Academic literature on the topic 'Indonesia in fiction'

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Journal articles on the topic "Indonesia in fiction"

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Wahyudi, Ibnu. "FLASH FICTION DI INDONESIA: 1858 HINGGA KINI." SEMIOTIKA: Jurnal Ilmu Sastra dan Linguistik 24, no. 1 (2023): 86. http://dx.doi.org/10.19184/semiotika.v24i1.36543.

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Flash fiction or what is better known in Indonesia as "mini fiction" or also "mini prose" is not a form of work that arises as a result of dealing with limited space today but also has something to do with the level of literacy at a certain time. It is not surprising that the publication of early prose in Indonesia, which at that time was still under colonial rule, namely in the mid-19th century, was essentially similar to the “fiksi mini” that has been developing in Indonesia in recent years. Thus, this paper is an attempt to straighten out and trace the dynamics of the flash fictions which h
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Adania, Luthfina, and Muhammad Luthfi Zuhdi. "NARASI KONTRA TERORISME PADA LITERATUR INDONESIA DAN ANIMASI FIKSI POPULER." Academic Journal of Islamic Principles and Philosophy 4, no. 2 (2023): 181–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.22515/ajipp.v4i2.8144.

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The author explores the potential of fictional media in counter-terrorism efforts, especially as an antidote to the spread of pro-terrorism narratives. Fiction media has the potential to bridge differences by spreading universal values that can transcend language, geography, and cultural boundaries. Multicultural culture helps teach tolerance and respect for one another. The method used is a literature study of previous research results. The selected studies used fiction and memoirs from Indonesia, as well as popular fiction from abroad, namely Avatar: The Legend of Aang and Fullmetal Alchemis
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Lesmana, Moh Eka, Alvanov Zpalanzani, Riama Maslan, and Erline Anasthasia D. "Perancangan Komik Historical Fiction Berbasis Cerita Bajak Laut Nusantara." ANDHARUPA: Jurnal Desain Komunikasi Visual & Multimedia 9, no. 03 (2023): 376–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.33633/andharupa.v9i03.7653.

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AbstrakPenggunaan historical fiction pada media populer seperti komik, film, game, dan lain-lain dengan pendekatan hiburan banyak menarik minat masyarakat untuk melihat berbagai fenomena sejarah. Penyampaian dengan pendekatan hiburan ini tentunya menjadi kekuatan dari genre historical fiction untuk dapat digunakan dalam mengangkat berbagai tema-tema sejarah Indonesia. Salah satu fenomena penting dalam sejarah maritim Indonesia yang tidak umum diketahui adalah fenomena ‘bajak laut’. Fenomena bajak laut yang marak di Indonesia pada masa kolonial merupakan bagian dari sejarah Nusantara yang penti
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Yulianeta, Yulianeta. "REPRESENTASI RONGGENG DALAM TIGA NOVEL INDONESIA." Jurnal Pendidikan Bahasa dan Sastra 14, no. 1 (2014): 79. http://dx.doi.org/10.17509/bs_jpbsp.v14i1.712.

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This paper is based on the phenomenon of dancer or “tayub” which is celebrated as a very popular cultural artifact in public life, particularly in Java. This tradition is originally part of a sacred ritual, which ultimately became a performing art, but tends to be viewed negatively. In a historical context, the dancer was originally seen based on cultural concept and evolves into culturally sacred profane. Negative reception of ronggeng is not only uttered orally but also embodied in the written tradition. It is found in the genre of literary fiction such as in Trilogy Ronggeng Dukuh Paruk wri
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Frolova, M. V. "Pulp Fiction: Indonesian detective from 1950–1960s’." Orientalistica 5, no. 5 (2022): 1239–60. http://dx.doi.org/10.31696/2618-7043-2022-5-5-1239-1260.

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The article offers a detailed analysis and comparison of four works of popular Indonesian literature (two texts dd 1955 and two dd 1967) in order to trace the vectors of development of the detective genre in the Indonesian literature. The analysis precedes an excursion into the history of criminal genres in the literature of Indonesia. The study shows that, using the selected texts as an example, there is a certain difference between the detective-type literature before the political changes and the transition to the New Order (1965), and afterwards, also allows us to take another step towards
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Syahreza, Andre. "The topicality of pre-colonial Indonesian heroes: Recent popular fiction from Indonesia." Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde / Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences of Southeast Asia 168, no. 1 (2012): 118–29. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/22134379-90003573.

