Media Clippings
A compilation of every mention of Indonesian writers, written on English/foreign-language media. See also What Media Say.
Indonesia as Frankfurt Book Fair Guest of Honor in 2015
Jul 16, 2013 / Publishing Perspectives by Hannah JohnsonIn 2015 the Frankfurt Book Fair will present “the vibrant literature, talents and the rich culture of one of the most populous and ‘young’ countries in the world, of which only little is known in Germany”, says Director of Frankfurt Book Fair, Juergen Boos. Indonesia will follow Brazil (after Finland in 2014) as Guest of Honour of the Frankfurt Book Fair in 2015. The respective agreement was signed in early June between the Book Fair and the partner, the Ministry for Education and Culture of the Republic of Indonesia. With this, the Book Fair will present yet another growing country with huge potential and an expanding education sector as a focus. Since 2003 the Indonesian government has spent 20% of its national budget on education, also investing in digital textbooks. In 2011 this amounted to a sum of 21.5 billion Euros. The Indonesian economy presented a growth rate of 6.5% in 2012.
Makassar writers festival to open next week
Jun 23, 2013 / Jakarta Post by Andreas D. ArdityaThe Makassar International Writers Festival (MIWF) is set to roll for a third time from June 25 to 29 at Fort Rotterdam in Makassar, South Sulawesi. MIWF theme this year is My City, My Literature, emphasizing the importance of support given by the city and its citizens in developing literary events and the appreciation of literature.
Unlocking Indonesia Through An Exploration of Its Literature
Mar 10, 2013 / Jakarta Globe by C.W. WatsonReading novels is an excellent way of getting to know something about a country when one is newly arrived, doesn’t know much about it, and is going to be spending some time there. Certainly this was my experience coming to Indonesia for the first time some decades ago. Only at that time I was hampered by the fact that there were few novels — only ones by Mochtar Lubis as far as I’m aware — that had been translated into English or any other foreign language which I could read. I had to learn Indonesian first before I could start reading the literature and it took me a year of hard work before I could comfortably read fiction. But the hard work paid off, and I plunged into all the novels and short stories that I could lay my hands on (not always easy to obtain at that time) and found myself entering a new world, one which bore an ambivalent relationship to the one that I had learned about over a year of personal experience, bemused observation and animated conversation with friends and mentors about recent history and the place of religion and culture in Indonesian society. One of the reasons for the ambivalence was that in fact there had been very few novels published between 1962 and 1972, so there was nothing describing contemporary events. What I was reading then, constituted the reflections, mediated through the fiction of writers from the period before 1962, a historical period of about 50 years, since it was only around 1910 that novels and fiction began to circulate widely in densely populated areas in the archipelago. These pre-1962 novels and short stories described a national experience of a time of considerable political turmoil and extraordinarily rapid social and economic change. The memory of what had occurred had become part of the life of the Indonesians I knew, something that they never bothered to explain because it was so familiar to them, so taken for granted. Thanks to the reading of the novels, however, I now had access to this shared world, and I could at last understand the existential orientations of my friends, the nature of their beliefs, the values they held dear, their personal aspirations. It would take too long to recount here the variety and range of the books I read and the different insights which I gained from them: regional novels, especially those from West Sumatra, short stories and novels of the revolutionary period between 1945-50, psychological novels, coming of age stories, romances. From each of the readings I took something new that helped me to understand the complexity of Indonesia and refine the crude conceptions drawn either from my limited experience or from the reading of the usual academic works of history and the social sciences. I now can alert readers to some of those same novels, which are available in translation, so that expatriates who also share that early desire of mine to learn more about how Indonesian writers saw their own country and society. Expatriate readers already predisposed to literature will certainly have come across the works of Pramoedya Ananta Toer, whose tetralogy, the so-called Buru quartet of four historical novels set in the early 20th century, as the Penguin edition have long been available in the bookshops. But I would advise readers to try to obtain Pramoedya’s early works, the short stories and novellas set in his native Blora in Central Java, which describe the turbulent times of his boyhood in the 1930s. Some of his later work including the collection “Tales from Jakarta” set in the 1950s has been republished by Equinox in Jakarta and is easily obtainable. There is also a translation in French of his instructive novel “Korupsi” set in the same period, which allows one to set present-day phenomena of corruption in a historical perspective. A few French translations of other representative short stories and translations are also available from the Institut Francais Indonesia offices in major Indonesian cities, including “Voyage de Noces,” a hypnotic autobiographical novel by the most senior living Indonesian writer, Ajip Rosidi. Perhaps the best place to start, however, is the accomplished set of translations that are currently being brought out by the Lontar Foundation