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  1. britannica.com

    Indonesian literatures, the poetry and prose writings in Javanese, Malay, Sundanese, and other languages of the peoples of Indonesia.They include works orally transmitted and then preserved in written form by the Indonesian peoples, oral literature, and the modern literatures that began to emerge in the early 20th century as a result of Western influence.
    Author:The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
    • Malay Literature

      Other articles where Malay literature is discussed: Southeast Asian arts: Malaysia and Indonesia: …afterward, during the Islamic period, Malay became the most important language—and still more so under later Dutch colonial rule so that, logically, it was recognized in 1949 as the official Indonesian language by the newly independent Republic of Indonesia.

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  3. factsanddetails.com

    Lack of English Translations and Interest in Indonesian Literature. Michael J. Ybarra wrote in the Los Angeles Times, "In 1986 the king of Thailand gave an award to Indonesian poet Sapardi Djoko Damono for his contributions to Indonesia's literature. Damono, in turn, wanted to hand out some of his verse when he accepted the award in Bangkok.
  4. academia.edu

    The evolution of the Indonesian national art forms, such as literature, drama, painting and music is a significant part of the broader history of Indonesian nationalism. ... The World of Indonesian Literature "Dendam" belongs to a much larger world of literature than that encompassed by the Indonesian revolution or the Indonesian nation ...
  5. en.wikipedia.org

    Indonesian literature is a term grouping various genres of South-East Asian literature.. Indonesian literature can refer to literature produced in the Indonesian archipelago.It is also used to refer more broadly to literature produced in areas with common language roots based on the Malay language (of which Indonesian is one scion).This would extend the reach to the Maritime Southeast Asia ...
  6. english.washington.edu

    Each chapter focuses on a specific period in Indonesian history—post-1870 Dutch imperial expansion, national independence, New Order anticommunism, and post-1998 decentralization—and shows how the literary texts produced around and about each period actively mediate the relationship between national diachrony and capitalist synchrony.
  7. jurnal.universitaslia.ac.id

    Indonesian in world literature. This research is a qualitative study since it is completed through document analysis. This study uses Damrosch's theory of world literature's characteristics in order to check and to find out whether Indonesian literature can be categorized as world literature or not. Indonesian literary works that have been ...
  8. thesmedia.id

    Oct 23, 2023The novel, published in 1860, is a scathing critique of Dutch colonialism in Indonesia and has been credited with inspiring the Indonesian independence movement. "Sitti Nurbaya" by Marah Rusli: "Sitti Nurbaya" is a tragic love story that has become a classic of Indonesian literature. The novel, first published in 1922, tells the story of a ...
  9. universalium.en-academic.com

    the poetry and prose writings in Javanese, Malay, Sundanese, and other languages of the peoples of Indonesia. They include works orally transmitted and then preserved in written form by the Indonesian peoples; oral literature; and the modern literatures that began to emerge in the early 20th century as the result of Western influence.
  10. britishcouncil.org

    When I started studying Indonesian literature, it was a literature of the revolution of the new nationalism. Indonesia fought a war of independence for five years, declared independence in 1945 and fought and gained independence from armed struggle. And the literature of that time is imbued with a passionate nationalism and revolutionary fervour.
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