Many scholars have analysed media and communications in Indonesia by focusing on state control and resistance to it. Another approach emphasizes the press and society interacting. This paper analyses rumours spreading through East Java in October and November 1998, which held that ‘ninjas’ were targeting traditionalist Muslims, their leaders, preachers and the whole community. The author argues that these rumours developed through the interplay of the newspapers and local gossip.
BubandtNils (2008), ‘Rumors, pamphlets and the politics of paranoia in Indonesia’, Journal of Asian Studies, Vol 67, pp 789–817.
3.
BudiantaMelanie (2002), ‘Beyond tears and anger: Representations of violence against women (a reflection)’, Kultur: The Indonesian Journal for Muslim Cultures, Vol 2, No 2.
4.
CohenPaul A. (1997), History in Three Keys: The Boxers as Event, Experience, and Myth, Colombia Press, New York.
5.
DeleuzeGillesGuattariFélix (1983), Anti-Oedipus: Capitalism and Schizophrenia, University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis, MN.
6.
GoebelZane (2009), ‘Semiosis, interaction and ethnicity in urban Java’, Journal of Sociolinguistics, Vol 13, pp 499–523.
7.
GoebelZane (2010), ‘Identity and social conduct in a transient multilingual setting’, Language in Society, Vol 39, pp 203–240.
8.
HatleyBarbara (1990), ‘Theatre as cultural resistance in contemporary Indonesia’, in BudimanA., ed, State and Civil Society in Indonesia, Monash University Centre of Southeast Asian Studies, Clayton, Victoria.
9.
HatleyBarbara (1993), ‘Constructions of ‘tradition’ in New Order Indonesian theatre’, in HookerV.M., ed, Culture and Society in New Order Indonesia, Oxford University Press, Kuala Lumpur.
10.
HefnerRobert W. (1997), ‘Mass media and ideological rivalries among Indonesian Muslims’, Indonesia, Vol 64, pp 77–103.
11.
HerrimanNicholas (2006), ‘Fear and uncertainty: Local perceptions of the sorcerer and the state in an Indonesian witch-hunt’, Asian Journal of Social Sciences, Vol 34, pp 360–387.
12.
HerrimanNicholas (2007), ‘“Sorcerer” killings in Banyuwangi: A re-examination of state responsibility for violence’, Asian Studies Review, Vol 31, pp 61–78.
13.
HerrimanNicholas (2010), ‘The great rumor mill: Gossip, mass media, and the ninja fear’, Journal of Asian Studies, Vol 69, pp 723–748.
14.
HerrimanNicholas (2012), The Entangled State: Sorcery, State Control and Violence in Indonesia, Yale University Southeast Asia Press, New Haven, CT.
15.
HeryantoAriel (1999), ‘Rape, race, and reporting’, in BudimanAriefHatleyBarbaraKingsburyDamien, eds, Reformasi Crisis and Change in Indonesia, Monash Asia Institute, Monash University, Clayton, Australia, pp 299–334.
16.
HillDavid T. (1991), The Press in ‘New Order’ Indonesia: Entering the 1990s, Asia Research Centre, Murdoch, Western Australia.
17.
KitleyPhilip (1994), ‘Fine tuning control: Commercial television in Indonesia’, Continuum, Vol 8, pp 103–123.
18.
KwonEunkyung (2001), ‘Infrastructure, growth, and poverty reduction in Indonesia: A cross-sectional analysis’, mimeo, ADB, Manila.
19.
MarwickM.G. (1950), ‘Another modern anti-witchcraft movement in East Central Africa’, Africa, Vol 20, pp 100–112.
20.
NoerArifin C. director (1984), The Treachery of the 30th September Movement (Pengkhianatan G30S/PKI), film.
21.
RetsikasKonstantinos (2006), ‘The semiotics of violence: Ninja, sorcerers, and state terror in post-Soeharto Indonesia’, Bijdragen, tot de Taal-, Land- en Volkenkunde, Vol 162, pp 56–94.
22.
SenKrishna (1993), ‘Repression and resistance: Interpretations of the feminine in New Order cinema’, in HookerV.M., ed, Culture and Society in New Order Indonesia, Oxford University Press, Kuala Lumpur.
23.
SenKrishnaHillDavid T. (2000), Media, Culture and Politics in Indonesia, Oxford University Press, South Melbourne, Victoria.
24.
SiegelJames (1993), ‘I was not there but…’, Archipel, Vol 46, pp 59–66.
25.
SiegelJames (1998), ‘Early thoughts on the violence of May 13 and 14, 1998 in Jakarta’, Indonesia, Vol 66, pp 75–108.
26.
SiegelJames (2006), Naming the Witch, Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA.
27.
SiegelJames T. (2001), ‘Suharto, witches’, Indonesia, Vol 71, pp 27–78.
28.
SiegelJames T. (2002), ‘Some views of East Javanese sorcery’, Archipel, Vol 64, pp 163–180.
29.
SpyerPatricia (2002), ‘Fire without smoke and other phantoms of Ambon's violence: Media effects, agency, and the work of imagination’, Indonesia, Vol 74, pp 21–36.
30.
ThufailFadjar I. (2005), ‘Ninjas in narratives of local and national violence in post-Soeharto Indonesia’, in ZurbuchenM.S., ed, Beginning to Remember: The Past in the Indonesian Present, Singapore University Press, Singapore.
31.
TickellPaul (1987), ‘The writing of Indonesian literary history’, Review of Indonesian and Malay Affairs, Vol 21, pp 29–43.
32.
TomsaDirk (2007), ‘Party politics and the media in Indonesia: Creating a new dual identity for Golkar’, Contemporary Southeast Asia, Vol 29, pp 77–96.
33.
TomsaDirk (2011), ‘Moderating Islamism in Indonesia: Tracing patterns of party change in the Prosperous Justice Party’, Political Research Quarterly, Vol 64, pp 1–13.