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Review of: Agus Sunyoto, Dhaeng Sekara: Telik sandi tanah pelik Majapahit. Yogyakarta: DIVA Press, 2010, 488 pp. ISBN 9786029782820. Price: IDR 55.000. Bagus Dilla, Bumi Sriwijaya. Yogyakarta: DIVA Press, 2010, 483 pp. ISBN 9786029782738. Price: IDR 58.000. Daryanto, Raden Fatah: Bara di atas Demak Bintara. Jakarta: Tiga Kelana, 2009, vi + 472 pp. ISBN 9786028535304. Enang Rokajat Asura, Prabu Siliwangi: Bara di balik terkoyaknya Raja Digdaya. Depok: Edelweiss, 2009, ix + 457 pp. ISBN 9789791962438. Enang Rokajat Asura, Wangsit Siliwangi: Harimau di tengah bara. Depok: Edelweiss, 2009, 444 pp.
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Nugraha, Reza Sukma, Eva Farhah, and Azka Nurzanah. "CROSS-CULTURAL ROMANCE: DIGITAL FICTION FORMULA IN LIBYA’S LA’NAT AL-‘ISHQ AND INDONESIA’S ABIGHEA." Adabiyyāt: Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra 7, no. 2 (2023): 196. http://dx.doi.org/10.14421/ajbs.2023.07024.

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The popularity of the digital literary platform Wattpad has been recognized globally, including in Indonesia and Libya. Among various studies on fiction published through Wattpad, this research focuses on a comparative analysis of romance formulas written by popular Wattpad authors from two countries: La'nat al-'Ishq by Hams Yosef in Libya and Abighea by Chelsea Karina Aelia in Indonesia. The main issue addressed in this study is whether romance stories in digital fiction from these countries share the same narrative formula despite the cultural differences between the authors and their reader
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Hayati, Yenni. "DUNIA PEREMPUAN DALAM KARYA SASTRA PEREMPUAN INDONESIA (Kajian Feminisme)." Humanus 11, no. 1 (2012): 85. http://dx.doi.org/10.24036/jh.v11i1.626.

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This article describes the world of and images of women depicted in women fiction writer, particularly in short story literature. In depicting women’s world, an Indonesian writer tends to focus on their domestic than public life. This is because domestic life is considered safer for women, and women are considered best settled in the domestic life. There are six images closely associated with women; a mother, a loyal woman, a successful woman, a second woman, an ideal woman, and a bad woman. Mother image is the most found, 14 of 15 fictions examined in this research. The description of domesti
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Bimantara, Varidh, Rengga Asmara, and Nur Rasyid Mubtadai. "OPTIMASI MESIN PENCARI BUKU FIKSI BERDASARKAN PADA SEMANTIK IMPRESI." METHODIKA: Jurnal Teknik Informatika dan Sistem Informasi 51, no. 1 (2019): 30–33. http://dx.doi.org/10.46880/mtk.v5i1.415.

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Fiction books are one of the most popular books in Indonesia. There are five most popular genres in fiction books, namely fantasy, mystery, romance, sci-fi, and thriller. Each genre gives a different impression and its own fans for the reader. It is common practice when people choose fiction books based on the title, author, or publisher of the book. However, this does not provide precise search results. In this final project, an application system was developed to find out fiction books based on the semantic impressions contained on the cover of the fiction book. The impression on each book c
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Asmara, Rengga, Nur Rasyid Mubtadai, and Varidh Bimantara. "OPTIMASI MESIN PENCARI BUKU FIKSI BERDASARKAN PADA SEMANTIK IMPRESI." METHOMIKA Jurnal Manajemen Informatika dan Komputerisasi Akuntansi 5, no. 1 (2021): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.46880/jmika.vol5no1.pp1-8.

