cover
Contact Name
Raymond Michael Menot
Contact Email
michael@ui.ac.id
Phone
-
Journal Mail Official
journal.ai@gmail.com
Editorial Address
"Departemen Antropologi, FISIP, Gedung B, Lt.1, FISIP Universitas Indonesia Depok 16424"
Location
Kota depok,
Jawa barat
INDONESIA
Jurna lAntropologi Indonesia
Published by Universitas Indonesia
ISSN : 1693167X     EISSN : 16936086     DOI : 10.7454
Core Subject : Social,
ANTROPOLOGI INDONESIA was published to develop and enrich scientific discussion for scholars who put interest on socio-cultural issues in Indonesia. These journals apply peer-reviewed process in selecting high quality article. Editors welcome theoretical or research based article submission. Author’s argument doesn’t need to be in line with editors. The criteria of the submitted article covers the following types of article: first, the article presents the results of an ethnographic/qualitative research in certain topic and is related with ethnic/social groups in Indonesia; second, the article is an elaborated discussion of applied and collaborative research with strong engagement between the author and the collaborator’s subject in implementing intervention program or any other development initiative that put emphasizes on social, political, and cultural issues; third, a theoretical writing that elaborates social and cultural theory linked with the theoretical discourse of anthropology, especially in Indonesia anthropology; last, the article is a critical review of anthropological reference and other ethnography books that must be published at least in the last 3 years.
Arjuna Subject : -
Articles 579 Documents
Harmoni Lanskap Spiritual dan Kontestasi Komoditas di Gunung Kawi Amirul Auzar Ch.; Tony Rudyansjah
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 40, No 2 (2019): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

In understanding spiritual landscape, human ideas and practices in dealing with something sacred was considered to be connected with history or memory, cosmology, livelihood, power, and social dynamics. These aspects appeared to create structures and agents entangled around something that was considered sacred. Through a study on the sacred sites of Gunung Kawi, this article wants to show how an awareness of spiritual landscape producing and co-existing with commodification practices. Through the intertwined of those two logics—spiritual landscape and commodification—a lot of things in Gunung Kawi, both human and non-human, were behaving as an agent and an object at the same time. The sacred was then created through the interaction between landscape and human framed by spirituality and commodity.
Sando Pea: Between Tradition and Health Challenge among Kaluppini Indigenous People Nurbaya Nurbaya; Wahyu Chandra
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 2 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article explored the phenomenon of abortion within which a health issue is embedded, both in modern medicine and traditional medicine which is very close to the culture of the local community. It described efforts of abortion treatment that act as a bridge between the roles of modern medicine and traditional medicine in the Yogyakarta region. Apart from the stigma of local community regarding abortion by women with unwanted pregnancy, this article aimed to eliminate inappropriate conceptions and practices that stem from misinterpretations of developments in science, technology, and media. Abortion at least represents a narrative and context in the medical studies, as well as opens up space for discussing the concept of women’s body health. The phenomenon of handling abortion in Yogyakarta with the ‘home abortion’ system through advertisements for ‘late menstruation’ or ‘late months’ has become part of the issue of women’s reproductive health. This step of self-abortion finally emerged with its optimism as a form of harmonization between modern medicine and traditional medicine in a broader context.
Pengetahuan Tradisional tentang Kesehatan dan Pemenuhan Hak Kesehatan Reproduksi Perempuan Bawean Pinky Saptandari
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 2 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Artikel ini bertujuan untuk mendeskripsikan pengetahuan tradisional tentang kesehatan dan pemenuhan hak kesehatan reproduksi perempuan Bawean di tengah-tengah perkembangan sistem layanan kesehatan modern. Mereka lebih banyak menerapkan pengetahuan dan praktik tradisional dalam memenuhi kesehatan dan hak kesehatan reproduksi mereka lewat sistem medis naturalistik, mulai dari haid hingga proses kehamilan dan kelahiran. Dukun bayi yang dikenal dengan sebutan Balian masih menjadi pilihan untuk persalinan, meskipun fasilitas layanan kesehatan di Pulau Bawean relatif lengkap dan modern. Kuatnya nilai-nilai patriarki terlihat dari cara pandang dan pola tindakan yang menempatkan tubuh dan kesehatan perempuan dalam diskursus tubuh, khususnya tubuh medis, yang cenderung abai terhadap aspek psikokultural dalam pemenuhan hak-hak kesehatan reproduksi perempuan.
The Dynamics of Abortion Treatment as an Effort of Harmonization between the Modern and the Traditional Medical System Hanifatus Salwa
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 2 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article explored the phenomenon of abortion within which a health issue is embedded, both in modern medicine and traditional medicine which is very close to the culture of the local community. It described efforts of abortion treatment that act as a bridge between the roles of modern medicine and traditional medicine in the Yogyakarta region. Apart from the stigma of local community regarding abortion by women with unwanted pregnancy, this article aimed to eliminate inappropriate conceptions and practices that stem from misinterpretations of developments in science, technology, and media. Abortion at least represents a narrative and context in the medical studies, as well as opens up space for discussing the concept of women’s body health. The phenomenon of handling abortion in Yogyakarta with the ‘home abortion’ system through advertisements for ‘late menstruation’ or ‘late months’ has become part of the issue of women’s reproductive health. This step of self-abortion finally emerged with its optimism as a form of harmonization between modern medicine and traditional medicine in a broader context.
Hidup dalam Transit: Representasi Diri Digital Pengungsi Muda Oromo di Instagram terhadap Rekonstruksi “Refugeeness” dalam Interaksi antara Pengungsi dan Audiens Clarisa Irene
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 42, No 1 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

