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Kembang Kertas is a 1984 Indonesian drama film directed by Slamet Rahardjo. [1] The film won five awards at the Indonesian Film Festival in 1985, including Best Feature Film . Accolades
I Gusti Ngurah Putu Wijaya (born April 11, 1944) [1] is an Indonesian author, considered by many to be one of Indonesia's most prominent literary figures. [1] His output is impressive; his published works include more than thirty novels, forty dramas, a hundred short stories, and thousands of essays, articles, screenplays and television dramas, and he has been the recipient of a number of ...
Directed by Putu Wijaya, who wrote the screenplay with Eddy D. Iskandar, the series mainly focuses on Indra, a college student who gave his first salary and shared his feelings with his mother, Diah, while having a strong relationship with his wife Ayu, and his housekeeper Haryati. Overarching themes include a focus on love and relationships as ...
According to Benedict Anderson, Iwan Simatupang and Putu Wijaya were the two "genuinely distinguished fictionalists" produced by Indonesia since Independence and both had a strong attachment to "magical realism". [5]
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Major factors which make for a blurring of distinctions are: the difficulty of distinguishing between Malay and Indonesian Even in the 1930s, Malay was the lingua franca of the Archipelago, but was also used widely outside it, while a national Indonesian language was still in a state of development. [ 1 ]
[11] [12] [13] Drama, in the narrow sense, cuts across the traditional division between comedy and tragedy in an anti- or a-generic deterritorialisation from the mid-19th century onwards. Both Bertolt Brecht and Augusto Boal define their epic theatre projects ( non-Aristotelian drama and Theatre of the Oppressed , respectively) against models ...
According to the Columbia Encyclopedia of Modern Drama, he was a prolific playwright and director from the 1970s until his death in 1995, directing all of his original plays including his best-known work, Kapai-Kapai ("Reaching Out"; translated as "Moths" in English) in 1970. [2]