to dance.

ANALYSIS

Dukuh Paruk Minor Women Characters’ Attitude

From the beginning, DukuhParuk is created by Ki Secamenggala, the ancestor of all people in Dukuh Paruk. Ki Secamenggala is a criminal but all Dukuh Paruk people honor him. This condition is mentioned in The Danceras follows:

A tiny area of settlement, situated almost two kilometers from the nearest road, Paruk could only be reached by traversing the network of dikes bordering the wet rice field. It was perhaps because of this isolation that the inhabitants of Paruk, over the years, had developed a unique way of life.

Twenty-three homes made up this tiny community, inhabited by people with a common genealogy. It was believed that all the villagers were descended from a man by the name of Ki Secamenggala, a shaman and mystic of ages past who, it was said, had sought out this very isolated area as a place to retire from his villainous career. To this place, the village of Paruk, Ki Secamenggala had entrusted his descendants, his flesh and blood.

The people of Paruk were aware of their ancestor’s dubious reputation, yet they still paid homage to him.

His grave is located on the crest of a small hill in the center of the village, was the focus of their spiritual lives, with constantly burning coals of incense on his gravestone bearing mute evidence of their devotion. (TD, p. 4-5)

They (Paruk women) believe that they carried the sacred trust of Ki Secamenggala to protect his descendants from extinction as a result of disaster and poverty. This meant having babies. (TD, p. 93)

Ki Secamenggala, the ancestor to all the people of Paruk, had left instruction for his descendants to include the ronggeng and calung a part of the village traditions. (TD, p. 149)

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alienated place called Dukuh Paruk. The isolated Dukuh Paruk makes the people there consider Ki Secamenggala as the only one who has power over them. As their God, Dukuh Paruk people please Ki Secamenggala. Dukuh Paruk seems to not have rules about sex, because Ki Secamenggala has sex with many women there. As the result, there are twenty three different houses in Dukuh Paruk and they are all one blood descendent of Ki Secamenggala. Following their God, Dukuh Paruk people also make love with each other.

Here Ki Secamenggala defines women and men relationship. He offers that men are sexually free and women have to agree and support it. The ideology is clearly giving advantages for men in their relationships with women. Their faith for Ki Secamenggala makes Dukuh Paruk people to live as he has lived. It means, Dukuh Paruk men enjoy free sex, woman who dance, and drinking alcohol. It is clear that the ideology passed down by Ki Secamenggala is a strong patriarchal ideology. As the ideology gives advantages to men in sexuality, and makes women feel alright about it. The ideology above is in line with

Beauvoir’s idea which reveals that in patriarchal society, men define the world and their

relation to women (194). Therefore, Dukuh Paruk ideology represents the men’s products since the relationship between men and women in Dukuh Paruk is defined by men and give them advantages too.

Dukuh Paruk people’s way of thinking leads them of women sexual exploitation. Besides the descendent, Ki Secamengala also wants peronggengan to be preserved in Dukuh Paruk. How Dukuh Paruk preserves peronggengan as Ki Secamenggala said is described through

Srintil’s grandfather, Sakarya’s dialogue and narrator’s monologue. He feels responsible for

the existence of Ronggeng as his fear to the dead of Ki Secamenggala.

“I hope it is as you say. Those of us in this hamlet who are elderly don’t want to die before seeing Paruk return to what it once was. I’ve been worried that Ki Secamenggala might even refuse me a spot in the cemetery if I don’t preserve the ronggeng tradition of hamlet.” (TD, p.12)

Sakarya was not only Srinitl’s grandfather, he was also a village elder, and felt he had to carry out the

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Dukuh Paruk people believe if they do not do what Ki Secamenggala has said, they will go to hell. So, they have to preserve the hamlets like what Ki Secamenggala has created before. Keeping free sex, dancing woman, and baby as the future preserver are the ways they preserve Dukuh Paruk. This belief leads the women to be the object of men’s sexual freedom that is supported by their attitudes and the myth. The myth is that Ki Secamenggala will not accept their dead body if they do not follow the rule. Dukuh Paruk women’s attitudes toward The Dancer and other women there, are the product of their belief to the myth and history made by Ki Secamenggala for them.

