Recommended

Blog

Byron Bay, 3 Agustus 2014: Festival Penulis

Bersama Janet Steele, Jono Lineen, Carina Hoanh, dan Bhuchung Sonam “So, where are you from?” tanya Janet Steele membuka panel diskusi “A Guest in Their Country” kepada kami para panelis: seorang pengungsi Tibet yang kini tinggal di Dharamsala, India; seorang Tionghoa Indonesia yang pernah mencari rumah ke negeri China; seorang pengungsi Vietnam yang pernah menjadi manusia perahu dan kini menikah dengan orang Australia dan tinggal di Australia; seorang Kanada-Australia yang kematian adiknya membawanya pergi ke Himalaya dan membuatnya menemukan agama baru—Buddhisme. Pertanyaan “Dari mana kamu?” adalah pertanyaan sederhana yang ternyata membutuhkan jawaban panjang. Bhuchung Sonam menceritakan bagaimana dia meninggalkan Tibet yang pernah menjadi rumahnya, ketika negerinya berada di bawah pendudukan China yang tidak akan pernah diakuinya sebagai tuan untuk negerinya, dan kini tinggal di India yang juga tidak pernah menjadi rumahnya. Bhuchung, dengan penuh kesedihan, mengatakan, dia tidak pernah kehilangan rumah karena memang dia tak punya rumah. Janet Steele, seorang jurnalis kawakan dari Amerika Serikat dan seorang Indonesianis, adalah moderator panel ini. Dia mengawali cuplikan dari buku saya Ground Zero, ketika saya berada di Kashmir di tengah keluarga pengungsi yang menjadikan saya sebagai bagian dari keluarga itu. Para pengungsi Kashmir itu berkata pada saya, “Agustinus, ke mana pun kamu pergi [...]

August 4, 2014 // 10 Comments

Byron Bay, July 31, 2014: A Nanny State?

“Australia is a country only for old people,” says Celine, a 22-year-old Indonesian student sitting next to me in a Qantas flight to Sydney. Celine lives in a suburb of Melbourne, and has been there for four years majoring food technology. “After 5 pm all shops are closed and the towns are deserted. There is absolutely no fun.” I am on my way to Gold Coast, to attend Byron Bay Writers Festival tomorrow; while Celine is heading to Melbourne and she will have some hours of transit in Sydney. Celine grumbles as she has no choice but to take this Qantas flight. She usually takes the Indonesian carrier, Garuda, which offers the only direct flight from Jakarta to Melbourne. But Garuda tickets are sold out, and only Qantas is available for her. But as I am a first timer to Qantas, I am very excited with this flight. In fact, I am first timer to any Western airlines. And I have to admit, I am shocked to see that all passengers were greeted by an overweight stewardess with thick lips wearing glossy lipsticks, whose age I bet around half a century. “Welcome, Sir,” she says with a friendly smile. In [...]

August 1, 2014 // 26 Comments

Jakarta, 29 Juli 2014: Australia dan Papua Nugini

Saya mengambil backpack, mengisinya dengan barang-barang, dan menyadari bahwa saya sudah tak ingat lagi kapan terakhir kali saya merasakan debar seperti ini. Debar akan Ketidaktahuan dan Keberbedaan. Besok, saya akan memulai perjalanan pertama saya keluar benua Asia. Hari Senin 21 Juli lalu saya mendapat konfirmasi undangan menghadiri Byron Bay Writers Festival (BBWF) di Byron Bay, NSW, 1-3 Agustus. Ini adalah festival penulis yang bekerja sama dengan Ubud Writers and Readers Festival, dan setiap tahun memberi kesempatan bagi penulis Indonesia maupun Asia untuk tampil pada forum penulis internasional ini. Karena waktu yang sangat mendesak, saya pun buru-buru mengurus visa Australia. Biasanya visa Australia membutuhkan waktu 5 hari kerja, dan berkenaan dengan Idul Fitri maka hari keberangkatan saya bertepatan dengan hari kerja ke-4. Agak riskan juga. Untunglah, visa Australia (dengan undangan dan permintaan urgen) keluar hanya dalam dua hari. Mengenai festival penulis ini, saya diundang untuk berbicara dalam dua panel, semuanya berhubungan dengan penulisan perjalanan. Hal yang paling membuat saya excited adalah kesempatan untuk berkomunikasi dengan penulis perjalanan dari negara lain. Ketika menerjemahkan buku ketiga saya, Titik Nol, ke dalam bahasa Inggris, saya sungguh menyadari betapa pola pikir dari setiap bangsa yang berbeda sangat memengaruhi cara masyarakat dari pengguna bahasa itu untuk [...]

