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Identity and Pleasure: The Politics of Indonesian Screen Culture

ARIEL HERYANTO is Professor and Deputy Director (Education), at The School of Culture, History and Language of The Australian National University’s College of Asia and The Pacific.

NUS Press & Kyoto University Press (First published, 2014)
xiv + 248 pages including Bibliography and Index

RM85.00

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Identity and Pleasure: The Politics of Indonesian Screen Culture critically examines what media and screen culture reveal about the ways urban-based Indonesians attempted to redefine their identity in the first decade of this century. Through a richly nuanced analysis of expressions and representations found in screen culture (cinema, television and social media), it analyses the waves of energy and optimism, and the disillusionment, disorientation and despair, that arose in the power vacuum that followed the dramatic collapse of the militaristic New Order government.

While in-depth analyses of identity and political contestation within the nation are the focus of the book, trans-national engagements and global dimensions are a significant part of the story in each chapter. The author focuses on contemporary cultural politics in Indonesia, but each chapter contextualizes current circumstances by setting them within a broader historical perspective.

Acknowledgements

1. Remembering the Future
2. Post-Islamism: Faith, Fun, and Fortune
3. Cinematic Battle
4. A Past Dismembered and Disremembered
5. The Impossibility of History?
6. Ethnic Minority Under Erasure
7. K-Pop and Gendered Asianization
8. From Screen to Street Politics

Bibliography
Index

Weight0.401 kg
Dimensions22.7 × 15.2 × 1.4 cm
Author(s)

Format

Paperback

Language

English

Publisher

,

Series

Year Published

2014

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