cover
Contact Name
Yudhi Andoni
Contact Email
yudhiandoni@hum.unand.ac.id
Phone
+6281363443699
Journal Mail Official
yudhiandoni@hum.unand.ac.id
Editorial Address
Fakultas Ilmu Budaya, Universitas Andalas, Kampus Limau Manis, Padang.
Location
Kota padang,
Sumatera barat
INDONESIA
Jurnal Ceteris Paribus: Jurnal Sejarah dan Humaniora
Published by Universitas Andalas
ISSN : -     EISSN : 29640296     DOI : https://doi.org/10.25077/jcp.1.2.1-10.2022
Jurnal Ceteris Paribus (JCP) is a peer-reviewed, open-access journal published by Fakultas Ilmu Budaya (FIB) Universitas Andalas, Padang, West Sumatra, Indonesia. It invites original articles on various issues all areas and periods in Indonesian history, and deals with all aspects of the history including economic, social, cultural, and politics. All historical approaches are also welcomed. This journal accepts on diverse format includes an article from scientific forums, review essays, and special issues. JCP seeks to publish a balanced mix of high-quality theoretical or empirical research articles, case studies, review papers, comparative studies, exploratory papers, and book reviews. All accepted manuscripts will be published online. JCP works closely with Kato Institute, which provides editorial members, peer reviewers, and authors, both are professional institutions related to JCP aims and scopes. This journal is an Open Access Journal. Article copyright belongs to the author. All information in this journal is closed and protected by the journal manager and protected from outside interests. Focus and Scope JCP invites original articles on various issues within all areas and periods in Indonesian history, and deals with all aspects of the history including economic, social, cultural, and politics. All historical approaches are also welcomed. This journal accepts on diverse format includes an article from scientific forums, review essays, and special issues.
Articles 2 Documents
Search results for , issue "Vol 5 No 1 (2026)" : 2 Documents clear
LOGISTIK PERLAWANAN: AGENSI MASYARAKAT LOKAL DALAM ORGANISASI DAPUR UMUM DI PARIT VII TUNGKAL I, JAMBI, 1945–1949 Tatik Winarti, Putri Ranjani; Mursal, Irhas Fansuri; Rahman, Abd
Jurnal Ceteris Paribus Vol 5 No 1 (2026)
Publisher : Faculty of Humanities, Andalas University, Padang, West Sumatra in cooperation with Kato Institute.

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25077/jcp.v5i1.52

Abstract

This study examines the strategic role of the Public Kitchen (Dapur Umum) organization as a multi-functional defense node within the context of the Dutch Military Aggression II (1945–1949) at Parit VII Tungkal I, Tanjung Jabung Barat Regency, Jambi. Unlike studies of revolutionary logistics centered in Java, this research foregrounds the agency of a coastal-swamp rural community long marginalized in national historical narratives. Employing a four-stage historical method—heuristics, source criticism, interpretation, and historiography—alongside a social history approach, this study examines how local society organized a subsistence strategy under conditions of asymmetric warfare. The principal finding is that the Public Kitchen at Parit VII Tungkal I functioned not merely as a food logistics provider but also as an arms storage facility, an emergency field hospital, and a guerrilla defense coordination hub. Its resilience against Dutch intelligence was sustained by three structural factors: the geographical advantage of the narrow Parit Gantung waterway, the kinship solidarity of the Banjar-Malay community, and the charismatic leadership of H. Mangun. These findings reinforce a history-from-below perspective in the historiography of the Indonesian Revolution, demonstrating that rural community agency constituted a structural—not merely supplementary—component of the independence struggle.
THE COQUETTE’S PRISON: ROSALIE MURRAY AND THE FAILURE OF HIGH-SOCIETY MARRIAGE AS A PATH TO AUTONOMY Syofyan, Donny
Jurnal Ceteris Paribus Vol 5 No 1 (2026)
Publisher : Faculty of Humanities, Andalas University, Padang, West Sumatra in cooperation with Kato Institute.

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.25077/jcp.v5i1.60

Abstract

Research on women's agency in Victorian literature typically focuses on the marginalized figure of the governess. At the same time, the upper-class coquette—who appears to wield power—remains overlooked in critical readings as a victim of systemic oppression. This research examines the coquette’s prison in Anne Brontë’s Agnes Grey, specifically analyzing how Rosalie Murray’s pursuit of high-society marriage serves as a mechanism of self-erasure rather than a path to autonomy. The study employs a qualitative approach rooted in feminist literary criticism and historical realism. The data consist of textual evidence from the novel, analyzed through close reading and character-comparative analysis. The research evaluates the transition from pre-marital performative power to post-marital domestic entrapment. The results indicate that Rosalie’s flirtatious artillery provides only a temporary and illusory agency. Upon marrying Sir Thomas Ashby for rank and wealth, she experiences a catastrophic loss of freedom, becoming a prisoner and a slave within the physical and psychological enclosures of Ashby Park. The research concludes that Victorian high-society marriage, when divorced from moral compatibility, leads to psychological petrifaction. Further studies are recommended to employ a digital humanities approach to map motifs of spatial and psychological confinement across the broader canon of the Brontës and to identify systemic patterns of gender inequality.

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