• Tentang UGM
  • IT Center
  • English
    • Bahasa Indonesia
    • English
Universitas Gadjah Mada Center for Southeast Asian Social Studies
Universitas Gajah Mada
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Overview
    • Researcher
    • Partner Researcher
    • Partner
    • library
  • Research
    • Research
    • Clusters
  • Program
    • The 17th International Asian Urbanization Conference
    • SUMMER COURSE
      • SUMMER COURSE 2021
      • SUMMER COURSE 2022
      • SUMMER COURSE 2023
      • SUMMER COURSE 2024 COMMUNICATING THE ASEAN IDENTITY THROUGH POPULAR CULTURE
      • SUMMER COURSE 2024 SOCIAL TRANSFORMATION IN CONTEMPORARY SOUTHEAST ASIA
      • SUMMER COURSE 2024 SMART CITY, DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION AND SOCIETY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
      • SUMMER COURSE 2025 SMART CITY, DIGITAL TRANSFORMATION, AND SOCIETY IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
    • Symposium on Social Science (SOSS)
      • Symposium on Social Science (2018)
      • Symposium on Social Science (2020)
    • SEA MCA
    • SEA Talk
    • CESASS TALK
    • SEA Chat
    • SEA Movie
    • INTERNSHIP
      • DOMESTIC INTERNSHIP
      • INTERNATIONAL INTERNSHIP
      • Intern’s Activities
      • Intern’s Essay
    • ASEAN Day
    • Workshop Kominfo
  • Publication
    • Book
    • Journal
    • Proceeding
  • Academic Essay
    • Culture & Linguistics
    • Digital Society
    • Economic and Social Welfare
    • Education
    • Media & Communication Studies
    • Law & Human Rights
    • Politics and International Relations
    • Article Guidelines
  • Home
  • Academic Essay
  • Culture & Linguistics
Arsip:

Culture & Linguistics

Wives for sale! Exports of the Vietnamese Bride Industry

Academic EssayCulture & LinguisticsEconomic and Social Welfare Friday, 11 December 2020

When it comes to Vietnamese exports, the first item that comes to mind for most people might be Vietnamese coffee. Indeed, this famous good lies among the many items exported out of Vietnam which has led to the establishment of these marketable industries. However, this article will not be exploring these conventional exports but will focus on a lesser-examined good instead- the Vietnamese bride.

This ‘economic good’ of the Vietnamese bride can be located within the larger phenomenon of the mail order bride industry. As defined by Sarker, Cakraborty, Tansuhaj, Mulder and Dogerlioglu-Demir (2013), this industry can be seen through “international marriage brokering agencies as mail order bride services”. In highlighting the centrality of brokering agencies to the market, this definition helps distinguish a bride that is specifically sold as an international ‘product’ against her fellow compatriot who marries overseas, outside of the system. Hence, this serves to demarcate and economise the human bride into a commercial good, which is arguably problematic due to its dehumanising undertones. However, for the purpose of understanding how this industry can be perceived using an economic lens of analysis, these terms will be used in the course of examination below. read more

The Domino Effect and the Web of Connections Between Tourist Sites in Indonesia

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Tuesday, 3 December 2019

On the 1st-4th of April 2019, I attended the MMAT workshop (Mengajar & Meneliti Asia Tenggara or “Understanding Changes in Southeast Asia”). The workshop aimed to equip the participants with a deeper understanding of Southeast Asia as well as research skills and experience. A part of the workshop was to do fieldwork at one of three locations, and I was in the group that did our fieldwork at Sosrowijayan. We were asked to observe and do interviews to find out more about the area in accordance to our area of study. As an anthropologist, I looked at the state of the society, and the practices of the people. read more

Tourism in Singapore

Academic EssayCulture & LinguisticsEconomic and Social Welfare Thursday, 3 October 2019

Introduction

Tourism has become one of the most important global industries today. To maintain global power, Singapore has to get involve and give value to tourism in the country. Singapore can be considered a small country if you determine it from the amount of land the country has, but if you measure from its economy, it is one of the most growing counties in the world. This statement is pointed out by Hooi Hooi Leana, Sio Hing Chongb and Chee-Wooi Hooyc (2014) who say that ;