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Fiction books are one of the most popular types of books in Indonesia. There are five most popular genres in fiction books, namely fantasy, mystery, romance, sci-fi, and thriller. Each genre gives a different impression and special interest for readers. It has become a common habit when people choose a fiction book based on the title, author, or publisher of the book. However, it does not provide precise search results. In this final project, an application system was developed to find out fiction books based on semantic impressions on the cover of the fiction book. The impression on each book
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Indonesia in fiction"

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Roth, J. Peter. "Thousands or Millions: Stories." PDXScholar, 2013. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/open_access_etds/1101.

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This collection explores various aspects of Indonesian culture. From remote government settlements off the coast of Sumatra to the urbanized and commercial beaches of Bali, these stories take a look at the complexities, differences and adjustments felt by people of both the East and West. An attempt has been made to detail confusion, frustration, disorientation, struggles, prejudices, misunderstandings as well as epiphanies without Orientializing (to borrow Edward Said's term) various ways of life within the archipelago. To most fairly convey the intricacies and differences between the broad g
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Karsono, Sony. "Indonesia's New Order, 1966-1998: Its Social and Intellectual Origins." Ohio University / OhioLINK, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1367606667.

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Riwoe, Mirandi. "Fragrance of night and the hybridisation of Indonesian crime fiction." Thesis, Queensland University of Technology, 2012. https://eprints.qut.edu.au/60982/1/Miranoi_Riwoe_Thesis.pdf.

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The novel manuscript Fragrance of Night is a crime novel set in Indonesia. Raymond Chan, struggling to deal with the death of his Australian wife, returns to his country of birth, Indonesia. Ostensibly he returns to attend his cousin Lee’s wedding but he is also in search of some meaning in his life. He is drawn into a local murder mystery, and with the help of a young, Javanese policeman, he is soon investigating suspects and motives. Raymond finds himself becoming increasingly enamoured with the main suspect, Lani, but ultimately, once the murder mystery is solved, Raymond loses her. The
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Heidbüchel, Esther. "The conflict in West Papua facts and fiction in Indonesian politics /." Giessen : IRU, 2005. http://deposit.d-nb.de/cgi-bin/dokserv?idn=986597570.

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Budiman, Manneke. "Re-imagining the archipelago : the nation in post-Suharto Indonesian women's fiction." Thesis, University of British Columbia, 2011. http://hdl.handle.net/2429/33945.

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This study sets out to investigate the ways in which some fiction by Indonesian women authors produced since the downfall of President Suharto in 1998 explores the notion of ‘nation’ that was established by the New Order during its thirty-two-year rule, and offers alternative perspectives. The New Order’s ideology of the unitary state of Indonesia required, as its foremost prerequisite, the construction of a sense of Indonesianness that was neither fragmented nor centrifugal. The result, however, was not only a Java-centric perspective of a vast archipelago that consists of more than 13,000 is
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Downes, Meghan. "(Un)toward Progress: Stories of Modernity and Development in Indonesian Film and Fiction." Phd thesis, Canberra, ACT : The Australian National University, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1885/117704.

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In this thesis, I trace a powerful narrative theme of ‘progress’ across several different genres of storytelling: fictional stories in cinema and literature, audience accounts of everyday consumption practices, and the various stories circulating in media, public debate, and academic scholarship. Stories of progress are pervasive and compelling in contemporary Indonesia, whether in ‘inspirational’ films and novels featuring upwardly mobile young protagonists, or in audience discussions and media debates about the potential of such fictional stories to ‘advance’ and ‘develop’ the nation in both
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Arimbi, Diah Ariani Women's &amp Gender Studies UNSW. "Reading the writings of contemporary Indonesian Muslim women writers: representation, identity and religion of Muslim women in Indonesian fictions." Awarded by:University of New South Wales. Women's and Gender Studies, 2006. http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/25498.

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Indonesian Muslim women???s identity and subjectivity are not created simply from a single variable rather they are shaped by various discourses that are often competing and paralleling each other. Discourses such as patriarchal discourses circumscribing the social engagement and public life of Muslim women portray them in narrow gendered parameters in which women occupy rather limited public roles. Western colonial discourse often constructed Muslim women as oppressed and backward. Each such discourse indeed denies women???s agency and maturity to form their own definition of identity within
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Eagling, CM. "Socio-political issues in women's fiction of the Reformasi." Thesis, 2011. https://eprints.utas.edu.au/12434/1/Caroline_Melita_Eagling_ID_923828_Master_of_Arts_Thesis_pdf.pdf.

