Anti-American Movements in Indonesia as Presented in Indonesian Online Media News: Violence Against American Cultural Symbols in Response to the “War On Terror”

Muhammad Taufiq al Makmun, Ardianna Nuraeni, Justine Niken Afda

Abstract


This article aims to explain the impact of George W. Bush’s War on Terror policy toward the direction of anti-American violence movements committed by Muslim groups in Indonesia. The data were collected from factual news presented in three online news sites: www.detik.com, tempointeraktif.com and kompas.com, during 2000-2009, reporting series of violence movement in Indonesia. It is a media studies research employing: (i) socio-cultural approach to see the social condition and cultural values of the muslim-dominated Indonesian society which has long been colored by American cultural influence, (ii) historical approach to trace the radical movement in Indonesia and to understand what War on terror is, and (iii) Kroes’ theory on Americanization and American cultural influence to understand the presence of American cultural symbols in Indonesia. The findings show that American foreign policy of Bush’s War on terror had changed the direction of violence in Indonesia from anti-Christianity movements to anti-American movements. There are three levels of violence conducted by different Muslim groups in Indonesia. Deadly violence attacks in the form of bomb explosions were done by a radical group of Jema’ah Islamiyah connected to AlQaeda network. Expelling foreigners were done by organized Muslim militas like Front Pembela Islam (Islam Defenders Front) and Laskar Jihad. Burning American flag and sealing American fastfood franchise in Indonesia, the lowest level of violence, were done by Muslim student organizations conducting demonstration. The movements are identified as responses to War on terror and the targets of the attacks are characterized as American cultural symbols.

Keywords: Media studies, violence movement, American cultural symbol, anti-America, War on Terror.


Full Text:

PDF

References


Barber, B. R. (2003). Jihad vs. McWorld: Terrorism's challenge to democracy. New York: Ballantine Books.

Barton, G. (2004). Indonesia’s struggle: Jemaah Islamiyah and the soul of

Islam. Sydney: UNSW Press.

Berman, R. A. (2008). Anti-Americanism in Europe a cultural problem. Stanford: Hoover Institution Press..

Hasan, N. (2006). Laskar Jihad: Islam, militancy and the quest for identity in post-new order Indonesia. Ithaca: Cornell Univ.

Huntington, S. P. (2002). The clash of civilizations and the remaking of world order. London: The Free Press, New York; Simon & Schuster.

Yuen, C. K., Naim, S., & Zamri, N. D. M. (2014). Online news report headlines of education Malaysia global services. Jurnal Komunikasi, Malaysian Journal of Communication, 30(2), 159-182.

Krastev, I., & McPherson, A. L. (2007). The anti-American century. Budapest: Central European University Press.

Kroes, R. (1996). If you've seen one, you've seen the mall: Europeans and American mass culture. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.

Mujiburrahman. (2006). Feeling threatened: Muslim-Christian relations in Indonesia’s New Order. Leiden: ISIM.

Rydell, R. W., & Kroes, R. (2005). Buffalo Bill in Bologna the americanization of the world, 1869-1922. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press.

Thompson, G. (2007). American culture in the 1980s. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press Ltd.

Vickers, A. (2005). A history of modern Indonesia. Cambridge: Cambridge U.P.

El Zein, H. (2014). Identifying and understanding the media discourse of Hezbollah. Jurnal Komunikasi, Malaysian Journal of Communication, 30(2), 117-140.

Zinn, H. (2003). A people’s history of the United States. New York: Harper Perennial.


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


e-ISSN: 2289-1528