Admission requirements
Relevant knowledge and skills at the level of the entry requirements for the MA in Southeast Asian (Indonesian) Studies, except the Southeast Asian language requirement (readings will be in English).
Description
Ballet Philippines, the Vietnam National Symphony Orchestra, the Malaysian National Literary Laureate, the University of Culture in Yangon, the Pornography Law in Indonesia (which addresses nudity in performance and media): as these examples indicate, culture is a beloved object of national cultural policy, not least in the Southeast Asian region. Many non-governmental organizations are active in this field as well, not to mention the fact that the market has a serious commercial interest in culture. The politics of culture in Southeast Asia serves a double aim: to provide students with an up-to-date comparative survey of Southeast Asian national politics in the cultural realm, and on a theoretical level to examine the ways in which institutions, communities, and individuals attempt to keep in check the ways of doing that we may call cultural.
The course consists of two main blocks. In the first, on the basis of weekly readings we discuss cultural politics in the respective Southeast Asian countries. To give the discussion substance and to facilitate comparison within Southeast Asia and with other parts of the world, we focus on a few concrete cultural categories. In 2010/11 these will be dance, puppetry, and pop, thus covering both genres that tend to be developed under state patronage and genres that tend to be left largely to the market, and allowing us to examine transnational cultural connections and flows as well. In the second block we consider the workings of institutional, communal, and individual control in the realm of culture, giving attention to theoretical perspectives on the basis of case studies of the performance of language in Java, Indonesia.
Course objectives
Knowledge of and comparative insight into contemporary cultural politics in the Southeast Asian countries, in historical perspective.
Analytical insight into the ways in which institutions, communities, and individuals work to control culture.
Timetable
Mode of instruction
Seminar
Assessment method
weekly tasks based on the readings and/or primary materials (40% of final mark)
a concluding written examination (60% of final mark)
Blackboard
Blackboard will be used for:
table of contents of the seminar
study materials
weekly tasks
announcements and other communications
Reading list
Weekly readings to be announced later.
Registration
Registration through uSis mandatory
Exchange and Study Abroad students, please consult the Study in Leiden website for information on how to apply
Contact information
Prof.dr. B. Arps