Anak sanusi pane biography
- Sanusi Pane (14 November 1905 – 2 Januari 1968) ialah seorang penulis, wartawan dan sejarawan Indonesia.
- Armijn Pane.
- It seems that 'modern Indonesia' culture was born in 1920s.
- •
- •
Sanusi Pane
Sanusi Pane | |
|---|---|
| Lahir | 14 November 1905 Muara Sipongi, Tapanuli, Hindia Timur Belanda |
| Meninggal dunia | 2 Januari 1968(1968-01-02) (umur 62) Jakarta, Indonesia |
| Pekerjaan | Penulis, wartawan, sejarawan |
| Bahasa | Indonesia Belanda |
| Warganegara | Indonesia |
| Genre | Puisi dan lakonan |
Sanusi Pane (14 November 1905 – 2 Januari 1968) ialah seorang penulis, wartawan dan sejarawan Indonesia. Beliau amat aktif dalam bidang kritikan media, menjadi ahli badan pengarang beberapa penerbitan. Beliau juga dikatakan dramatis yang paling penting sebelum Revolusi Nasional Indonesia.
Biografi
[sunting | sunting sumber]Sanusi Pane dilahirkan di Muara Sipongi, Tapanuli, Hindia Timur Belanda, pada 14 November 1905 anak kelahiran keluarga Muslim. Beliau memulakan pendidikan di dua sekolah rendah di Sibolga, sebelum menyambung pelajaran ke sekolah menengah, mula-mula di Padang, dan kemudian di Betawi (sekarang Jakarta). Sanusi menerbitkan puisi pertamanya, "Tanah Air" semasa di Jakarta, dalam majalah Jong Soematra. Selepas menghabiskan pendidikan dalam tahun
- •
Sutan Pangurabaan Rewrites Sumatran Language Landscapes
The Political Possibilities of Commercial Print
in the Late Colonial Indies
By Susan Rodgers
(Professor of Anthropology, and Garrity Professor, College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Massachusetts. Her main field of academic interest is politics and aesthetics of indigenous literatures and literacies (newspapers, novels, autobiographies). She is the author of Telling lives, telling history: Autobiography and historical imagination in modern Indonesia, Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1995, and Print, poetics, and politics: A Sumatran epic in the colonial Indies and New Order Indonesia, Leiden: KITLV Press, 2005. Professor Rodgers may be contacted at srodgers@holycross.edu).
The Sipirok area of the southern Batak highlands in Sumatra was a notably school-focused (even, school-obsessed) region by the 1920s. Indigenous village aristocrats, market town merchants, civil service clerks, and mission staff competed with each other by this era to see whose family could boast the most child graduates of local Bata
Copyright ©yambump.pages.dev 2025