In the late 1960s, between one and two million people were killed by Indonesian president Suharto’s army in the name of suppressing communism—and more than fifty years later, the issue of stigmatization is still relevant for many victims of the violence and their families. The End of Silence presents the stories of these individuals, revealing how many survivors from the period have been so strongly affected by the strategy used by Suharto and his Western allies that these survivors, still afraid to speak out, essentially serve to maintain the very ideology that led to their persecution.
Soe Tjen Marching is a writer, academic, activist, and a composer. In 1998, she won national competition for Indonesian Contemporary Composers held by the German Embassy. In 2010, her work has been selected as one of the two best compositions at the International Competition for avant-garde composers held in Singapore. She has published academic books and novels, in English and in Indonesian. She is now senior lecturer in Indonesian at SOAS, University of London.
The Long History of Identity, Ethnicity and Nationhood
Contact name: Ilya Afanasyev
Contact email: ilya.afanasyev@humanities.ox.ac.uk
Audience: Open to all