“ Tourism is a fast-growing industry in Singapore. Despite the small contribution to the country’s overall GDP, hovering around 8 percent, Singapore’s tourism industry lingers as a noteworthy showcase not only for trade and economic powerhouse but also as a hub for entertainment, media, and culture in Southeast Asia. In 2005, the Singapore Tourism Board heralded its target to ensure tourism played the role as a key economic pillar by tripling tourism receipts to S$30 billion and doubling visitor arrivals to 17 million in 2015. Besides, the “Uniquely Singapore” campaign that launched in March 2004, aimed to show the world the blend of the best of Singapore as the modern world of warm, enriching and unforgettable tourist destination had won a gold award conferred by the Pacific Asia Travel Association. In 2009, the contribution of the tourism industry on economic growth has recorded 7.3 percent and created 5.8 percent out of total employment opportunities. An increasing trend showing 4.1 percent of the total economy from the tourism industry in 2004 has escalated to 7.3 percent in 2009.” read more

Gender Bias in Marhata Sinamot: Wedding Procession of Toba-Batak

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Wednesday, 25 September 2019

The process of marriage in Indonesia the society recognizes in term of dowry (mahr) for both brides. Dowry (mahr) is a property given to a woman from a man when he wants to marry the woman. In Toba-Batak custom, dowry is similar to sinamot. However, the distinguish dowry is not used for the cost of the wedding ceremony. Meanwhile, sinamot means” buying” – the woman he wants to marry from her family and for the wedding ceremony (Manurung, N. 2015, p. 33). Unlike Sinamot, Marhata Sinamot is an event in determining the amount of sinamot that will be given to women and whole of sinamot is used as the capital to make the wedding ceremony and as the purchase price of women. There is no specific formula for Sinamot. It was determined at the time of Marhata Sinamot by considering several things, such as the education of women – the higher the education the more sinamot they were given, social status – the more Sinamot given by men to be considered as established person and more Sinamot accepted by women is considered as buying an established lady, and the last is the position of the families – if it comes from high clan will be more expensive, is that so. In this era, born as a woman is still unprivileged under the stigma of “women will belong to others” and makes women left behind, unwell educated, and various others discrimination (Levine, D. 2003). read more

The Phenomenal Pink Tourism Destination in Indonesia

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Sunday, 15 September 2019

Discussing LGBT (Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender) is still a controversial issue for Indonesian society by this time. The assumptions are constructed on the community tend to discriminate because they are often considered as the scum. All of that is due to the mindset of our society who still assume that LGBT is a deviant behavior their existence is often undesirable by society (Oetomo, 2013). However, no one would think that it turns out LGBT as one of the attractions for local and foreign tourists in Indonesia. LGBT Tourism Destination or called Pink Tourism is a term for LGBT travel (Huges, 2006) where not a new phenomenon, but its existence is not so highlighted by the wider community, particularly in Indonesia. It called Pink Tourism because pink color has been adopted by the homosexual community when the inverted pink triangle must be worn by gay men at Nazi Germany concentration camps at the time. So that, nowaday, phrase of pink tourism have been the term for tourist attractions which used LGBT as the main attraction (Ni Putu Diah Prabawati et al., 2019). Pink Tourism has become a natural thing for countries in Europe such as Spain, France, Germany, and the Netherlands, but not for Indonesia (UNWTO, 2012). Indonesia for this far has only been mostly recognized by its tourism sector in term of natural and ethnicity. However, it turns out that we keep taboo tourism in the society called LGBT tourism. Many tourists want to visit Indonesia because they want to feel this Indonesia LGBT tourism. Two regions as the most popular tourism in Indonesia also store lucrative LGBT tourism, which is Yogyakarta and Bali. Indonesia is truly rich with its tourist attractions where all over parts of Indonesia has its attractiveness. However, as we know from all of that Special Region of Yogyakarta and Bali are the most want to visit places in Indonesia. This two well-known regions not only provide a beautiful landscape and ethnicity but also amazing and interesting Pink Tourism for their tourists. read more

Military Conscription and Transgenders in Thailand

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Sunday, 25 August 2019

April can be a matter of life and death for young Thai men.