in Jakarta under the directorship of John McGlynn, who deserves more credit than he has been given so far for his work over the years in promoting Indonesian culture to an international audience. These beautifully produced editions with wonderful pictorial covers have at last made available in English the great Indonesian classic novels of the 1920s: “Sitti Nurbaya” and “Salah Asuhan,” set in West Sumatra, novels which for generations of Indonesian readers, at least before 1975, defined the terms in which the debates about Westernization and alleged conflicts between adat (indigenous culture and custom) and modern education were posed. Other novels in the series include the realistic work “The Fall and the Heart” of the female writer S. Rukiah, a tragic figure caught up in the aftermath of the events following the coup of 1965. Also translated is the novel “And the War Is Over” set in eastern Sumatra at the end of the Pacific War, which although only first published in 1979 offers an interesting Indonesian perspective on the period of the Japanese occupation. Of more contemporary novels, Oka Rusmini’s “Earth Dance” is a riveting story of a Balinese woman, and Ahmad Tohari’s graphic “The Dancer,” recently made into a passable Indonesian film, offers a glimpse of the world of popular Javanese village culture. And the most recent translation on offer is of prolific writer Kwee Tek Hoay’s 1927 novel, “The Rose of Cikembang,” which takes us into a different world altogether, that of the Peranakan Chinese. I just mentioned a few works here, but there is much more available, though they are sometimes difficult to locate. Readers, however, who have a passion for novels will find the effort of chasing up the books worthwhile — and I am sure that John McGlynn will be more than ready to help with his comprehensive lists of translated works. Indonesian readers unacquainted with these novels should also seek out the originals. Sadly, not enough young Indonesian readers know these emblematic works of their country’s past, and since they also have little opportunity to study their own history, they are losing touch with their origins. Reading novels is one way they can remedy the situation.
Mentors for Writers
Feb 26, 2013 / Personal Blog by Bryce AlcockA writer never stops learning how to write. Having produced dribs and drabs of prose and poetry all my life, I imagined when I set out to write in earnest four years ago that I ...
Notes about the INDONESIA Special Issue
Dec 29, 2012 / Cordite Poetry Review by Kent MacCarterWhen I approached major Indonesian poet Sapardi Djoko Damono – godfather of that sprawling nation’s contemporary poetics and a renowned translator of English-language works into Bahasa Indonesia – about working with me on a kind of ‘translation exchange’ to then publish online and promote in our countries, he e-replied enthusiastically that ‘we must’!
Crossing Bloodlines
Dec 29, 2012 / Cordite Poetry Review by Deborah ColeThe poems in this collection trace the overlapping cycles of the human journey from birth to death across the space/time habitat we measure in footfalls and poetic metre. Travelled in the company of family and community, our journeys enact the species’ heritage and legacy of kinship and violence – two sides of the same struggle towards a longed-for intimacy that might negate the spatial, temporal and psychological divide between the other and the self. Through commingling languages and intertwining elocutions, this issue explores the distances and intimacies between a varied set of human journeys by poets writing in Indonesia and Australia. As these two countries are so close on maps – but oftentimes, sadly, only on our maps – these poems invite the re-arrangement of our conceptual geographies.
Understanding Obsession With Women’s Body Through Performing Arts
Apr 25, 2012 / Jakarta Globe by Olin MonteiroOn April 21, Indonesians celebrated the birth of Kartini, a Javanese writer and educator who started a school for girls on her own porch. Kartini, one of Indonesia’s greatest heroines, continues to uplift Indonesian women’s rights. Kartini’s letters to her friend, which were translated into Bahasa Indonesia from Javanase decades later, revealed what were considered shocking thoughts for a woman during the colonial era, such as her passion for women's education, the desire to end polygamy and her spirit of nationalism. In 2012, the spirit of Kartini still resonates in the lives of many Indonesian women. Cultural performances and events were held to commemorate her birth, one of which was the theatrical performance “Goyang Penasaran” (“Obsessive Twist”).
Thugs, Dancers and Ojek Drivers: ‘Goyang Penasaran’ is Theater With a Twist
Apr 18, 2012 / Jakarta Globe by Catriona Richards[hide for=”!logged”]Many people think of the theater as a place for stuffy costumes and stale dialogue. But a play now showing at the Salihara cultural center in South Jakarta is sure to put a twist ...
The obsessive twist coming your way
Mar 24, 2012 / Jakarta Post by Dina IndrasafitriHorror movies milking the usual images of various types of ghouls and ghosts, as well as scantily clad women, who somehow find their way into the plots, still flood local cinemas. But the play Goyang ...
Found in Translation: Putting Indonesian Novels on the Map
May 20, 2011 / Jakarta Globe by Katrin FiggeIn the international world of books and literature, Indonesia has long been a blank spot on the map as only a handful of writers from the country, including Pramoedya Ananta Toer and Mochtar Lubis, are internationally known and read. A new series of Indonesian literature translated into English aims to change that. Officially launched on Thursday at Aksara bookstore in Plaza Indonesia, the new series called “Modern Library of Indonesia” includes 10 titles by local authors that cover a time span from the 1920s until 2001.