The ideology that exists in Dukuh Paruk makes the women think differently to the other women outside Dukuh Paruk. For Dukuh Paruk women, their husbands’ relationship with other woman is not a problem, especially with The Dancer they proud of. They also please the Dancer, because being The Dancer is the highest position of women. However, actually Ronggeng or the Dancer is made by Ki Secamenggala. This means that even the highest

position of women is still under men’s position. This is also connected to Beauvoir idea that

in patriarchal society women are established by men (194), because Ronggeng in Dukuh Paruk is made by men.

Realizing that Sintil position in the highest position among other women in Dukuh Paruk, they treat her as if she were a princess. After Srintil dances for the first time, they compete to take care of her. They insist to lull her, wash her clothes, take her bath, wash her hair, give her some massages, and give her the best fruit they have. A woman even wish Srintil is born from her womb.

“I never knew Srintil could dance so well,” she said. “I just want to cradle her in my arms and rock her

until she falls fast asleep on my lap.”

“I want to wash her clothes and help her with her morning bath,” another woman said.

“Srintil doesn’t belong to any one person. You aren’t only ones that want to pamper her. After the performance, I’m gonna talk to Mrs. Kartareja.”

“What are you going to do?”

“I want to give Srintil massage. The child will certainly be tired. I’m gonna give her a good rub down before she goes to bed.”

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Page 33-34: From then on, she became like a doll for the women of Paruk. Everyone wanted to coddle

her, to dote on her. The women of Paruk took turns to wash Srintil’s clothes. They bathed her and shampooed

her hair with an ashy substance they made from burnt rice stalks.

If a man happened to cut down a banana tree, he should try to carve a beautiful comb for Srintil. If a chicken was slaughtered because it was ill (nobody in the village would kill healthy chicken), Srintil would always get some of the meat. (TD, p.33-34)

The conversation above is Dukuh Paruk women’s conversation, talking about their plans to take care of Srintil. This conversation is the evidence that they worship Srintil. Seemingly, it is an honor to take care of her. All they want is to make Srintil happy. They even do not allow Srintil to do anything by herself. They keep Srintil away from tiredness and dirt. That Srintil has to face so many men, she should not look dirty. Otherwise men will not be interested to her. If Srintil gets tired or sick because doing the chores, the result is Srintil will not be able to dance well. Consequently, men will not be happy because Srintil cannot entertain them. The point of keeping Srintil in a good condition is that, their men can be entertained.

The women’s attitudes indicate that their ideology is inherited from their ancestor. The

only ideology that they know is that they have to preserve peronggengan and the ronggeng. Preserving their tradition makes these women do not realize that women are the sexual objects of men. More, they have no identity of themselves other than being sexualized objects

or taking care of the men’s sexual object, Srintil. It connects with Beauvoir idea for the

patriarchal society that women confuse about the absolute truth (194). Since the society is defined by men, women do not know whether their attitude in preparing the Dancer gives significant for them or not.

The reason why Dukuh Paruk women are taking care of Srintil like a child is because they

want their husbands to get Srintil’s innocent. In the page 38, it is stated that Dukuh Paruk

women are arguing for whose husband is going to get Srintil’s innocent.

Their words would certainly not have caused their husband to think that they were shackled in any way by marriage and family.

“When Srintilis allowed to dance socially, my husband will be the first man to touch her,” one of the woman

announced.

“Don’t be silly,” said another “The ronggeng’s choice will be the man that gives her the most money. And in this regard, my husband is unbeatable.”

“But your husband’s old. After just one dance, his butt will cramp.”

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“Well, don’t get to cocky. I could sell a goat so that my husband has enough money. I still believe that my

husband will be the man who first kisses Srintil.”

“We’ll just have to wait and see when the time comes, which husband will win.”

So it went on. A professional ronggeng dancer would never become a source of jealousy for the women of the village, rather the reverse. The more a husband dances with a ronggeng dancer, the prouder his wife feels. (TD, p.36)

This conversation shows that not only men,but also women want Srintil’s virginity for their

husbands. By getting Srintil’s innocent, they want to show their wealth and their husbands’ masculinity. That is why these women themselves are preparing Srintil to look beautiful, fresh, and healthy. This situation indicates the ideology of Dukuh Paruk people which

placesmen’s sexual desire as women’s priority.

The patriarchal ideology above correlates with at least three Beauvoir patriarchal ideas.