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Long struggling for a platform for woman's voice, Indonesian women authors have been publishing novels and anthologies of stories, poetry and articles in unprecedented numbers since the beginning of Reformasi. Not unnoticed has been their common use of sex and sexuality as a prominent component of their writings. Many of the authors have been labelled with the term sastrawangi; a friendly but patronizing and slightly derogatory label. The following critique illuminates the more important but previously un-investigated facets of literature from this generation of authors and brings to light the
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Manurung, Jadi Haposan. "Investor Protection in the Indonesian Securities Market: Fact or Fiction?" Thesis, 2016. https://vuir.vu.edu.au/42316/.

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The improvement of investor protection systems is increasingly becoming a major concern of the financial sector in almost all jurisdictions because investors play a significant role in sustaining the activities of the securities market. With the enactment of its Capital Market Law, Indonesia has developed a rule and principles-based system to protect investors. However, the purpose of an investor protection system is not merely to provide regulations, ensure market supervision, and law enforcement, but also to provide investors with mechanisms for effective and efficient financial dispute reso
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Lawrence, Anne E. "The colour of dissonance : ethics, aesthetics, alterity and form in the cross-cultural novel." Thesis, 2014. http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:32300.

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This thesis, which consists of a creative component (a novel) and a dissertation, engages with creative arts practice understood as hermeneutical process, that is, as ‘fluid, repetitive and continuous … a kaleidoscope of everchanging reflections, revisions, false starts and backtracking’ (Snodgrass and Coyne 2006: 46). It brings into intimate proximity Australia and Australians, Indonesia and Indonesians, and considers the transformative process of writing the cross-cultural novel as an act of interpretation, where the embodied writer engages in a process of understanding with the self, and wi
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Books on the topic "Indonesia in fiction"

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Ratnatunga, Manel. Saga Indonesia. Quill Press, 1994.

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Moeis, Abdoel. Salah asuhan. 3rd ed. Balai Pustaka, 2009.

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PN, Balai Pustaka, ed. Kisah-kisah kepahlawanan perang kemerdekaan 1945-1949 dan perang merebut kembali Irian Barat: Kumpulan cerpen. Balai Pustaka, 1993.

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Sumarjo, Yakob. Pengantar novel Indonesia. Citra Aditya Bakti, 1991.

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Angie, Kilbane, ed. The rainbow troops. Sarah Crichton Books/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2013.

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Mona, Matu. Pacar Merah Indonesia. 2nd ed. Jendela, 2001.

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Sumarjo, Yakob. Konteks sosial novel Indonesia, 1920-1977. Alumni, 1999.

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Toer, Pramoedya Ananta. Tales from Djakarta: Caricatures of circumstances and their human beings. Southeast Asia Program Publications, Cornell University, 1999.

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Mahayana, Maman S. Ringkasan dan ulasan novel Indonesia modern. Gramedia Widiasarana Indonesia, 2007.

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T, Faruk H. Novel Indonesia, kolonialisme, dan ideologi emansipatoris. Ombak, 2012.

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Book chapters on the topic "Indonesia in fiction"

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Piocos III, Carlos M. "Sexuality, Shame and Subversions in Indonesian Migrant Women’s Fiction." In Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-5659-3_8.

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AbstractThis contribution examines malu (shame) as an effect of Indonesian women’s migration, illustrating how gendered moral discourses shape the problematic politics of labour migration in the country. It argues that shame not only reinforces several problematic gender and moral discourses imposed on Indonesian migrant women but also heightens their precarious role and place in their home and host countries.This essay probes into the possibilities opened by Indonesian migrant domestic workers themselves as they write, publish and circulate their own stories in Hong Kong, Singapore and Taiwan
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Djenar, Dwi Noverini. "Just Like Conversation?: Speech and Thought Presentation in Indonesian Adolescent Fiction." In Language Practices Among Children and Youth in Indonesia. Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-4775-1_8.

