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Marshall Clark - Indonesia-Malaysia Relations: Cultural Heritage, Politics and Labour Migration

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Drawing on social media, cinema, cultural heritage and public opinion polls, this book examines Indonesia and Malaysia from a comparative postcolonial perspective. The IndonesiaMalaysia relationship is one of the most important bilateral relationships in Southeast Asia, especially because Indonesia, the worlds fourth most populous country and third largest democracy, is the most populous and powerful nation in the region. Both states are committed to the relationship, especially at the highest levels of government, and much has been made of their sibling identity. The relationship is built on years of interaction at all levels of state and society, and both countries draw on their common culture, religion and language in managing political tensions. In recent years, however, several issues have seriously strained the once cordial bilateral relationship. Among these are a strong public reaction to maritime boundary disputes, claims over each countrys cultural forms, the treatment of Indonesian workers in Malaysia, and trans-border issues such as Indonesian forest fire haze. Comparing the two nations engagement with cultural heritage, religion, gender, ethnicity, citizenship, democracy and regionalism, this book highlights the social and historical roots of the tensions between Indonesia and Malaysia, as well as the enduring sense of kinship.

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IndonesiaMalaysia Relations Drawing on social media cinema cultural heritage - photo 1
IndonesiaMalaysia Relations
Drawing on social media, cinema, cultural heritage and public opinion polls, this book examines Indonesia and Malaysia from a comparative postcolonial perspective. The IndonesiaMalaysia relationship is one of the most important bilateral relationships in Southeast Asia, especially because Indonesia, the worlds fourth most populous country and third largest democracy, is the most populous and powerful nation in the region. Both states are committed to the relationship, especially at the highest levels of government, and much has been made of their sibling identity. The relationship is built on years of interaction at all levels of state and society, and both countries draw on their common culture, religion and language in managing political tensions. In recent years, however, several issues have seriously strained the once cordial bilateral relationship. Among these are a strong public reaction to maritime boundary disputes, claims over each countrys cultural forms, the treatment of Indonesian workers in Malaysia, and trans-border issues such as Indonesian forest fire haze. Comparing the two nations engagement with cultural heritage, religion, gender, ethnicity, citizenship, democracy and regionalism, this book highlights the social and historical roots of the tensions between Indonesia and Malaysia, as well as the enduring sense of kinship.
Marshall Clark is Director of the Australian National Internships Program and a Senior Lecturer at the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University. He is the author of Maskulinitas: Culture, Gender and Politics in Indonesia (Monash University Press, 2010).
Juliet Pietsch is a Senior Lecturer of Political Science at the School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University. Juliet is a Principal Investigator of the Australian Election Study, the World Values Survey and the National Asian Australian Survey.
Media, Culture and Social Change in Asia
Series Editor
Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, University of New South Wales
Editorial Board:
Gregory N. Evon, University of New South Wales
Devleena Ghosh, University of Technology, Sydney
Peter Horsfield, RMIT University, Melbourne
Chris Hudson, RMIT University, Melbourne
K.P. Jayasankar, Unit for Media and Communications, Tata Institute of Social
Sciences, Bombay
Michael Keane, Queensland University of Technology
Tania Lewis, RMIT University, Melbourne
Vera Mackie, University of Melbourne
Kama Maclean, University of New South Wales
Jane Mills, University of New South Wales
Anjali Monteiro, Unit for Media and Communications, Tata Institute of Social
Sciences, Bombay
Laikwan Pang, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Gary Rawnsley, Aberystwyth University
Ming-yeh Rawnsley, University of Leeds
Jo Tacchi, RMIT University, Melbourne
Adrian Vickers, University of Sydney
Jing Wang, MIT
Ying Zhu, City University of New York
The aim of this series is to publish original, high-quality work by both new and established scholars in the West and the East, on all aspects of media, culture and social change in Asia.
1 Television Across Asia
Television industries, programme formats and globalisation
Edited by Albert Moran and Michael Keane
2 Journalism and Democracy in Asia
Edited by Angela Romano and Michael Bromley
3 Cultural Control and Globalization in Asia
Copyright, piracy and cinema
Laikwan Pang
4 Conflict, Terrorism and the Media in Asia
Edited by Benjamin Cole
5 Media and the Chinese Diaspora
Community, communications and commerce
Edited by Wanning Sun
6 Hong Kong Film, Hollywood and the New Global Cinema
No film is an island
Edited by Gina Marchetti and Tan See Kam
7 Media in Hong Kong
Press freedom and political change 19672005
Carol P. Lai
8 Chinese Documentaries
From dogma to polyphony
Yingchi Chu
9 Japanese Popular Music
Culture, authenticity and power
Carolyn S. Stevens
10 The Origins of the Modern Chinese Press
The influence of the Protestant missionary press in late Qing China
Xiantao Zhang
11 Created in China
The great new leap forward
Michael Keane
12 Political Regimes and the Media in Asia
Edited by Krishna Sen and Terence Lee
13 Television in Post-Reform China
Serial dramas, Confucian leadership and the global television market
Ying Zhu
14 Tamil Cinema
The cultural politics of Indias other film industry
Edited by Selvaraj Velayutham
15 Popular Culture in Indonesia
Fluid identities in post-authoritarian politics
Edited by Ariel Heryanto
16 Television in India
Satellites, politics and cultural change
Edited by Nalin Mehta
17 Media and Cultural Transformation in China
Haiqing Yu
18 Global Chinese Cinema
The culture and politics of hero
Edited by Gary D. Rawnsley and Ming-Yeh T. Rawnsley
19 Youth, Society and Mobile Media in Asia
Edited by Stephanie Hemelryk Donald, Theresa Dirndorfer Anderson and Damien Spry
20 The Media, Cultural Control and Government in Singapore
Terence Lee
21 Politics and the Media in Twenty-First Century Indonesia
Edited by Krishna Sen and David T. Hill
22 Media, Social Mobilization and Mass Protests in Post-colonial Hong Kong
The power of a critical event
Francis L. F. Lee and Joseph M. Chan
23 HIV/AIDS, Health and the Media in China
Imagined immunity through racialized disease
Johanna Hood
24 Islam and Popular Culture in Indonesia and Malaysia
Edited by Andrew N. Weintraub
25 Online Society in China
Creating, celebrating, and instrumentalising the online carnival
Edited by David Kurt Herold and Peter Marolt
26 Rethinking Transnational Chinese Cinemas
The Amoy-dialect film industry in Cold War Asia
Jeremy E. Taylor
27 Film in Contemporary Southeast Asia
Cultural interpretation and social intervention
Edited by David C. L. Lim and Hiroyuki Yamamoto
28 Chinas New Creative Clusters
Governance, human capital, and investment
Michael Keane
29 Media and Democratic Transition in South Korea
Ki-Sung Kwak
30 The Asian Cinema Experience
Styles, spaces, theory
Stephen Teo
31 Asian Popular Culture
Edited by Anthony Y. H. Fung
32 Rumor and Communication in Asia in the Internet Age
Edited by Greg Dalziel
33 Genders and Sexualities in Indonesian Cinema
Constructing gay, lesbi and waria identities on screen
Ben Murtagh
34 Contemporary Chinese Print Media
Cultivating middle class taste
Yi Zheng
35 Culture, Aesthetics and Affect in Ubiquitous Media
The prosaic image
Helen Grace
36 Democracy, Media and Law in Malaysia and Singapore
A space for speech
Edited by Andrew T. Kenyon, Tim Marjoribanks and Amanda Whiting
37 IndonesiaMalaysia Relations
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