First, women’s relationship with men is being defined by men (194).In this case, since

beginning by Ki Secamenggala has assigned Dukuh Paruk women to take care of The Dancer. Whereas actually, the women do not get advantages by make Srintil beautiful, fresh,

and healthy. If their husbands get Srintil’s innocent, the only advantage they get is pride. On

the contrary, the men may get both advantages; the pleasure for watching Srintil dances and doing sexual activity with Srintil. The men are also feeling proud of their masculinity and wealth. Second, these women dream through the dreams of men (174).In fact, when Dukuh

Paruk men’s dreams are to have sex or dance with Srintil, it becomes their wives dreams.

Third, women are considered as sexual objects of men. Relating the women’s attitudes to

another patriarchal idea of Beauvoir, this ideology supports women to be men’s sexual

objects (194). Through the myth, men are keeping women to agree with their sexual freedom. As the result, women are being sexualized by men.

Women as men’s sexual objects also can be seen when a Dukuh Paruk woman is proud

when her baby is taken cared by Srintil. Tampi, feels proud because Srintil loves and wants her baby. It is stated in below:

“... . Hush. Don’t disturb him. And don’t call him your child anymore. Call him my child, Okay?”

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To make Srintil’s admirers happy, Tampi willingly gives her baby to Srintil forever. Men get

two advantages from this condition. First, Srintil does not have to be pregnant if she wants a baby. Thus, she will not get fat and unattractive like if she gets pregnant. As the result men

still can be satisfied by Srintil’s perfect body. Second, because Tampi is no longer busy to

taking care of her child, that means she is able to fulfill her husband’s sexual needs. It is the example of women as sexual objects of men (Beauvoir 173, Beauvoir 395).The more

important thing is women become men’s sexual objects because of the ideology that is

developed by the myth. As mentioned before, the myth represents men’s point of view in defining women and men sexual relationship (Beauvoir, 194).

In fact, Dukuh Paruk women do not have any other activities except satisfying their

husbands’ sexually, cooking, and taking care of their children. Explicitly, it is stated in the

story that the women’s life only focus on three activities; having sex, taking care of children,

and cooking.

For the village women, servicing their husbands wasn’t just something they had to do. It was the only other

activity outside of the kitchen and child rearing. In reality, the most important aspect of life Paruk women was on the mattress of their bamboo beds. (TD, p.165)

This paragraph mentions that beside preparing food in the kitchen and taking care of children, fulfill their husbands sexual needs is also their duty. It describes patriarchal condition according to Beauvoir that women dedicate themselves to men’s sexual freedom (395).

Whereas normally the one who initiate sexual activity is men, which means women’s desire

and want are hardly considered. Essentially, I am arguing that it happens because Ki Secamenggala chose a rural place to live. This isolated place makes Dukuh Paruk people do not have any idea about life except what he told them about.

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It was not unusual for a pregnant woman, or a woman who had recently given birth, to tell her husband to ask a special favor from Srintil. A midwife often gives similar advice to the husband. “Be careful not to have

sex with your wife before a hundred days has passed after the birth. Ask Srintil to help you if you can’t hold out.” (TD, p.248)

The attitude of this woman apparently concerns on another woman’s health and put aside

man’s desire. However, what really happens is the new mother sacrifice the other woman to

fulfill her husband sexual need. Again, women become the sexual objects of men. When the

wife cannot fulfill husband’s sexual need, the husband can sleep with another woman.

Women in Dukuh Paruk are actually the victim of men’s sexual demands. The women become the victim because the important thing is the husband still can have sex even if not with his wife.

Dukuh Paruk shows sexual freedom, because sex is not ruled by marriage there. The sexual freedom is not equal for men and women. In Dukuh Paruk, if a husband finds his wife sleeping with a neighbor, he will not get angry, because he also can do the same thing with the neighbor’s wife as quoted here from the novel;

There (in Paruk), for example, a husband wouldn’t even get upset if he found his wife sleeping with his neighbor. The husband would know that the practical way of taking action was to go to the neighbor’s wife and

sleep with her. (TD, p.88)

It sounds as if in Dukuh Paruk women and men have the same position in the sexual relationship. Since, both women and men have the same chance to have sex not only with their husband or wife. But, when we look deeper, again, women are just the sexual objects of men. Paragraph above mentions that when a husband finds his wifesleeping with another

man, he will not get angry. He will just come to the man’s house to sleep with the man’s

wife. Nevertheless, there is no explanation in the book that if a woman finds her husband having sex with another woman then she can come to the woman’s house tosleep with the

woman’s husband. Therefore only men can come to women’s and not on the other way

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women’s sexual desire, links to Beauvoir idea, as men’s property, women are considered as

the sexual objects (173). Women as sexual objects are supported by the women attitudes that

dedicate themselves to men’s sexual freedom (Beauvoir, 395).