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AbstractThis chapter examines a remark by an observer of Indonesian adolescent literature that the language in Indonesian Teenlit novels resembles “spoken language,” implying that it is conversational in style. Drawing on approaches to speech and thought presentation initially applied to the study of English language texts, the chapter shows that direct speech and free direct speech are the main techniques employed by Indonesian authors to represent the speech and thought of adolescent characters. It is argued that the observer’s remark is not an indication that the language in Teenlit is inde
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Wieringa, Edwin. "Can Kartini Be Lesbian? Identity, Gender, and Sexual Orientation in a Post-Suharto Pop Novel." In Gender, Islam and Sexuality in Contemporary Indonesia. Springer Nature Singapore, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-5659-3_9.

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AbstractThe British author Martin Amis once remarked that “the way a writer names his characters provides a good index to the way he sees the world—to his reality-level, his responsiveness to the accidental humour and freakish poetry of life” (Amis Amis, The moronic inferno and other visits to America, Penguin, London, 1987, p. 13). If this is so, what, then, does the choice of the name Kartini for the protagonist in the 2007 pop novel Kembang Kertas (Paper Flowers) by the Indonesian woman writer Eni Martini with the provocative subtitle Ijinkan aku menjadi lesbian (Allow me to be lesbian) tel
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Faisal, Rakmat, Setya Yuwana Sudikan, and Titik Indarti. "A Critique of the Representation of Human and Technological Relations in Indonesian Science Fiction Literature." In Advances in Social Science, Education and Humanities Research. Atlantis Press SARL, 2025. https://doi.org/10.2991/978-2-38476-404-4_3.

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Halimah, H., S. Sumiyadi, Y. Yulianeta, and Sri Ulina Br Sembiring. "The Influence of CERDIK and Short Story Videos on Students’ Learning Motivation in Indonesian Prose Fiction Appreciation." In Proceedings of the Sixth International Conference on Language, Literature, Culture, and Education (ICOLLITE 2022). Atlantis Press SARL, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/978-2-494069-91-6_31.

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Downes, Meghan. "Women Writing Wayang in Post-reform Indonesia: A Comparative Study of Fictional Interventions in Mythology and National History." In The Southeast Asian Woman Writes Back. Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-7065-5_7.

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Wijaya, Elizabeth. "Memories of the Future: Speculative Cold War Histories in Yosep Anggi Noen’s The Science of Fictions and Daniel Hui’s Snakeskin." In Remapping the Cold War in Asian Cinemas. Amsterdam University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463727273_ch15.

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In 1965 Indonesia, the CIA helped Suharto spread false reports on a coup plot by the PKI (Partai Komunis Indonesia), contributing to an anticommunist purge; that same year, a farmer chances upon a film shoot by a foreign crew of a fake moon landing and has his tongue cut off. The latter is a speculative invention of Yosep Anggi Noen’s fiction film, The Science of Fictions (2019). In Daniel Hui’s hybrid speculative fiction / documentary Snakeskin (2014), set in the year 2066 in Singapore, references to the 1950s Chinese leftist movements form part of the film’s excavation of national myths and
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"MALAY TRANSLATIONS OF CHINESE FICTION IN INDONESIA." In Literary Migrations. ISEAS Publishing, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1355/9789814414333-016.

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Hongxuan, Lin. "A Critical Ummah, a Conscious Proletariat." In Ummah Yet Proletariat. Oxford University PressNew York, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780197657386.003.0005.

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Abstract During the parliamentary democracy period (1950–59), Indonesians were deeply invested in the idea of cultivating an Indonesian national community that would organically develop its own way forward in an uncertain postwar world. Their desires for a “critical” ummah or a “conscious” proletariat militated against blindly accepting whatever the local Imam said in the mosque on Friday, or uncritically believing whatever Pravda printed. Instead, the discursive climate of parliamentary democracy encouraged intellectual independence and inquiry, allowing pious Muslims to explore and selective
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Bahrawi, Nazry. "Speculative Verses of Islam in Singapore Malay Literature." In The Politics of Muslim Identities in Asia. Edinburgh University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474466837.003.0002.