July 29, 2014 // 27 Comments

Jakarta, July 29, 2014: Australia and Papua New Guinea

I grab my backpack, clean it up from a layer of thick dust covering it, and put my clothes inside. It has been years since the last time I touched this backpack. Suddenly I realize I do not remember the last time I felt this kind of anxiety. Anxiety to face the Unknown and the Otherness. Tomorrow, I will start my first trip out of Asia. Just few days ago, on Monday, July 21, I got the confirmation of invitation to attend the Byron Bay Writers Festival (BBWF) in Byron Bay, NSW, Australia, to be held from August 1 to 3. It is a literary festival in collaboration with the Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in the Indonesian island of Bali, which I have attended twice. Each year BBWF provides an opportunity for Indonesian writer for a special appearance in this international event. As the confirmed invitation came up in very last minutes, I was worrying whether I would get my Australian visa on time. Australian visa usually takes five working days. But as Indonesia is celebrating Eid-ul-Fitr, the day of my departure coincided with the 4th working day after I lodged my visa application along with complete invitation documents [...]

July 29, 2014 // 26 Comments

Tentang Workshop A CREATIVE WRITING CLASS ON #YourJourney Gramedia 14 Juni 2014

Teman-teman penulis, pembaca, dan pencinta tulisan perjalanan: Pada 14 Juni ini, Gramedia Pustaka Utama akan mengadakan workshop dan seminar A CREATIVE WRITING CLASS ON #YourJourney, dengan pembicara saya sendiri, Agustinus Wibowo. Acara ini akan digelar dalam satu hari saja, dari pukul 9:00 WIB sampai 16:00 WIB yang akan dibagi menjadi tiga sesi. Pada zaman sekarang ini, semakin banyak orang melakukan perjalanan dan semakin banyak orang yang menuliskannya. Tetapi, tidak banyak tulisan perjalanan mampu meninggalkan kesan di hati pembaca. Kamu mungkin pernah mencoba menuliskan pengalaman perjalananmu, atau pengalaman hidupmu, tetapi sering kebingungan sampai di tengah-tengah karena tidak tahu bagaimana harus menyelesaikannya? Atau kamu merasa ceritanya jauh lebih membosankan dari perjalanan seru yang kamu alami? Atau, kamu pernah mencoba memasukkan data-data untuk memperkaya tulisanmu, tetapi malah jadinya seperti artikel Wikipedia? Kamu tidak sendiri. Workshop ini akan membahas apa itu tulisan perjalanan, bagaimana sejarahnya, dan bagaimana menggunakan teknik bercerita untuk menghasilkan tulisan perjalanan yang kuat. Teknik nonfiksi kreatif ini bukan hanya bisa dipakai untuk menulis tulisan perjalanan saja, tetapi juga memori perjalanan hidup (memoar) ataupun pelaporan pewartaan (jurnalisme sastrawi). Teknik-teknik dan berbagai tips praktis ini akan membuat tulisanmu hidup dan lincah seperti halnya novel fiksi, walaupun semua yang kamu sampaikan adalah kisah nyata [...]

June 9, 2014 // 0 Comments

Eramadina (2014): Menemukan Kembali Makna Perjalanan yang Terabaikan

http://eramadina.com/menemukan-kembali-makna-perjalanan-yang-terabaikan/ Judul buku : Titik Nol; Makna sebuah Perjalanan Penulis : Agustinus Wibowo Penerbit : Gramedia Pustaka Tahun terbit : 2013 ISBN : 978-979-22-9271-8 Tebal buku : xi +552 halaman Banyak orang yang mengelana begitu jauh, menyeberangi lautan, melewati daratan mendaki pegunungan namun dari semuanya yang mereka lakukan tidak pernah menemukan makna dari suatu perjalanan. Seakan perjalanan yang dirasakan hanya terhabiskan dengan sensasi berfoto, makan-makan, yang menjadi sekedar kumpulan kisah dan deretan foto yang bisa dipamerkan kepada orang lain. Dari sinilah timbul pertanyaan sesungguhnya apa yang dicari oleh para pejalan (Traveller)? Melalui untaian kisah pengalaman perjalanan seorang lelaki muda bernama Agustinus Wibowo ini kiranya sangat tepat untuk menjawab pertanyaan tersebut, dengan segala catatan pengalaman yang penuh dengan teka-teki, hingga menemukan satu demi satu makna dibalik perjalanan yang selama ini terabaikan. Menurut Agustinus sesungguhnya setiap pejalan punya tujuannya sendiri-sendiri. Setiap pejalan punya satu titik yang ingin dicapainya, punya mimpi yang ingin diraihnya dan punya makna yang ingin ditelusurinya sadar ataupun tidak. Dalam bukunya yang berjudul Titik Nol: Makna Sebuah Perjalanan adalah sebuah catatan tentang perjalanan panjang seorang lelaki muda bernama Agustinus Wibowo. Selama 10 tahun Agus meninggalkan Lumajang, dimulai dari menuntut ilmu di Beijing hingga kemudian [...]