From the women attitudes that are explain above, it is clear that women in Dukuh Paruk

are become men’s the sexual objects. The condition becomes worse because they do not

realize that they are being sexualized by men as they apply ideology that is inherited by their ancestor. The myth that exist in Dukuh Paruk develops their way of their thinking to support

men’s sexual freedom. Living in an isolated place and holding on to Ki Secamenggala’s

words, instead they are proud of the men’s sexual freedom, which is actually not bring real

happiness for them.

Alaswangkal Women’s Attitudes

Minor women’s attitudes in Alaswangkal are shown when Srintil is performing there. The

narrator shows that the women in Alaswangkal love The Dancer. They love the Dancer because they feel she represents them in playing men’s sexual desire which indicates that they are lack of sexual power to men. As stated in below:

As the evening grew darker, more and more torches began to move toward Sentika’s house (the place the

ronggeng will dances). The children would be satisfied just to watch. The men came either expecting to feel aroused with passion or with nostalgia for pas passions. The women would experience a strange feeling of pride. They were happy to see a ronggeng like Srintil show women’s natural power over men. For the village women, the only time they could experience men being manipulated by female sex, and not the other way around as was the usual state of affairs, was during a performance of ronggeng. (TD, p.232)

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This situation correlates with Beauvoir’s concept of patriarchal women that they are lack

of dignity in the men’s eyes, because of the norms held by society about women and men

relationship. Society rules in patriarchal environment is defined by men, (194). In these setting men describe themselves as the ones who have the rights in sexual activity and women have to follow them.

Dawuan Market Women’s Attitude

When Srintil comes to Dawuan Market to go shopping, many sellers give her their stuff for free. There is an old woman gives a bra she sells, the mango seller gives some mangos for her, and a traditional herbs tonic seller gives a glass tonic for her.

An old woman ran up to Srintil from behind, holding out a chemise.

“Oh, my pretty girl, you must wear this chemise. You will look beautiful wearing it. Your breasts are filling

out.”

“How much is it?”Srintil asked. “I don’t want to sell it to you. ...”

But it was not only chemise vendor who give merchandise to Srintil. Others followed suit. A woman selling

fruit presented her with some ripe mangos, of “to fresh you when you stay awake all those nights.” A traditional herbal medicine specialist quickly concocted a special brew. “So that your muscles remain firm. Those young men are so rude and they hate flabbiness!” (TD, p.85)

Dawuan Market Women give their stuffs for free to Srintil in order to make her appearance look good. The bra makes her breasts look more beautiful. The fruits seller gives her mangos in order to make Srintil looks fresh, because she knows Srintil has to stay up late almost every night. While the traditional herbs tonic seller, she gives the traditional medicine for Srintil in order to keep her body adored by men, in order to satisfy men who sleep with her. Therefore, men are happy for the beautiful, fresh, and virgin-like body of Srintil. These attitudes show they unconsciously women dream through men’s dreams (Beauvoir, 174). The

women’s attitudes are influenced by the idea that women cannot live without men and

supported by men’s definition about a perfect woman (Beauvoir, 16 – Beauvoir, 194).

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Women sellers are also jealous with Srintil because of her beauty that attracts men’s attention. The jealousy of women sellers sustain their ideology that women have to be

beautiful and sexually attractive to get men’s acceptance. The ideology links to Beauvoir idea

that in patriarchal society, women are defined by men (194).The women are defined that women cannot live without men (Beauvoir, 16).The ideology makes women sellers married with unemployed men, because they are not beautiful. Following the society’s way of thinking, people think that the wealthy men are able to get more beautiful women. As stated in the Dawuan women sellers on below:

“How lucky is it to be so beautiful. Even after being imprisoned, after living in an isolated little hovel in Paruk, she can still find a young man interested in her. And Srintil’s guest is even a man from Jakarta.”

“Indeed. That’s not your fate. How come your lips are floppy and your nose looks like salakfruit?”

“Well, sure. Luckily, my husband is so stupid that I was able to have some kids.”