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The discourse of Islamic thought should not be confined to the normative fields of fiqh, usuluddin, shari’ah laws and tafsir. It can also be seen in literature, even though this discipline has been marginal to Islamic studies. This chapter aims to address this gap. It begins from the acknowledgment that literary fiction channels and shapes Islamic thought if we consider the well-known cases of Salman Rushdie’s The Satanic Verses and Naguib Mahfouz’s Awlad Haritna. Like their peers in Muslim cultures elsewhere, Malay/Muslim writers in Singapore, too, have engaged deeply with Islamic thought in
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Conference papers on the topic "Indonesia in fiction"

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NST, M. Ismail, Bakhtaruddin NST, and Zulfadhli ZULFADHLI. "The Structure of Indonesian Fiction before and after Period of Reform in Indonesia." In Sixth International Conference on Languages and Arts (ICLA 2017). Atlantis Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icla-17.2018.40.

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Saftiah, Tridanova, Efendi Napitupulu, and Hamonangan Tambunan. "The Learning Outcomes in Appreciating Indonesian Fiction and Non-fiction Books Through E-learning Modules." In Proceedings of the 8th Annual International Seminar on Transformative Education and Educational Leadership, AISTEEL 2023, 19 September 2023, Medan, North Sumatera Province, Indonesia. EAI, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.19-9-2023.2340395.

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Pratiwi, Fatma, Lukman Nusa, Rika Virga, and Niken Puspitasari. "IDENTITY CONSTRUCTIONS OF INDONESIAN MOSLEM YOUTH THROUGH FAN FICTION." In Proceedings of the 1st Padjadjaran Communication Conference Series, PCCS 2019, 9 October 2019, Bandung, West Java, Indonesia. EAI, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.9-10-2019.2291104.

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Kusumaningtyas, Rindia. "Adaptation Works as Original Creations from an Intellectual Property Perspective (Study of Fans Fiction Works)." In Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Indonesian Legal Studies, ICILS 2021, June 8-9 2021, Semarang, Indonesia. EAI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.8-6-2021.2314373.

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Yuliana, Refi, and Suratni Suratni. "Acquisition and Designing Youth Non-Fiction Books through School Literacy Programs." In Proceedings of the First Jakarta International Conference on Multidisciplinary Studies Towards Creative Industries, JICOMS 2022, 16 November 2022, Jakarta, Indonesia. EAI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.16-11-2022.2326108.

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Habsari, Sri, Diah Kristina, Fitria Primasita, Yusuf Kurniawan, M. Al Makmun, and Karunia Kusciati. "Ludic Activity of Writing Using Wattpad as Digital Fiction Engagement and Meaning Experiences." In Proceedings of the 4th BASA: International Seminar on Recent Language, Literature and Local Culture Studies, BASA, November 4th 2020, Solok, Indonesia. EAI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.4-11-2020.2314222.

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Rohmah, Nurul, and Uman Rejo. "Representation Of Traditional Buton Events In Fiction Works By Wa Ode Wulan Ratna: a Study Of New Historicism." In Proceedings of the First International Seminar Social Science, Humanities and Education, ISSHE 2020, 25 November 2020, Kendari, Southeast Sulawesi, Indonesia. EAI, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.25-11-2020.2306717.

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Yuliana, Refi, Suratni Suratni, and Prily Aziz. "Mascot Design "Poli and Medi" as Intellectual Property Characters for Sustainable Children's Fiction book in Publishing Study Program." In Proceedings of the 3rd Jakarta International Conference on Multidisciplinary Studies towards Creative Industries, JICOMS 2024, 11-12 November 2024, Jakarta, Indonesia. EAI, 2025. https://doi.org/10.4108/eai.11-11-2024.2354498.

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Sitohang, Pernando, Mara Ritonga, and Malan Lubis. "Development of Student Worksheets (LKPD) Fiction Text Based On Higher Order Thinking Skill (HOTS) In Class VII Students Of Santa Lusia Private Junior High School Sei Rotan." In Proceedings of the 7th Annual International Seminar on Transformative Education and Educational Leadership, AISTEEL 2022, 20 September 2022, Medan, North Sumatera Province, Indonesia. EAI, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.20-9-2022.2324817.

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Rahmayati, R., R. Rengganis, and T. Tjahjono. "Portrayal of Ecological Crisis In Indonesian Prose: Fiction and Reality." In 2nd Workshop on Language, Literature and Society for Education. EAI, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4108/eai.21-12-2018.2282792.

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