March 15, 2014 // 0 Comments

Pikiran Rakyat (2014): Berselimut Debu, Menembus Garis Batas

MINGGU  (PAHING)  9 MARET 2014 7 JUMADIL AWAL 1435  H JUMADIL AWAL 1947   Agustinus Wibowo Berselimut Debu, Menembus Garis Batas SULIT juga ”menangkap” pria yang satu ini. Dalam dua hari kunjungannya ke Bandung, travel writer Agustinus Wibowo (33) disibukkan dengan aktivitas menjadi pembicara di berbagai tempat dari pagi hingga tengah malam. Wartawan Pikiran Rakyat, Endah Asih, baru bisa menemui nya Minggu (2/3/2014) pagi, sambil mengobrol di atas kereta api yang melaju dari Stasiun Kiaracondong ke Cicalengka, Kabupaten Bandung. Memang, tak ada cara yang lebih menyenang kan untuk berakhir pekan dengan traveller, selain melakukan perjalanan itu sendiri meski singkat.   SETELAH berkeliling Asia selama 13 tahun, Gus, begitu ia biasa disapa, akhirnya bermukim di Indonesia sejak Februari 2013. Dalam terminologi seorang backpacker “kahot“, harap dimaklumi bahwa kata bermukim itu hanya diartikan sebagai tinggal sekurang-kurangnya satu tahun di suatu tempat. “Saya memang rencana mau pulang ke Indonesia nengok keluarga dan ngeluarin buku ketiga waktu itu, tapi ternyata Ayah saya meninggal tepat dua minggu sebelum jadwal pulang, akhirnya saya mempercepat agenda pulang kampung,” kata pria kelahiran Lumajang Jawa Timur ini, memulai perbincangan. Pagi itu, suasana Stasiun Kiaracondong masih agak lengang. Dalam satu malam, barang-barang yang seluruhnya memiliki  berat 100 kilogram, selesai di-packing.  [...]

March 11, 2014 // 1 Comment

Agama, Nasionalisme dan Kemanusiaan di Mata Agustinus Wibowo

Senin, 03 Maret 2014 13:31 WIB ( 570 Views ) http://islamindonesia.co.id/detail/1485-Agama-Nasionalisme-dan-Kemanusiaan-di-Mata-Agustinus-Wibowo#sthash.vTZddrUA.dpuf Penulis : Lina Agustinus Wibowo saat mengisi workshop di Kantor Mizan Pustaka, Bandung pada Sabtu, (01/03/14). Perjalanan adalah jembatan antara nilai-nilai universal yang menyangkut agama, nasionalime, dan kemanusiaan.   Nama Agustinus Wibowo mulai mendapat tempat di hati para traveler Nusantara dengan tiga buku best-sellernya, yakni Selimut Debu, Garis Batas dan Titik Nol. Bukan hanya karena kisah perjalanannya yang unik dan penuh tualang, tapi juga karena paradigma baru yang berhasil ia tawarkan pada para pembaca. Sebuah paradigma yang mampu menyentuh hati—tentang bagaimana memaknai tiap langkah manusia, hingga mampu mengubah pola pikir yang kadang, menjadi garis batas bagi dirinya sendiri—dengan agamanya—dengan etnisnya—dengan negaranya—yang sebetulnya mengkerangkeng nilai-nilai universal yang dimiliki setiap manusia. Ditemui di sela-sela mengisi Workshop di Kantor Mizan Pustaka, Bandung, lelaki kelahiran Lumajang, Jawa Timur ini bercerita panjang lebar tentang pengalamannya selama menjadi traveler—terkait agama, nasionalisme dan kemanusiaan. Berikut ini adalah petikan wawancara dengan Agustinus Wibowo; Latarbelakang keagamaan Anda? Orangtua saya Budhis, tapi saya disekolahkan di sekolah Kristen. Jadi, saya juga ke sekolah Minggu, juga ke Vihara. Saya dibesarkan dalam kultur dua agama [...]

