Description

Book Synopsis
Indonesian Notebook contains myriad documents by Indonesian writers, intellectuals, and reporters that provide the largely absent Indonesian perspectives of the 1955 Bandung Conference and of Richard Wright's activities there, adding new depths to the understandings of the conference. It also includes a newly discovered lecture by Wright.

Trade Review
"Indonesian Notebook fills out the broader picture of Wright and the conference. It performs a valuable service ... and should encourage further scholarly digging in locales and languages affected by the conference." -- Jason Parker * Journal of American History *
"In U.S. histories, the meanings of the term the Third World is often rendered as stable. Non-American actors, too, sometimes remain only a spectral presence. By insisting that Indonesian intellectuals and Wright co-produced a different kind of Bandung spirit, Indonesian Notebook instead underscores the contingencies of what one historian rightly calls “the complex and uneven geographies of the postcolonial cold war world.” In doing so it can help us begin to reimagine the politics, and the poetics, of the Third World." -- Mark Philip Bradley * Modern American History *
"Rigorously researched and beautifully composed." -- Taomo Zhou * Southeast Asian Studies *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Abbreviations xv
Bibliography of Translated and Republished Sources xvii
On the Translations xxi
On Spelling and Personal Names xxiii
Introduction. Richard Wright on the Bandung Conference, Modern Indonesia on Richard Wright 1
Part I. Transnational Crosscurrents
1. The Indonesian Embassy's Cultural Life of Indonesia (Excerpts) (1951) 35
2. Pramoedya Ananta Toer's "The Definition of Literature and the Question of Beauty" (1952) 43
3. S. M. Ardan's "Pramoedya Heads Overseas" (1953) 50
4. De Preangerbode's Review of The Outsider (1954) 56
5. Beb Vuyk's "Stories in the Modern Manner" (1955) 59
Part II. An Asian-African Encounter
6. A Sheaf of Newspaper Articles: Richard Wright in Indonesia's Daily Press (1955) 67
7. Mochtar Lubis's "A List of Indonesian Writers and Artists" (1955) 89
8. Gelanggang's "A Conversation with Richard Wright" (1955) 95
9. Konfrontasi's "Synopsis" of Wright's "American Negro Writing" (1955) 106
10. Richard Wright's "The Artist and His Problems" (1955) 122
11. Anas Ma'ruf's "Richard Wright in Indonesia" (1955) 138
Part III. In the Wake of Wright's Indonesian Travels
12. Beb Vuyk's "Black Power" (1955) 145
13. Beb Vuyk's "H. Creekmore and Prostest Novels" (1955) 152
14. Asrul Sani's "Richard Wright: The Artist Turned Intellectual" (1956) 159
15. Frits Kandou's "Richard Wright's Impressions of Indonesia" (1956) 171
16. Beb Vuyk's "A Weekend with Richard Wright" (1960) 182
17. Goenawan Mohamad's "Politicians" (1977) 207
18. Seno Joko Suyono's "A Forgotten Hotel" (2005) 214
Afterword. Big History, Little History, Interstitial History: On the Tightrope between Polyvocality and Lingua Franca 229
Works Cited 239
Index 253

Indonesian Notebook

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    A Paperback / softback by Brian Russell Roberts, Keith Foulcher

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 21/03/2016
      ISBN13: 9780822360667, 978-0822360667
      ISBN10: 0822360667
      Also in:
      Asian history

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Indonesian Notebook contains myriad documents by Indonesian writers, intellectuals, and reporters that provide the largely absent Indonesian perspectives of the 1955 Bandung Conference and of Richard Wright's activities there, adding new depths to the understandings of the conference. It also includes a newly discovered lecture by Wright.

      Trade Review
      "Indonesian Notebook fills out the broader picture of Wright and the conference. It performs a valuable service ... and should encourage further scholarly digging in locales and languages affected by the conference." -- Jason Parker * Journal of American History *
      "In U.S. histories, the meanings of the term the Third World is often rendered as stable. Non-American actors, too, sometimes remain only a spectral presence. By insisting that Indonesian intellectuals and Wright co-produced a different kind of Bandung spirit, Indonesian Notebook instead underscores the contingencies of what one historian rightly calls “the complex and uneven geographies of the postcolonial cold war world.” In doing so it can help us begin to reimagine the politics, and the poetics, of the Third World." -- Mark Philip Bradley * Modern American History *
      "Rigorously researched and beautifully composed." -- Taomo Zhou * Southeast Asian Studies *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      Abbreviations xv
      Bibliography of Translated and Republished Sources xvii
      On the Translations xxi
      On Spelling and Personal Names xxiii
      Introduction. Richard Wright on the Bandung Conference, Modern Indonesia on Richard Wright 1
      Part I. Transnational Crosscurrents
      1. The Indonesian Embassy's Cultural Life of Indonesia (Excerpts) (1951) 35
      2. Pramoedya Ananta Toer's "The Definition of Literature and the Question of Beauty" (1952) 43
      3. S. M. Ardan's "Pramoedya Heads Overseas" (1953) 50
      4. De Preangerbode's Review of The Outsider (1954) 56
      5. Beb Vuyk's "Stories in the Modern Manner" (1955) 59
      Part II. An Asian-African Encounter
      6. A Sheaf of Newspaper Articles: Richard Wright in Indonesia's Daily Press (1955) 67
      7. Mochtar Lubis's "A List of Indonesian Writers and Artists" (1955) 89
      8. Gelanggang's "A Conversation with Richard Wright" (1955) 95
      9. Konfrontasi's "Synopsis" of Wright's "American Negro Writing" (1955) 106
      10. Richard Wright's "The Artist and His Problems" (1955) 122
      11. Anas Ma'ruf's "Richard Wright in Indonesia" (1955) 138
      Part III. In the Wake of Wright's Indonesian Travels
      12. Beb Vuyk's "Black Power" (1955) 145
      13. Beb Vuyk's "H. Creekmore and Prostest Novels" (1955) 152
      14. Asrul Sani's "Richard Wright: The Artist Turned Intellectual" (1956) 159
      15. Frits Kandou's "Richard Wright's Impressions of Indonesia" (1956) 171
      16. Beb Vuyk's "A Weekend with Richard Wright" (1960) 182
      17. Goenawan Mohamad's "Politicians" (1977) 207
      18. Seno Joko Suyono's "A Forgotten Hotel" (2005) 214
      Afterword. Big History, Little History, Interstitial History: On the Tightrope between Polyvocality and Lingua Franca 229
      Works Cited 239
      Index 253

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