Output list
Conference paper
Knowing Indonesia from Afar: Indonesian Exiles and Australian Academics
Published 2008
17th Biennial Conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia: Is this the Asian Century?, 01/07/2008–03/07/2008, Melbourne, Australia
The violent lurch in 1965-66 from Sukarno’s Guided Democracy and to Suharto’s New Order was a dramatic and unparalleled turning point in Indonesia’s domestic politics and international relations. Coming at the height of the Cold War, it triggered a major international realignment for Indonesia as the state froze relations with former allies like China and the Soviet bloc, to embrace the West warmly, including Australia. Among the victims of this seismic diplomatic shift were the many hundreds, if not thousands, of Indonesian leftists trapped abroad who, if they chose to return to their homeland, would face the imprisonment or death that had been suffered by their political comrades. In their search for political refuge they scattered across states in Asia and Europe, relocating as host states’ international alignments shifted in the Cold War’s thaw. Yet for decades these exiles lobbied, wrote and published a wide range of material, including about their experiences in exile and their analyses of Indonesian politics. This paper will tentatively broach a collective silence, or at least an apparent lack of academic study, about Indonesian political exiles. It is not its proposition to compare experiences of these exiles with the victims in Indonesia killed and imprisoned for years without trial. Instead, it poses the curious question of why so little attention was directed at exilic communities (and why so few academic connections were fostered) when their existence was relatively common knowledge – or at least a matter of rumour or occasional note – amongst Australian Indonesianists. Instead, Indonesian exiles and Australian academics maintained very separate perspectives, while both ‘knowing Indonesia’ from afar.
Conference paper
Ethics and Institutions in Biographical Writing on Indonesian Subjects
Published 2006
The Pacific Review, 16, 4
Asian Studies Association of Australia, 16th Biennial Conference, Asia Reconstructed, 26/06/2006–29/06/2006, Woolongong, Australia
Abstract not available
Conference paper
Politik Identitas dalam Budaya Indonesia/Melayu (Identity Politics in Indonesian/Malay Culture)
Published 2006
Susastra, 2, 4, 1 - 15
Konferensi Internasional Kesusastraan XV11 (International Conference on Literature XVII), 07/08/2006–10/08/2006, Jakarta, Indonesia
In addition to looking into the socio-political milieu of the production and interpretation of Indonesian literature, as well as the historic interaction between some Indonesian and Malay writers, this article also attempts to discuss changes in the meaning of ‘Malay’ identity and “Malayness’ and the application of certain interpretations of such an identity in both the contemporary and historic perspectives. The discussion depends largely on Joel Kahn’s anthropological analysis of ‘nationalism and cosmopolitanism in modem Malay world.’ A comparison with the meaning and application of ‘Indonesian’ identity will then be made. Some conclusions that can be drawn are, among others, that the ‘malayness? indonesianess’ of a writer is not relevant since literature as a text is not based on the ethnic category to which the writer belongs, but on its language or its milieu of production. However, it is also realized that this analysis may be too simplistic as it does not take into account the many exceptions that exist. Finally, this article does not aim to offer any solution to the indeterminacy surrounding the ‘Malay’ or ‘Indonesian’ identity in this global era, and at best, it can only bring up a set of questions for our contemplation.
Conference paper
Communication for a new democracy: Indonesia's first online elections
Published 2002
Asian Studies Association of Australia, 14th Biennial Conference, After Sovereignty: Nation and Place, 30/06/2002–03/07/2002, University of Tasmania, Hobart, Tasmania
This paper examines Internet practices in Indonesian political life in the period since the fall of Soeharto. In particular, it looks at the ways in which the Internet was used by political parties for campaigning and organizing, and the state, the media and the public to scrutinize Indonesia's first democratic elections since 1955. The 7 June 1999 general elections in Indonesia were not conducted online; voters did not register their ballot directly onto the Internet. It was, however, significantly the first occasion when Indonesian voters were able to witness online, through a publicly accessible official Internet site, the calculation of the poll statistics, from 300,000 individual polling stations, through all strata of government from district level to the final centralized national tally. It was, in that sense, an election whose credibility and transparency relied significantly upon individual citizens' ability to monitor the electoral process and the entire tabulation of the count. Given the relatively restricted distribution of the technology in Indonesia, the Internet was not a tool for party propaganda, but it was an effective, and particularly significant, means of scrutinizing the fledgling democratic processes of Indonesia's political transition.
Conference paper
East Timor and the Internet: Global Political Leverage in/on Indonesia
Published 2001
Indonesia, 73
Media Cultures in Indonesia / Budaya Media di Indonesia, 02/04/2001–07/04/2001, Leiden University
Student protestors inside the occupied national Parliament compound reporting online to the world from laptop computers epitomized the extent to which forces opposing President Suharto mobilized the internet in the dying phase of his rule. So too, under Suharto’s successors, is the Internet proving a new medium for separatist and minority ethnic groups within the archipelago seeking self-determination or international recognition for their aspirations. “The most important factor in gaining independence is communication with international powers,” claimed one Acehnese separatist leader, who added, “The internet is the only way we can achieve this.” They are staking their claim on the internet, with several sites like “Achehnese tears” providing “Information on breaches of human fights in Aceh,” complete with graphic photographs of military brutality. Moluccan groups, too, both in Indonesia and abroad, have taken to the internet to argue their position on the recent conflict there. This paper examines how one particular marginalized regional Independence movement has exploited the potential of the Internet in its struggle. East Timor provides a striking example of how a protracted Independence struggle adjusted to the new strategic possibilities of the internet, how these new technological possibilities could exert international political leverage, and how they can be applied by a nation on the path to Independence.
Conference paper
Global industry, national politics: popular music in contemporary Indonesia
Published 1997
Refashioning Pop Music in Asia: Cosmopolitan Flows, Political Tempos, and Aesthetic Industries
Symposium on Cultural Values and Cultural Capital of Pop Music in Asia, 27/09/1997–28/09/1997, Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, Perth, W.A.
Abstract not available
Conference paper
Taking Stock: 'In-Country' Indonesian Studies and The Case for an Australian Consortium
Published 1994
Indonesian ILOTES Project Conference; Teaching Indonesian at Tertiary and Secondary Levels: Constructive Planning for a Co-ordinated Future, 22/04/1994–24/04/1994, Flinders University, Australia
In recent years there has been a marked increase in the number and variety of courses in Indonesian language and area studies offered in Indonesia, under collaborative arrangements with Australian universities. The first part of this paper attempts to take stock of such developments, by outlining the range of current 'in-country' Indonesian studies courses, and commenting briefly on some of their relative strengths and limitations. In so-doing it does not claim to detail comprehensively all 'in-country' language programs by every Australian university, but rather concentrates on select illustrations of various types of programs. It asserts that demand by Australian students for opportunities to study in Indonesia is likely to grow rapidly in coming years and argues, in the second half of the paper, that there is a strong justification for the establishment of a consortium to facilitate particular kinds of 'in-country' course.
Conference paper
David and Goliath: Regionals and Nationals in the Indonesian press battle
Published 1994
The Pacific Review, 16, 4
Asian Studies Association of Australia Biennial Conference: 'Environment, state and society in Asia: The legacy of the twentieth century', 13/07/1994–16/07/1994, Murdoch University, Perth, Western Australia
Abstract not available