March 3, 2014 // 8 Comments

The Color is Red (Chinese New Year in Jakarta, 2014)

The Chinese Indonesians welcomes the arrival of Chinese New Year 2014. During the Suharto regime, the celebration of Chinese New Year in public was forbidden. But today, about a dozen years since the government allowed the Chinese community to celebrate their festivals and traditions openly, red is in full swing, red has become the dominating color in temples and shopping malls, on clothes and decorations, on the altar of Buddhist gods and on the lanterns and on the dragon masks. In Indonesia, the Chinese New Year is associated with religion. Indonesia is the only country in the world recognizing Confucianism as one of its state religions, and the Chinese New Year is regarded as religious holiday of Confucianism (as religious holidays are national holidays, thus it becomes nationwide holiday). While in China they say, “Happy Lunar New Year 2014”, in Indonesia they say, “Happy Lunar New Year 2565”, with 2565 is counted from the birthday of Confucius, the prophet of Confucianism. The Chinese believe that rain during the Chinese New Year will brings good fortune. In their ancestral land, Chinese New Year signifies the arrival of spring, and as they say, “Rain in spring is as worthy as oil”, the [...]

February 1, 2014 // 7 Comments

Jakarta, Water City

The heavy rain from midnight until early morning today has caused numerous Jakarta streets flooded. Rains, floods, traffic jams, total deadlock, have been haunting Jakarta and other cities in Indonesia since last three weeks. In Jakarta, somehow it’s important to emphasize the difference between “a pile of water” and “flood”. The local Chinese believe that rains symbolize good fortune, especially if it rains during the Chinese new year’s Eve (which happens to be tomorrow midnight), the heavy rain is believed to bring a super-prosperous new year. But for sure, the flooding at least brings some fortune to the kids (who are always enjoying “beach-waves-and-swimming-pool-right-in-the-heart-of-the-capital-city”) and chart owners, who earned money by transporting motorcycles on their charts. In this year rainy season, some 40 thousands of Jakarta dwellers had to stay in temporary shelters. There were also some kids who participated in swimming contest in a flooded river, drowned, and unfortunately, get killed. What striked me most after living abroad for more than a dozen years and come back to my home country, is seeing laughter and smiles on the faces of my countrymen, despite the fact that they are facing disasters and troubles. The laughter, the never-faded smiles, the genuine [...]

January 29, 2014 // 3 Comments

Bukunya (2014): Membedah Buku Laris Gramedia Pustaka Utama 2013

http://bukunya.com/membedah-buku-laris-gramedia-pustaka-utama/ Membedah Buku Laris Gramedia Pustaka Utama 2013 By redaksi Mengupas resep dan rahasia tingginya penjualan Penerbit Gramedia Pustaka Utama pada Jumat (3/1) mengumumkan daftar buku terlaris mereka sepanjang 2013. Bukunya membedah beberapa alasan buku-buku tersebut masuk daftar bestseller. Kategori fiksi: Rantau 1 Muara karya A. Fuadi 99 Cahaya di Langit Eropa karya Hanum Rais dan Rangga Alma 9 Summers 10 Autumns karya Iwan Setyawan Mimpi Sejuta Dolar karya Alberthiene Endah Autumn Once More karya Ilana Tan, Alia Zalea, Ika Natassa, dkk. Seasons to Remember karya Ilana Tan Negeri di Ujung Tanduk karya Tere Liye Sunshine Becomes You karya Ilana Tan Daun yang Jatuh Tak Pernah Membenci Angin karya Tere Liye The Devil in Black Jeans karya Alia Zalea Daftar buku laris ini menunjukkan dua resep buku laris dewasa ini yakni mengangkat novelisasi kisah hidup dari sederhana cenderung tak berada hingga sukses terutama setelah berjuang di luar negeri. Resep kedua adalah kisah asmara yang mudah dicerna. Roman memang tak ada matinya. Faktor film juga berperan besar dalam daftar ini. Misalnya saja 99 Cahaya meski isinya unik dan ditulis oleh putri tokoh ternama, namun penjualannya baru terdongkrak sejak rumor film hingga kemunculannya di layar lebar. Yang bakal mengikuti jejak novel ini [...]

