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Djuhertati Imam Muhni
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The Prairie and Deliverance: A Futile Search for a “Paradise Regained” Djuhertati Imam Muhni
Humaniora Vol 10, No 1 (1998)
Publisher : Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (787.928 KB) | DOI: 10.22146/jh.608

Abstract

Through the fall of Adam and Eve, paradise was lost to human beings; the striving for its recovery never ends. The dream for a "paradise on earth" is a universal phenomenon which attracks writers. In this short essay I would attempt to show how two American novelists of different generations depict the futile effort to regain the lost paradise in this world. James Fenimore Cooper who wrotr The Prairie was born in the nineteenth century whereas James Dickey the writer of Deliverance was born in tyhe twentieth, yet both novelists deal with the tragic relationship between the ideal and the real. In their Respective novels, The Prairie and Deliverance, both James Fenimore Cooper and James Dickey describe humankind's futile search for a paradise regained. Both are bitter books, in the sense that the protagonists in each find out that wahat they are striving for is only an empty dream.
EARLY DOWNHOME BLUES IN AMERICAN CULTURE Djuhertati Imam Muhni
Humaniora Vol 12, No 2 (2000)
Publisher : Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (504.197 KB) | DOI: 10.22146/jh.692

Abstract

People's traditional music and the way people behave when performing it are symbolic expressions of broad cultural pattern and social organization . In other words music is a part of men's learned heritage . Hence this study is about music in a given culture, specifically blues in American culture . Allen Trachtenberg stated that blues songs are inheritance from the American past for negotiating black people's lives as Americans . In the experience of blues the African-Americans find themselves caught up in questions of self identity, authority, definition, and nationality . In its origin the blues has been black's music, but in its diffusion, the blues addresses and implicates both whites and blacks . For whites, the experience of the music is a relationship, a form of interaction : for whites to fill and claim the blues as part of their own inheritance means to recognize the blacks as Americans and to confront the continuing presence of race-definition inequalities in the common culture (Trachtenberg, 1994 : xi-viii) . The blues urges all Americans to feel the rhythm, the lyric, and the innuendo and to learn their common paradoxical condition : the interchangeability of race and culture within the national identity . Ought's a ought, figger's a figger ; All for the white and none for the niger (White, 1965 :383) . Blues indicates American conflict and struggle : the racial issues that are never far 212 from the beat of the downhome blues are transposed into a new space of contest and challenge (Trachtenberg, 1994 : xii) . Scope and Approach of Discussion There are two major types of early blues songs, namely downhome and vaudeville blues. Downhome blues is mostly sung by men, while Vaudeville by women singers . Originally downhome blues is folk music, but since 1920 with the recording industry it has become pop music . Vaudeville, on the other hand, is pop music right from the start . Most downhome singers sing accompanied by his own guitar-playing, whereas Vaudeville singers almost always sing in front of a jazz group . Vaudeville singers were mostly black women with backgrounds in musical shows ; they were professionals taking pride in their ability to deliver any kind of songs . Vaudeville blues was popular music, not folk music, their lyrics were usually composed by professionals black musicians. Most vaudeville blues songs from the 1920s resembled that of today's musical comedies . Influenced by genteel white taste, vaudeville singers strove for dramatic delivery, enunciating the words of the lyrics in standard English pronunciation (Titon, 1994 : xvii) . Not minimizing the importance of vaudeville blues, this study will only concern with downhome blues, leaving the former for further study .
The Pursuit Of Happiness In American Mind And In Javanese Thought Djuhertati Imam Muhni
Humaniora Vol 14, No 1 (2002)
Publisher : Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (49.751 KB) | DOI: 10.22146/jh.742

Abstract

society has a concept of happiness and has a way to pursue it. This essay tries to bring out some of these concepts and its pursuits as seen in two different societies, namely American and Javanese. The discussion is more of a vision on the theme rather than a comparative study. The essay falls into two sections: the first describes some important facts about American pursuits of happiness and the second discusses the pursuit of happiness in one small part of the Javanese thoughts or Kejawen, namely Soerjomentaram’s philosophy of Ngelmu Beja.
Wanita Kulit Hitam Amerika dan Refleksinya dalam Karya Sastra Djuhertati Imam Muhni
Humaniora Vol 12, No 1 (2000)
Publisher : Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (1252.837 KB) | DOI: 10.22146/jh.1289

Abstract

Tulisan ini menelusuri perjalanan sejarah wanita Afrika-Amerika dengan pendekatan interdisipliner yang menyertakan unsur-unsur sejarah, budaya, sosiologi, kajian wanita, dan sastra. Pendekatan sastra di sini berbeda dengan studi sastra "murni", dalam arti karya sastra akan dipakai sebagai mental evidence yang mendukung hard evidence untuk menyelidiki fenomena yang terjadi di masyarakat. Pendekatan studi wanita (women studies approach) memungkinkan penulis untuk membagi-bagi tulisan ini dalam tiga bagian yang mencerminkan tahap-tahap perjalanan hidup wanita Afrika-Amerika, yaitu sebagai gadis, sebagai istri, dan setuju wanita masa kini.
Ancient Greek Influence and Imagism In H.D's Early Poems Djuhertati Imam Muhni
Humaniora No 8 (1998)
Publisher : Faculty of Cultural Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | Full PDF (1095.087 KB) | DOI: 10.22146/jh.2060

Abstract

In 1912 in the Museum-Street-Tea Shop Ezra Pound edited H.D's poem "Hermes of the Ways," signing it "H.D.lmagiste," and by this gesture the Imagist movement exists in the literary world. This often quoted information indicates that there is a significant influence of ancient Greek Literature On Imagist poets, particularly on H.D.; for example, one might note that the first two poems that appeared bearing the name Imagist, namely "Hermes of The Ways" and "Priapus" were based on Greek dedicatory epigrams. The purpose of the paper is to trace the ancient Greek influence on H.D.'s works, especially her purest Imagist poems. Though the discussion focuses on H.D.'s poetry, it also touches upon them works of two other Imagists, namely Ezra Pound's and Aldington's. These poets were two of the most important people in H.D.'s life as well as in her poetry. Pound came early in her life, and sparked her interest in Greek literature, while Aldington appeared in her London period,contributing a share in her intensive study of ancient Greek works. Accordingly, the paper falls into two main parts of discussion: first, on the personal and literary relationships between Ezra Pound, Aldington, and H.D. (Hilda Doolitle); second, the influence of Greek literature especially that of Sappho on H.D. as the main focus.