CANCELED – Jakarta and the Urban Grotesque, with Doreen Lee (Northeastern Univ.) (Oct. 29, 2024)

 

Due to unforeseen circumstance, this event has been canceled. We apologize for any inconvenience. Please email buasia@bu.edu with any questions. We hope to reschedule this event in Spring 2025.

 

This talk distills the flows and values of life in Jakarta, Indonesia’s largest city and financial core, into a central idea: The Urban Grotesque. The urban grotesque is a name and framework for situating the dynamic, generous, predatory, and unpredictable textures of Jakarta’s financial lives. My book manuscript follows the stories of individuals who experience and justify the high social costs of living in the city, tracking their commonplace gestures of giving and taking to build a systematic analysis of how redistribution and circulation dominate urban life. My research shows that long-standing cultural practices of exchange and reciprocity align with a fast-changing financial landscape in which neoliberal ideas are fast becoming popular. Combining ethnography and memoir, and playing with genre, the book showcases the challenges of capturing the financial edge of urban life without romanticizing the fast-paced economic developments and collective forms of resilience that characterize this Global South city.

About the Speaker: 
Photo by Matthew Modoono/ Northeastern University

Doreen Lee is Associate Professor of Anthropology at Northeastern University. She received her PhD in Sociocultural Anthropology from Cornell University with a concentration in Southeast Asian Studies and History. She has served as the Acting Director of the Global Asian Studies program at Northeastern University and as a SEAC councilmember for AAS. Her first book Activist Archives: Youth Culture and the Political Past in Indonesia was published by Duke University Press in 2016 and won the Harry J. Benda Prize from the Association of Asian Studies in 2019. Her current book project is a demonstration of how cultures of circulation shape the financial lives of the people of Jakarta.

Doreen Lee
Associate Professor of Anthropology
College of the Social Sciences and Humanities
Northeastern University