
Music for the Pria Dewasa: Changes and Continuities in Class and Pop Music Genres
Author(s) -
Emma Baulch
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of indonesian social sciences and humanities
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2656-7512
pISSN - 1979-8431
DOI - 10.14203/jissh.v3i1.48
Subject(s) - politics , indonesian , authoritarianism , popular music , context (archaeology) , democracy , class (philosophy) , period (music) , order (exchange) , sociology , media studies , history , aesthetics , political science , literature , art , law , epistemology , linguistics , philosophy , archaeology , finance , economics
This paper presents Rolling Stone Indonesia1 (RSI) and places it in an historical context to tease out some changes and continuities in Indonesian middle-class politics since the beginning of the New Order. Some political scientists have claimed that class interests were at the core of the transition from Guided Democracy to the New Order, and popular music scholars generally assert that class underlies pop genre distinctions. But few have paid attention to how class and genre were written into Indonesian pop in the New Order period; Indonesian pop has a fascinating political history that has so far been overlooked. Placing RSI in historical perspective can reveal much about the print medias classing of pop under New Order era political constraints, and about the ways these modes of classing may or may not have endured in the post-authoritarian, globalised and liberalised media environment