Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen

Following the Great Depression, colonial Indonesia underwent a shift in societal make-up, which influenced various forms of popular culture. Writers and other creative professionals used popular culture to express their opinions on the cultural shift. The reporter turned screenwriter Saeroen was no...

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Main Author: Woodrich, Christopher A.
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2015
Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/stjgs/vol3/iss2/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/stjgs/article/1069/viewcontent/ST_203.2_203_20Article_20__20Woodrich.pdf
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Institution: Ateneo De Manila University
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.stjgs-10692024-10-22T17:48:02Z Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen Woodrich, Christopher A. Following the Great Depression, colonial Indonesia underwent a shift in societal make-up, which influenced various forms of popular culture. Writers and other creative professionals used popular culture to express their opinions on the cultural shift. The reporter turned screenwriter Saeroen was no exception. Attached to four film production houses in his four-year screenwriting career (1937–1941), Saeroen’s oeuvre included some of the biggest commercial successes of the period, and often involved the theme of migration from the villages to the cities. Though the majority of Saeroen’s films are now thought lost, enough evidence survives in the form of film reviews, novelizations, and promotional material for a textual analysis of his works and the views contained within. As will be shown, Saeroen’s works represent a testament to the experience of abandoning the villages and embracing the cities. Using postcolonial theory and Upstone’s concept of space, we argue that Saeroen represented colonial cities as both full of the possibility for further development and replete with dangers not found in the villages, and villages as stagnant and rarely changing with few intrinsic dangers. We further argue that cities and villages in these films become embodiments of the oft-contrasted concepts of modernity and tradition. Ultimately, we conclude that Saeroen’s representation of colonial Indonesia is intended as both a warning against embracing modernity at the expense of tradition, as well as a call for further modernization. 2015-09-30T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/stjgs/vol3/iss2/3 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/stjgs/article/1069/viewcontent/ST_203.2_203_20Article_20__20Woodrich.pdf Social Transformations Journal of the Global South Archīum Ateneo
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
description Following the Great Depression, colonial Indonesia underwent a shift in societal make-up, which influenced various forms of popular culture. Writers and other creative professionals used popular culture to express their opinions on the cultural shift. The reporter turned screenwriter Saeroen was no exception. Attached to four film production houses in his four-year screenwriting career (1937–1941), Saeroen’s oeuvre included some of the biggest commercial successes of the period, and often involved the theme of migration from the villages to the cities. Though the majority of Saeroen’s films are now thought lost, enough evidence survives in the form of film reviews, novelizations, and promotional material for a textual analysis of his works and the views contained within. As will be shown, Saeroen’s works represent a testament to the experience of abandoning the villages and embracing the cities. Using postcolonial theory and Upstone’s concept of space, we argue that Saeroen represented colonial cities as both full of the possibility for further development and replete with dangers not found in the villages, and villages as stagnant and rarely changing with few intrinsic dangers. We further argue that cities and villages in these films become embodiments of the oft-contrasted concepts of modernity and tradition. Ultimately, we conclude that Saeroen’s representation of colonial Indonesia is intended as both a warning against embracing modernity at the expense of tradition, as well as a call for further modernization.
format text
author Woodrich, Christopher A.
spellingShingle Woodrich, Christopher A.
Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
author_facet Woodrich, Christopher A.
author_sort Woodrich, Christopher A.
title Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
title_short Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
title_full Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
title_fullStr Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
title_full_unstemmed Between the Village and the City: Representing Colonial Indonesia in the Films of Saeroen
title_sort between the village and the city: representing colonial indonesia in the films of saeroen
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2015
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/stjgs/vol3/iss2/3
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/stjgs/article/1069/viewcontent/ST_203.2_203_20Article_20__20Woodrich.pdf
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