“Your husband isn’t stupid, he’s just poor. If he had money, I bet he wouldn’t be quite so happy to have you

as his wife,”

“So, what about your husband?”

“He is my husband at home. Elsewhere, I really don’t know.”

“Well, sure. I don’t know what my husband does at home while I’m here at the market. But, I don’t think

about things like that. I don’t want to worry myself sick.”

“Sometimes, I am. Sometimes, I’m not. I’m jealous when I go through rough time and my husband act up. But, I’m not jealous when I remember my ugly body. I’m lucky to have a husband at all!.”

“But take a look at our neighbor, that woman over selling material. Here, in the market, she’s probably the prettiest and the most elegant woman, and she’s from a wealthy family. Her husband is worthless. The only

thing he does is trap mourning doves. Sometimes he even uses her money to gamble. What do you say about

women like her?”

“If they wouldn’t, then a woman like her just needs a man to father her children. Nothing else. But, no matter what, with a husband who’s an asshole, you can do whatever you want!”

“Morally right? Why, we are. We’re ugly women but we still have husband and children. And our husband aren’t unfaithful because they’re too poor to fool around. That’s right! We’re lucky because we’ve accepted out lot in life.”(TD, p.378-379)

The beginning of the conversation shows that the women sellers realize that men want beautiful women and they are not beautiful women. Even though they are not beautiful, they still believe that they need men to complete them. Living in the middle of patriarchal society with this kind of ideology, women are forced to accept men who can contribute nothing in their lives, but children. Even though the women sellers have to work by themselves to fulfill

their families’ needed, they still believe that they need men.

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the market. The women ignorance implies their belief that the happiness of men is more important than theirs. These women want their men to stay by their side. This condition makes women allow their husbands to do anything they want. This reflects Beauvoir idea about women that they need men to complete their lives (16).

Local Officials’ Wives Attitude

Srintil is well known among Kawedanan officials. Kawedanan is a stage of Dutch government in the Colonialism era until several years after Indonesia Independent. Many men who work in Kawedanan office also get attracted to Srintil, they want to have sex with or even marry her. However, their wives apparently hamper their husbands’ intentions. Page 201 describes the reaction of the head Sub-District Governor’s wife. She feels anxious because Srintil is so beautiful and her husband looks at her.

The wife of the sub-district head felt uneasy, but she hid her feeling behind a bland smile. In all honesty she had to admit that the ronggeng from Paruk was definitely superior to herself in many ways. More beautiful than she had been, even when she was the same age. Surreptitiously, she stole a look at the seats on the front row which were filled with men. She felt more uneasy when she realized that almost every single man was looking at Srintil, including her husband.(TD, p.201)

That the wife is threatened by Srintil’s beauty shows that the wife is afraid of losing her

husband. This condition indicates the woman’s attitude as a result from patriarchal system that men like beautiful women. That is why many women want to be beautiful too. In the same time, women think that they need men to complete their lives (Beauvoir, 16). These two

conditions correlate with Beauvoir’s patriarchal ideas; women dream through men’s dream

and men keep women dependent in order to make women need them (Beauvoir, 174- Beauvoir, 171). Thus, the official’s wife hates Srintil for being more beautiful because she is

afraid to lose her husband’s attention.

Many married women are facing the same problem because their husbands want to take Srintil as their wife.

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It is evidence that generally women are afraid of the existence of another beautiful woman. In fact, their marriage gets threatened by Srintil’s beauty. This circumstance proves that men are the ones who control marriage relationship. If a man finds a more beautiful woman, they can leave his wife to be with the woman which confirms that women have no power in marriage relationship.

Contradict with the two other previous conditions, the local official’s wives attitudes

demonstrate their worry and fear of Srintil’s existence, because there is a possibilities that

their husband may have a relationship with Srintil. The anxious women are weaken by their powerless in their relationship with men. Yet, men have power in their relationship to women, as they can decide whether they will go on or start a new relationship. Men’s power

leads women to do everything to attract men’s attention as their fear to lose them. The

women’s fears end up in rules and standardizations created by men toward women which is

called patriarchal system. Besides showing women position as the second sex, it also proves that women’s dreams are to be fulfilled through the men’s dream as Beauvoir’s patriarchal ideas (Beauvoir, 171- Beauvoir, 174).