The representation of refugees and asylum seekers should not be bounded to media’s depiction of it. This paper focuses on refugees’ self-representation on Instagram, one of the most used social media platforms in the world, which cannot be understood separately from their daily life as refugees. Drawing from the observation of young Oromo refugees, I find that Instagram—and other social media—are used as a form of online participation to fill their days in transit. Other than offering the Oromo youths access to entertainment and new insights, Instagram also provides a space in which they can build and maintain relationship and it allows them to talk about and for themselves with photos, videos, and captions. They do this by celebrating their mundane moments as well as accessing and expressing happiness through the platform. Their posts also affect the audience or other users who know them as refugees and have online and offline interaction with them. They evoke a peculiar reconstruction of refugeeness. This paper offers a view of refugeeness as something constantly reconstructed and a thorough as well as contextual understanding of the lives of refugees, especially urban refugees who live in a transit country.
Spectactorial Sisterhood: Relasi Sosial Pengguna Second Account di Instagram Amelia Rugun Sirait
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 42, No 1 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Instagram is a popular image based social media platform. Usually, users have their own accounts for their personal profile to be viewed publicly. As Instagram features develop, users may have more than one account. Accounts that are specific to certain circle of friends are called “second accounts” and treated as private accounts used to express and relate through images. In this social media ethnography, seven subjects shared their experiences through uploaded images, videos and texts. They have the awareness to avoid relationships and gazes in their main account by building a different subjectivity in their second account. Contents on their second account are stories shared with their most trusted people. The dynamics of second account show different relations expressed through visual cues in Instagram, which I will call “spectatorial sisterhood” here.
YouTube Sebagai Arena Produksi dan Reproduksi Kultur Hip-Hop Edra Ramadhan Praliansyah
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 42, No 1 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article discusses the so-called YouTube rapper phenomenon, a new subgenre of hip-hop music whose emergence was caused by YouTube. Rap or hip-hop, which has a long history of intergroup resistance from stage to stage, has now moved to YouTube as a new battleground, producing the YouTube rapper subgenre. This article shows that the hip-hop community was very responsive to YouTube, which was their new stage, alongside Discord and Facebook as more textual media employable for debate and discussion. This article argues that YouTube has the capacity to become a center of hip-hop capitalization in Indonesia, as in elsewhere, because it was proven to be able to produce and reproduce the culture of hip-hop.
“Pacaran, Yuk!”: Sebuah Studi Kasus Mengenai Proses Percintaan di LINE PLAY, Our Avatar World Nabila Anggana Laras
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 42, No 1 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

This article will explain about the love process of the players that occurs in a chat-based online game called LINE PLAY - Our Avatar World. LINE PLAY is an online game that aims to interact by bringing a player closer to another player who is distant and foreign, including virtual dating. The case studies are taken from virtual dating experiences carried out by LINE PLAY players whom are members of a “BROTHERHOOD” group, namely, Momo, Sapi, Rio, and Emeng. They were represented by an avatar in the LINE PLAY world. This research was conducted online and offline for 1 year and 2 months. In Online data research, my avatar, Volans and I conducted participatory observations and interviews to get to know the respondents in LINE PLAY. In Offline data research, I met the respondents in real life by conducting interviews in Dago, Bandung, West Java. In this research, I found that LINE PLAY as a virtual space is a serial world for someone which doing a virtual dating. That is, when players date virtually, there are many options for virtual spaces that are similar to the steps of someone who takes in finding a girlfriend in the real world. So, it becomes an imitation for a player to look for a girlfriend virtually. Also, LINE PLAY is also an extension of a player in virtual dating, represented by an expansive, playful avatar that makes it interesting to play.
Kolektif sebagai Institusi Kebudayaan Alternatif di Perkotaan Jawa: Telaah Infrastruktur Sosial Khidir Marsanto Prawirosusanto
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 40, No 2 (2019): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

