1st Edition

Visual Media in Indonesia Video Vanguard

By Edwin Jurriëns Copyright 2017
    264 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    264 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In the age of digital communication and global capitalism, people’s mental, social and natural environments are interconnected in complex and often unpredictable ways.

    This book focuses on the visual media, one of the key factors in shaping the contemporary ecology of colliding environments. Case-studies include video artists, community media activists, television programme makers and literary authors in the fourth most populous country in the world, Indonesia. The author demonstrates that these actors are part of an international creative and social vanguard that reflect on, criticise and rework the multidimensional impact of the visual media in imaginative and innovative ways. Their work explores alternative and more sustainable presents and futures for Indonesia and the world. This research is urgent and timely, as Indonesia has emerged in recent years as one of the world’s most vibrant hubs for contemporary art and media experimentation.

    Using an innovative interdisciplinary framework of visual culture analysis that derives from a wide range of academic fields, the book will be of interest to academics in the field of Southeast Asian Studies, Media Studies, Cultural Studies and Art History, Anthropology and Sociology.

    1. Introduction

    Part 1: Media Environments

    2. Media Critique

    3. Media Literacy

    Part 2: Media Reflexivity

    4. Media Democracy

    5. Video Bodies

    6. Video Interactivity

    Part 3. Media Utopia

    7. Participatory Media

    8. Video Communities

    9. Video Simulations

    Part 4: Media Ecologies

    10. Sustainable Media

    11. Disaster Media

    12. Conclusion

    Biography

    Edwin Jurriëns is a Lecturer in Indonesian Studies at the Asia Institute, Faculty of Arts, The University of Melbourne, Australia. He is also Adjunct Lecturer with the School of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) in Canberra, Australia. His most recent publication is Disaster Relief in the Asia-Pacific: Agency and Resilience (co-edited, 2014), also published by Routledge.