I. CONCLUSSION

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the people do not acknowledge any religious view. Second, women oppression happens to women in Dawuan market who are independent economically, so their unemployed husbands supposed to be need them. Unfortunately, these women hold on an ideology that they cannot live without men. That is why they let themselves to be economically oppressed to keep the men by their side. The last condition is the women oppressions toward the Official’s wives. They have no power to maintain their marriage when their husbands want another woman. They only have two choices, either to admit polygamy or lose her husband. It means that, it is not important whether the women agree or not because the men still get what they want. It happens because women have an ideology that they have to be like what men’s want, which is also driven by the ideology that they need men to complete them in their lives.

Those are women oppressions in Javanese society in the past that portrayed by one literary work, Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk. However, this kind of practice still exists today. To make women aware about women oppression is not an easy job. If women know it when they are adult, they may realize and aware of their way of thinking. Nevertheless, the common social rules and attitudes that adults have known so far, much or less, will limit their moves to get rid of the women oppression. Different things may happen if society teaches gender equality in the early age of new generation. This generation is being introduced to gender equality starting from the ideas that men and women have the same chance, right, and power. Hopefully, the new generations will get used to treat both gender as the same. In the future they are expected not to oppress one another.

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high. Even though the political tension was high, the tension was just in form of distrust among different party or organization (Roosa et all., 27).This novel shows those political condition in country side of Indonesia when G 30 S/ PKI happened. Considering the content

of the novel, the government banned some parts of this book that showed Indonesia’s

political condition. As the new regime have the authority to control the information spread in Indonesian citizen. Mcglynn says his writing entitled Silenced Voices, Muted Expressions: Indonesian Literature Today that “in practice, this decree (PP.NO. 4/1963) authorized the

Attorney General to ferret out any writing that appears to oppose Indonesia’s national

ideology, constitution, laws, and social norms or that has potential to disrupt the nation’s

political, economic, and social structure ”(Mcglynn, 39). The novel experience is an evidence

of Indonesian political condition at the time this novel was published. At that time, people lost their rights to deliver their aspirations and opinion toward government. Their voices were acutely oppressed, since many artists like singers, poems, and writers who criticize the government were arrested, many of them unknowingly lose. This novel is the evidence of Indonesian voice oppression by government in New Order regime.

This novel also can be a tool to deconstruct the same time period production of academic book that used in the public schools. The tragedy of G30S/PKI can be deconstructed by this novel as many book used by teacher at schools are indicated give false facts, as the New Order Government took authoritative control to give a good portrayal over Soeharto.

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27 ACKNOWLEGMENT

Finishing my thesis, I would like to give my biggest thank to Allah S.W.T for the blessing and strength. Without the blessing and strength I will not be able to finish this thesis.

I also thank my parents and my brothers for supporting me financially and mentally. Without their support I would not be here, in Satya Wacana Christian University. Then I would not meet the best supervisor and second reader ever. I thank you Danielle and Mam Suzana for being patient and helpful in my thesis writing.

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28 REFERENCES

Bates, U. U., Denmark, F. L., Held, V., Helly, D. O., Lees, S. H., Pomeroy, S. B., et al.

Women's Realities, Women's Choices. New York: Oxford University Press, 1983.

Print.

Beauvoir, Simone De. The Second Sex. London: Lowe and Brydone, 1953. Print. Eagleton, Terry. Ideology: An Intrduction. London: Verso, 1991. Print.

Figes, Eva. Patriarchal Attitudes. New York: Persea Books, 1970.

French, M. The War Against Women. New York: Matrix Production, 1992. Print.

Logan, L. M. (2005). The Importance of Women to Early American Study : A socio-Cultural

Justice Prespective. University of Central Florida , 41-43.

Mcglynn, J. H. “Silinced Voice, Muted Expressions:Indonesian Literature Toda”. Silenced Voices. Manoa : University of Hawai’i Press, 2000. Print.

Mulder, N. Inside Indonesian Society; Cultural change in Java. Yogyakarta: Kanisius, 2005. 38-44.Print.

Risyadi, Imron. RA. KaritiniBiografiSingkat 1879-1904. Jogjakarta: Garasi, 2010. Print. Roosa, J., Ayu Ratih, Hilmar Farid. Tahun yang Tak Pernah Berakhir. Jakarta : Lembaga

Studi dan Advokasi Masyarakat (Elsam), 2004. Print.

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