HUMANITIES IN INDONESIA FOR A GLOBAL AGE
Anthony Reid(1*)
(1) Australian National University
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
The 70th Anniversary provides an opportunity for reflection on the development of the Humanities in Indonesia, the achievements and the disappointments of a remarkable period. Indonesian Humanities scholars, and specifically those at UGM, have much to be proud of. They have built professional critical methods in a completely new language and context, without losing the critical approach to evidence. There have however been some disappointments and losses. Bahasa Indonesia’s gain has been many other languages’ loss. There is a danger that Humanities, in Indonesia as everywhere, may allow themselves to be restricted to a kind of heritage industry, preserving and coding the culture of ‘us’, as opposed to the complex interactions of the planet and beyond. The best way to counter the long-term decline of Humanities in the university may be the opposite, to embrace cultural diversity and interdependence.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
REFERENCES
Anderson, Benedict (1984) ‘Politics and Their Study in Southeast Asia,’ in Southeast Asian Studies: Options for the Future, ed. Ronald A. Morse, Lanham/New York: University Press of America for the Wilson Center.
Drewes, G.W.J. (1969). The Admonitions of Seh Bari: A 16th century Javanese Muslim text attributed to the Saint of Bonan, re-edited and translated with an introduction, The Hague: Martinus Nijhoff.
Grijns, C.D. ‘Andries Teeuw (1986). Bujangga Wredatama,’ in A Man of Indonesian Letters: Essays in Honour of Professor A. Teeuw, ed. C.M.S. Hellwig and S.O. Robson, Dordrecht: Foris for KITLV.
Guggenheim, Scott (2012). ‘Indonesia’s Quiet Springtime: Knowledge, Policy and Reform,’ in Anthony Reid (ed.) Indonesia Rising: The Repositioning of Asia’s Third Giant (Singapore: ISEAS Publications.
Messud, Claire, ‘The Brother of the “Stranger”’, NYReview 22 October 2015, p.56.
Poesponegoro, M.D., and Nugroho Notosusanto (ed.) (2008). Sejarah Nasional Indonesia (Jakarta: Balai Pustaka for Departemen Pendidikan dan Kebudayaan, 1977, republished 1981-3, 1984, 1992, 2008.
Reid, Anthony (2015). ‘Indonesian Manuscripts in the Vatican Library,’ in Southeast Asia Library Group Newsletter, no. 46: http://www.sealg. org/Newsletter2014.pdf.
---------------- ‘Indonesian Studies at the Australian National University: Why so late?’ in Review of Indonesian and Malaysian Affairs 43, no.1
Schrieke, B.J.O. (1916), Het Boek van Bonang (Published Leiden dissertation).
Sunarta, Wayan (2015). ‘The island that literature forgot:
Indonesian literature at the Frankfurt Book Fair’; https://en.qantara.de/content/ indonesian-literature-at-the-frankfurt-book-fair-the-island-that-literature-forgot.
OTHERS
h t t p : / / p o r t a l . u n e s c o . o r g / c u l t u r e / e n / files/41748/13390726483Translation_ t r e n d s _ 1 9 9 0 _ 2 0 0 5 _ D e c _ 2 0 1 0 . p d f / Translation%2Btrends%2B1990_2005_ De c % 2 B 2 0 1 0 . p d f .
http://en.qantara.de/content/literature-in-indonesia-a-land-without-readers.
http: / /www.une s co. o rg/xt r a n s /bs s t a t exp. a s p x ? c r i t 1 L = 4 & n Ty p = m i n & t o p N =50
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jh.11409
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 3919 | views : 3743Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2016 Anthony Reid
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.