Collectives as a non-formal cultural institution began to emerge and widespread at around the 1998 Reformation. As a new form of cultural movement in Yogyakarta, collectives were different to formal cultural institutions, such as museums and art galleries, which mostly depend on financial support from the government, corporation, or some individual patrons. This article discusses the contemporary cultural organization domain with the case of collectives based in Yogyakarta. Some groups with characteristics of collectives were initiated in the urban sphere and run by young people. We comprehend this activism of collectives as a ‘cultural acts’ (laku budaya)—they ran various cultural activities continuously in fine arts, visual arts, music, food issues, and the practices of ‘knowledge production.’ Cultural acts collectivism could be identified through their creative and liberatory works oriented toward the creation of art works and/or critical publications. Their works were experimental and frequently expressed through various mediums. Likewise, the spaces they used were generally not tied to a strict administrative framework as in various formal cultural institutions. This ethnography intends to present the history and dynamics of the collectives of cultural acts in Yogyakarta, both as a group and individuals, which stood on the spirit to represent alternative ideas, resistance, and liberation as the basis to their values. In addition, it also discusses how the collectives of cultural acts took tactical means through social, cultural, and political functions to promote their values to the public.
The Sixth Sense that Gives Burdens: Narratives and Explanations on the ‘Gifted People’s Encounters with the Supernatural Ratna Andriani Fabrian
Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 2 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia
Publisher : Department of Anthropology

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

In Jakarta, stories of people experiencing ghosts were not uncommon or peculiar. For some people, a given sixth sense allows them to gain advantages by communicating with the supernatural—this is considered as a gift. But, this ‘gift’ carries a side-effect, that is, the bearers may often get disturbed by ghosts due to their own supernatural sensitivity. To protect themself from supernatural disturbances, the bearers have to refrain from committing certain actions and have to constantly and solemnly pray. However, if they find the disturbances unbearable, they may visit a spiritual healer who has more power in controlling the supernatural. This paper aims to highlight the narratives on ghostly encounters and disturbances of people with a sixth sense. The featured narratives were of four people with a sixth sense from different backgrounds and statuses. They all lived in Jakarta. It focuses on their life histories as well as their beliefs on the supernatural. Despite their different personal histories, all informants conveyed that they have endured significant painful experiences before becoming susceptible to ghostly disturbances. It was then evident that their intriguing ghostly encounters were one of the results of their distressing past events. However, cultural beliefs denied and/or concealed the underlying issue and regarded it as a mere supernatural phenomenon. This raises a question on the conceptualization of mental health problems and its categorization cross-culturally; should a cultural symptom be classified as a mental health problem?

Filter by Year

1969 2021


Filter By Issues
All Issue Vol 42, No 2 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 42, No 1 (2021): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 2 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 41, No 1 (2020): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 40, No 2 (2019): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 40, No 1 (2019): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 39, No 2 (2018): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 39, No 1 (2018): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 38, No 2 (2017): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 38, No 1 (2017): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 37, No 2 (2016): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 37, No 1 (2016): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 36, No 2 (2015): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 36, No 1 (2015): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 35, No 1 (2014): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 34, No 2 (2013): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 34, No 1 (2013): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 33, No 3 (2012): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 33, No 2 (2012): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 33, No 1 (2012): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 32, No 3 (2011): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 32, No 2 (2011): Antropologi Indonesia Vol 32, No 1 (2011): Antropologi Indonesia ##issue.vol## 31, ##issue.no## 3 (2010): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 31, No 3 (2010): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 1 (2009): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 30, No 3 (2006): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 30, No 2 (2006): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 30, No 1 (2006): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 29, No 3 (2005): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 29, No 2 (2005): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia Vol 29, No 1 (2005): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 75 (2004): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 74 (2004): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia (english edition) No 74 (2004): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 73 (2004): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 72 (2003): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 71 (2003): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 70 (2003): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 69 (2002): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 68 (2002): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 67 (2002): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 66 (2001): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 65 (2001): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 64 (2001): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 63 (2000): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 62 (2000): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 61 (2000): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 60 (1999): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 59 (1999): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 58 (1999): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 57 (1998): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 56 (1998): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 55 (1998): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 54 (1997): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 53 (1997): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 52 (1997): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 51 (1995): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 50 (1992): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 49 (1991): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 48 (1991): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 47 (1989): Jurnal Antropologi Indonesia No 44 (1986): Berita Antropologi No 43 (1986): Berita Antropologi No 42 (1986): Berita Antropologi No 41 (1986): Berita Antropologi No 40 (1985): Berita Antropologi No 39 (1980): Berita Antropologi No 38 (1980): Berita Antropologi No 37 (1980): Berita Antropologi No 36 (1980): Berita Antropologi No 35 (1978): Berita Antropologi No 34 (1978): Berita Antropologi No 32-33 (1977): Berita Antropologi No 31 (1977): Berita Antropologi No 30 (1977): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 21 (1975): Berita Antropologi No 20 (1975): Berita Antropologi No 19 (1975): Berita Antropologi No 23 (1974): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 18 (1974): Berita Antropologi No 17 (1974): Berita Antropologi No 15 (1974): Berita Antropologi No 14 (1974): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 3 (1973): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 11 (1972): Berita Antropologi No 9 (1972): Berita Antropologi No 8 (1972): Berita Antropologi No 7 (1972): Berita Antropologi No 6 (1972): Berita Antropologi No 2 (1972): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 1 (1972): Berita Antropologi Terbitan Khusus No 5 (1971): Berita Antropologi No 4 (1971): Berita Antropologi No 3 (1969): Berita Antropologi No 2 (1969): Berita Antropologi No 1 (1969): Berita Antropologi More Issue