Subagio Sastrowardoyo was an Indonesian poet, short-story writer, essayist and literary critic. Born in Madiun, East Java, the Dutch East Indies, he studied at Gadjah Mada University, Cornell University and in 1963 graduated with an MA from Yale University. His debut as a writer came early with the publication of Simphoni, a collection of poems, in 1957. The collection has been described as "cynical, untamed poetry, shocking sometimes". Simphoni was followed by several attempts at short story writing, including the publication Kedjananan di Sumbing, before Subagio settled on poetry as his main creative outlet. Following an extended stay in the United States he published a collection of poems entitled Saldju in 1966. The poems in this collection deal with questions of life and death, and of the need for "something to hold on to in an existence threatened on all sides", and have been described as altogether more restrained than those in his earlier work. Additional works published since 1966 include Daerab Perbatasan , Keroncong Motinggo , Buku Harian, Hari dan HaraSimphoni Dua, and several books of literary criticism. Subagio's collected poems have been published as Dan Kematian Makin Akrab. From 1958 to 1961 Subagio taught in the Faculty of Letters at Gadjah Mada University. He was able to read French, Dutch and English with sufficient fluency to be able to translate poems in these languages into Indonesian, and this allowed him to find employment abroad. He spent several years teaching in Australia, firstly as a senior lecturer at Salisbury College of Advanced Education and from 1974 to 1981 he lectured at Flinders University in Adelaide, South Australia. He also acted as guest instructor at Ohio University, teaching Indonesian. In 1981 he became a member of the Working Group on Socio-Cultural Defense and the Director of Young PN Hall Book Publishing, and from 1982 to 1984 he was a member of the Jakarta Arts Council. For many years, he was a director of Balai Pustaka, a publishing firm in Indonesia. In 1987, Subagio Sastrowardoyo, together with Goenawan Mohamad, Sapardi Djoko Damono, Umar Kayam, and John H. McGlynn, established the Lontar Foundation, a non-profit organization with the primary aim of promoting Indonesian literature and culture through the translation of Indonesian literary works. Subagio Sastrowardoyo died in Jakarta on 18 July 1995.
Awards and legacy
In 1986, Mr. Sastrowardoyo, as a representative of Balai Pustaka, presented the Pegasus Prize for Literature to Ismail Marahimin, author of And the War is Over, in New York City.
Mr. Sastrowardoyo was awarded the S.E.A. Write Award in 1991.
A few years ago, McGlynn's foundation collected Indonesians' impressions of the United States, many of them unsettling, in a book called On Foreign Shores. One of the poets, Ajip Rosidi, reacted to New York in a poem titled "Manhattan Sonnet." "Is it within these strong and rigid walls / one's sense of safety nestles? / All I find here is vigilance, the source of apprehension." His compatriot Subagio Sastrowardoyo wrote about a city "where life is cheap." New York's greed, he said, "has made this place too confined for prayer or a human voice."
The Australian composer Betty Beath based a composition, "Manusia Pertama di Angkasa Luar...The First Man in Outer Space" on a poem by Subagio Sastrowardoyo.
Selected list of works
Short stories
Kejantanan di Sumbing, Jakarta : Balai Pustaka, 1965
Poetry
Simfoni, Yogyakarta, 1957
Daerah Perbatasan, Jakarta, 1970
Keroncong Motinggo 1975
Buku Harian, Jakarta : Budaya, 1979
Hari dan Hara, Jakarta : Balai Pustaka, 1982
Simfoni Dua, Jakarta, Balai Pustaka, 1990
Dan Kematian Makin Akrab, Jakarta : Grasindo 1995
Literary criticism
Sastra Hindia Belanda dan Kita
General
Bakat Alam dan Intelektualisme, Jakarta : Pustaka Jaya, 1972
Manusia Terasing di Balik Simbolisme Sitor, Jakarta : Budaya Jaya, 1976
Pengarang sebagai Manusia Perba-tasan, Jakarta : Balai Pustaka, 1989
Sekilas Soal Sastra dan Budaya, Jakarta : Balai Pustaka, 1992
Wirt dies Wort!, Unkel/Rhein-Bad Honnef : Horlemann, 1991
Anthologies
On Foreign Shores: American Images in Indonesian Poetry. Jakarta: Lontar Foundation, 1990.
John H. McGlynn and E.U. Kratz, eds., Walking Westward in Morning: Seven Contemporary Indonesian Poets.School of Oriental & African Studies, 1990.
John H. McGlynn, ed., Menagerie 1. 1992. Jakarta: Lontar Foundation, 2006.
Iem Brown and Joan Davis, eds., Di Serambi/On the Verandah: A Bilingual Anthology of Modern Indonesian Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995.
Erica Manh, comp. Sharing Fruit: An Anthology of Asian and Australian Writing. Melbourne: Curriculum Corporation, 1998.
Audio recordings
CDs
Betty Beath; Glen Roger Davis, David Fetherolf and Anthony Vazzana, composers. Music from Six Continents. Ruben Silva, cond. Moravian Philharmonic Orchestra. Vienna Modern Master, 1995. ASIN: B000004A71