Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Kartini is a National Hero of Indonesia. [2] Kartini was an intellectual who elevated the status of Indonesian women and a nationalist figure with modern ideas, who struggled on behalf of her people and played a role in the national struggle for independence. [38] She is among the first modern intellectuals in Indonesia. [27]
Kartini (subtitled Princess of Java in other regions) is a 2017 Indonesian biographical family drama film directed by Hanung Bramantyo and written by Bramantyo and Bagus Bramanti. It features an ensemble cast, with Dian Sastrowardoyo starring in the title role of Indonesian woman emancipation heroine, Kartini .
In 2016, Sastro starred as Indonesia's national heroine in the biographical drama movie Kartini. [7] In 2018, Dian starred in Aruna dan Lidahnya (Aruna and Her Palate), a film based on the Laksmi Pamuntjak written book novel of the same name. [8] [9] In 2020, she starred in the comedy film Crazy Awesome Teachers and it released directly on Netflix.
Letters of a Javanese Princess (Dutch: Door duisternis tot licht: Gedachten over en voor het Javaansche volk; 'Through darkness to light: Thoughts about and for the Javanese people') is a posthumous book of letters by the Dutch East Indies women's rights activist and intellectual Kartini.
Raden Kosasih was born in Bogor, Indonesia, at April 4, 1919. At the start of his career, he worked as a book illustrator. [1] Kosasih published his first comics, a five-part comic book series featuring the female superheroes Sri Asih and Siti Gahara, in 1954. It was the first popular indigenous comic book in Indonesia. [2]
Benny & Mice comic strips are also published as comic books: . Kartun Benny & Mice: Jakarta Luar Dalem (Benny & Mice Cartoon: Jakarta Inside Out) (2007); Benny & Mice: Talk About Hape (Benny & Mice: Talk About Mobile Phones) (March 2008)
Kartini is known as a pioneer in the area of women's rights for native Indonesians. In her letters, Kartini wrote about her views of the social conditions prevailing at that time, particularly the condition of native Indonesian women. The majority of her letters protest the tendency of Javanese Culture to impose obstacles for the development of ...
Put On is a comic by Chinese Indonesian cartoonist Kho Wan Gie [], published in the Dutch East Indies and later in independent Indonesia.It began its run in Sin Po in 1931 and was published twice weekly, every Friday and Saturday, in Malay —the language of its publication.