And no, it surely does not involve with Songkran, a popular water fight festival in the scorching heat of Thailand. It is a military conscription, a military enlistment process which Thai men who aged 21 years old and over must take part and choose between taking a voluntary military service for six months to one year, or going through a lottery system which the process is based on pure luck, just picking a card to see if the card is ‘red’ or ‘black’. While getting a black card means a permanent exemption, a red card is kind of a one-way ticket to military enlistment for 1-2 years. Plain and simple as it is, the lottery process could bring the toughest man to his knees. read more

The Price of Love: Bride Price in Thailand and Indonesia

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Thursday, 15 August 2019

‘You can live without money, but you cannot live without love’, the romantic quote that many people may have heard before, or even grown up with it. However, in some parts of the world, you cannot love without money, and marriage is more than a ceremony to declare two people’s love. Some lovers cannot be together because of their status differences, and sometimes marriage strongly involves social status and financial stability. They are the bride price I am talking about, the price of love. read more

Tourism is Singapore

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Saturday, 25 May 2019

Tourism has become one of the most important global industries today. To maintain global power, Singapore has to get involve and give value to tourism in the country. Singapore can be considered a small country if you determine it from the amount of land the country has, but if you measure from its economy, it is one of the most growing counties in the world. This statement is pointed out by Hooi Hooi Leana, Sio Hing Chongb and Chee-Wooi Hooyc (2014) who say that ;

“ Tourism is a fast-growing industry in Singapore. Despite the small contribution to the country’s overall GDP, hovering around 8 percent, Singapore’s tourism industry lingers as a noteworthy showcase not only for trade and economic powerhouse but also as a hub for entertainment, media, and culture in Southeast Asia. In 2005, the Singapore Tourism Board heralded its target to ensure tourism played the role as a key economic pillar by tripling tourism receipts to S$30 billion and doubling visitor arrivals to 17 million in 2015. Besides, the “Uniquely Singapore” campaign that launched in March 2004, aimed to show the world the blend of the best of Singapore as the modern world of warm, enriching and unforgettable tourist destination had won a gold award conferred by the Pacific Asia Travel Association. In 2009, the contribution of the tourism industry on economic growth has recorded 7.3 percent and created 5.8 percent out of total employment opportunities. An increasing trend showing 4.1 percent of the total economy from the tourism industry in 2004 has escalated to 7.3 percent in 2009.” read more

Football, Collective Memory, and Nationalism in Southeast Asia

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Thursday, 21 December 2017

Nationalism is an endless thing. It must be inherited continuously through education, slogans, and of course the existence of ‘others’. In the context of inter-state relations the existence of ‘others’ will become more complicated if the national identity of other nations has come into contact in open conflict. In other words, ‘others’ would be considered an antagonist if history presents a collective memory of inter-state conflicts.

In Southeast Asia, conflicts between nations are not new. The confrontation between Malaysia and Indonesia at the end of the Old Order is one example. However, since the establishment of ASEAN 50 years ago, open conflicts between Southeast Asian nations incorporated in ASEAN have almost never been heard. This is because the countries incorporated in ASEAN agree not to interfere with the sovereignty of other countries in politics or ideology. With the agreement they hope to create peace in the region of Southeast Asia. read more

Tracing Prostitution Tour in Thailand from Time to Time

Academic EssayCulture & Linguistics Wednesday, 23 August 2017

The problem of prostitution is endless. In addition to the many opposing parties, there are still a handful of supporters. Although considered immoral by most people, but the sex industry is still surviving until now around the world. No matter how intense the government declares illegal, it is not easy to make prostitution vanish from a country because there is always a need. In Southeast Asia, Thailand is famous for its sex tourism. Boonchutima (2009) stated that the government of the White Elephant has been trying to change the image by promoting other tourisms such as cultural tourism. But unfortunately, a thick Thai image of sex tourism has not changed. read more

12

Recent Posts

  • CESASS UGM hosted the Representative from Asian School of Business-MIT Sloan School of Management, Malaysia
  • Center for Southeast Asian Social Studies UGM successfully held the 17th International Asian Urbanization Conference
  • Head of Centre for Southeast Asian Social Studies (PSSAT) UGM became a speaker at the Global Immersion Guarantee (GIG) Program UGM, ACICIS, and Monash University
  • CESASS UGM Hosts Visit from Harvard-Yenching Institute Leaders
  • Seminar and Final Monitoring-Evaluation of RKI Research Project “Creative, Innovative, and Smart Sustainable City Concept for Capital City.”
Universitas Gadjah Mada

Center for Southeast Asian Social Studies
Universitas Gajah Mada

Gedung PAU, Jl. Teknika Utara
Daerah Istimewa Yogyakarta 55281
pssat@ugm.ac.id
+62 274 589658

Instagram | Twitter | FB Page | Linkedin | 

© Universitas Gadjah Mada

KEBIJAKAN PRIVASI/PRIVACY POLICY

[EN] We use cookies to help our viewer get the best experience on our website. -- [ID] Kami menggunakan cookie untuk membantu pengunjung kami mendapatkan pengalaman terbaik di situs web kami.I Agree / Saya Setuju