However, globalization not only demands an integration of cultural diversity in the global community. It also reflects peoples' (nations') needs to develop a strong self or cultural identity (ies). In this light, one can see that Japan is not only an exporter of media. Rather, Japan has also been receiving various media from other Asian countries; such as Korea with its television dramas.
Though Indonesia it does not share the same amount of attention as Korea does in the Japanese market, Japan has also been receiving media from the former country as well. This study will look at one of these contributions, the novel Bi wa Kizu (Beauty is a Curse). In 2004, Cantik Itu Luka (Beauty is a Curse) was published in Indonesia by one of the leading publishing bodies of a large Indonesian media group, KOMPAS Gramedia Group.
What is surprising is that despite the contents of this novel, in 2006, the Japanese company Shinpusha purchased the publishing rights and a translation of this work was published entitled Bi wa Kizu. For foreign countries to succeed in penetrating a target market, every cultural product must overcome the language barrier; in the case of this study, the language barrier between Indonesian and Japanese. This is where translation plays a major role.
In this study, I found it interesting how a Japanese publisher decided to publish a novel about the life of a comfort woman in Indonesia during War World II, and in the translations I have observed that there certain sections of the novel where the brutality of the Japanese Imperial Army was described stayed unaltered. Nonetheless certain sections were slightly altered, probably for the sake of the Japanese market.
Indah S. Pratidina
Research student, Institute for the Study of Global Issues, Hitotsubashi University, Tokyo, Japan**Was my first International level talk. After all the Japanese that I am forced to swallow, luckily my english didn't abandon me that time. Alhamdulillah~ This is a well overdue entry, but better now than never, I supposed.
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Presented in
Media Culture and Industry in Asia (MCIA), Hallym University, Seoul-Chuncheon, South Korea http://www.hallym.ac.kr/~icat/200711/ November 16, 2007