Max Havelaar; or, the Coffee Auctions of the Dutch Trading Company
Multatuli
Lu par John Greenman





Called "the Book that Killed Colonialism", Max Havelaar is an indictment of the Dutch colonial policies of the 1850s that were designed to exploit the native Indonesian masses.
In the novel, the protagonist, Max Havelaar, tries to battle against a corrupt government system in Java, which was then a Dutch colony.
Although the novel addresses issues of a bygone era, it is still hailed widely for its literary styles and expression of thought.
Translator Baron Alphonse Nahuÿs, compared Max Havelaar to Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin for its exposure of the ill-treatment of a subject people by men intent on economic gain.
The book raised the awareness of Europeans at the time, that the wealth that they enjoyed was the result of suffering in other parts of the world.
Indonesian novelist Pramoedya Ananta Toer argued that by triggering these educational reforms, Max Havelaar was in turn responsible for the nationalist movement that ended Dutch colonialism in Indonesia after 1945, and which was instrumental in the call for decolonization in Africa and elsewhere in the world.
Thus, according to Pramoedya, Max Havelaar is "the book that killed colonialism".
Note: The author, Dutch writer Eduard Douwes Dekker, used "Multatuli" as
a pen name. The German poem was read by Michael Grunze of Heidelberg, Germany.
(Summary by John Greenman and Wikipedia) (11 hr 41 min)
Chapitres
Preface | 12:04 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter I | 16:13 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter II | 18:39 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter III | 15:47 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter IV | 31:53 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter V | 42:31 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter VI | 40:44 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter VII | 45:42 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter VIII | 45:39 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter IX | 29:21 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter X | 13:17 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XI | 42:45 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XII | 26:15 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XIII | 33:01 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XIV | 1:05:03 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XV | 36:21 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XVI | 40:03 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XVII | 58:39 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XVIII | 29:51 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XIX | 23:00 | Lu par John Greenman |
Chapter XX | 35:09 | Lu par John Greenman |
Critiques
A great telling of a sad tale.





Chubber
I wish they provided a translation for the extensive French, German and Dutch passages.
Super!





Una
Richtig klass gelesen, read very well!