EDITORIAL

Language and media has always been in a mutual relationship. Historical record shows that mass media, such as newspaper, magazine and other products of printing technology, played a very instrumental role in the development of language and its changing practices and functions within society. In Indo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abdul Wahid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Gadjah Mada 2016-05-01
Series:Humaniora
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/jurnal-humaniora/article/view/11408
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spelling doaj-5a969a48588744748e11d00c80d159782020-11-25T00:10:17ZengUniversitas Gadjah MadaHumaniora0852-08012302-92692016-05-012811210.22146/jh.v28i1.114089051EDITORIALAbdul Wahid0Universitas Gadjah MadaLanguage and media has always been in a mutual relationship. Historical record shows that mass media, such as newspaper, magazine and other products of printing technology, played a very instrumental role in the development of language and its changing practices and functions within society. In Indonesia, this can be seen during the late colonial period – particularly from early twentieth century onward – when printing technology was introduced on massive scale as part of the capitalist expansion to produce an increasing number of newspapers, magazines, journals, and other publications. These mass media boosted the literacy rate of Indonesian population and created a ‘reader community’, and cultivated written tradition, which later stimulated wider cultural and political literacy among Indonesian society. This ‘printing capitalism’ also facilitated the evolution of vernacular language and brought them into a modern written world that partially supported the identity formation of local society in a colonial context. More importantly, the mass media also mediated the transformation and institutionalization of Malay from a ‘vernacular language’ into a ‘national language’, known later as Bahasa Indonesia. A growing number of Western educated Indonesians used and practiced Bahasa Indonesia in their reading, writing, and speaking activities abandoning the Dutch as ‘national language’ of the colonial state of Netherlands Indies. In turn, this escalated the formation of Indonesian nationalism and forged the nationalist movement and the national identity to counter and liberate Indonesia from the tyranny of colonialism (Anderson, 1991; Adam,1995).https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/jurnal-humaniora/article/view/11408editorial, language, media
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abdul Wahid
spellingShingle Abdul Wahid
EDITORIAL
Humaniora
editorial, language, media
author_facet Abdul Wahid
author_sort Abdul Wahid
title EDITORIAL
title_short EDITORIAL
title_full EDITORIAL
title_fullStr EDITORIAL
title_full_unstemmed EDITORIAL
title_sort editorial
publisher Universitas Gadjah Mada
series Humaniora
issn 0852-0801
2302-9269
publishDate 2016-05-01
description Language and media has always been in a mutual relationship. Historical record shows that mass media, such as newspaper, magazine and other products of printing technology, played a very instrumental role in the development of language and its changing practices and functions within society. In Indonesia, this can be seen during the late colonial period – particularly from early twentieth century onward – when printing technology was introduced on massive scale as part of the capitalist expansion to produce an increasing number of newspapers, magazines, journals, and other publications. These mass media boosted the literacy rate of Indonesian population and created a ‘reader community’, and cultivated written tradition, which later stimulated wider cultural and political literacy among Indonesian society. This ‘printing capitalism’ also facilitated the evolution of vernacular language and brought them into a modern written world that partially supported the identity formation of local society in a colonial context. More importantly, the mass media also mediated the transformation and institutionalization of Malay from a ‘vernacular language’ into a ‘national language’, known later as Bahasa Indonesia. A growing number of Western educated Indonesians used and practiced Bahasa Indonesia in their reading, writing, and speaking activities abandoning the Dutch as ‘national language’ of the colonial state of Netherlands Indies. In turn, this escalated the formation of Indonesian nationalism and forged the nationalist movement and the national identity to counter and liberate Indonesia from the tyranny of colonialism (Anderson, 1991; Adam,1995).
topic editorial, language, media
url https://jurnal.ugm.ac.id/jurnal-humaniora/article/view/11408
work_keys_str_mv AT abdulwahid editorial
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