January 5, 2014 // 0 Comments

Esquire (2013): Di Atap Dunia

1 2 • 1 3 Esquire Gourmet Halaman 19 Di Atap Dunia Kuliner yang amat mengakar budaya >>> Teks & Foto: Agustinus Wibowo “Makanan apa ini?” gerutu seorang tamu saat memandang piring-piring besar yang disajikan para gembala Pamir. Di satu piring, kepala domba utuh dengan mulut seperti mengerang plus bola mata hitam menyembul,menatap ke arah kami, para tamu kehormatan. Tersaji di pinggan sebelahnya, sebongkah gajih seukuran semangka dari pantat domba, empuk bagai agar-agar yang berbalut minyak. Menu istimewa dari padang gembala di ujung terjauh Afghanistan ini direbus tanpa bumbu dan garam, menyisakan rasa dan aroma domba yang paling murni. Kepala domba adalah bagian paling mulia, simbol penghormatan bagi tamu teristimewa. Lemak domba untuk tamu level dua. Potongan daging sebesar lengan manusia itu untuk tetamu biasa. Berulang kali kami memohon pada tuan rumah untuk diperlakukan sebagai tamu biasa, dalam hati sungguh tidak tega melahap kepala domba dan menelan gumpalan lemak itu. Penghuni Pamir adalah bangsa nomaden Kirgiz, mendiami padang rumput di ketinggian 4.500 meter, dikelilingi barisan gunung bertudung salju. Tidak ada musim panas, apalagi pohon, belukar, buah, toko, atau pasar. Bahkan perdagangan masih menggunakan sistem barter dengan mata uang berupa domba. “Domba murahan adalah yang lemaknya sedikit,” kata pepatah bangsa Kirgiz. [...]

December 16, 2013 // 4 Comments

The Palace of Illusions

When drawing a picture about memory of the past, we tend to have only two alternatives. Either we amplify good memories and minimize the bad ones, or the other way round. When the nostalgia is about history, this can be dangerous, as the history may turn to an illusion, no matter how real the events are. The incidence of nostalgia may bring you to homesickness. American physicians in nineteenth century even pointed out that acute nostalgia led to “mental dejection”, “cerebral derangement” and sometimes even death. In Indonesia, the so-called history is never so long ago. Some people say, Indonesians have such short memories as they suffer from “history amnesia”. With most of its population are less than 30 years old, majority people did not really experience the whole history of the Republic, from the Independence struggle era (1940s), Sukarno’s Old Order (1950s), the chaos before the arrival of Suharto’s New Order (1960s), and the never ending period of our-president-is-him-again-and-him-again (1970s-1990s). When grumbling about the hardship in current democratic period, people tend to turn their head to the past: how strong and respected our country during Sukarno! How things were cheap and life were happy under Suharto! How we need [...]

December 15, 2013 // 7 Comments

[Audio] UWRF13: Reflections of Afghanistan

Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2013 Reflections of Afghanistan : Ben Quilty, Agustinus Wibowo & Michael Vatikiotis Forgotten wars & forgotten people. Hear from two individuals who have made the journey to Afghanistan to record the lives of the people there through their images. What does it look like through their eyes? Indus, 15 October 2013   http://www.ubudwritersfestival.com/audio/reflections-of-afghanistan-ben-quilty-agustinus-wibowo-michael-vatikiotis/ Featuring: Ben Quilty Ben Quilty has been widely recognised for his artwork. Quilty’s paintings of his Holden Torana produced a sell-out show in 2002 and since then his work has been seen in many exhibits and art fairs. Some of his work can be seen at the Art Gallery of New South Wales and the Museum of Contemporary Art. Quilty won the Doug Moran Portrait Prize in 2009 for his painting Jimmy Barnes, ‘There but for the Grace of God Go I, no.2′. In the same year Quilty was named runner up in the Archibald Prize for this portrait. He then won the Archibald Prize two years later for his portrait of fellow artist Margaret Olley. Find out more about Ben Quilty   Michael Vatikiotis Michael Vatikiotis is a writer and novelist who has lived in Southeast Asia since 1987. He has [...]

December 5, 2013 // 0 Comments

[Audio] UWRF2013: Travellers

Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2013 Travellers : Trinity, Don George, Tony Wheelers, Agustinus Wibowo & Lisa Dempster Travel – from the beginning of Lonely Planet to today, we track the journey of travel writing. Who are the travel writers these days, does what they say still have an impact or have we all become travel writers? Neka, 13 October 2014 http://www.ubudwritersfestival.com/audio/travellers-trinity-don-george-tony-wheelers-agustinus-wibowo-lisa-dempster/ Featuring:   Agustinus Wibowo Agustinus Wibowo is an Indonesian travel writer whose travel experiences have taken him through Asia to the Middle East. He is fascinated by cultures and traditions and is curious about how the world works as one when it is constantly divided by history and culture. He prefers to travel overland when he can and once entered Tibet by pretending to be a Chinese citizen. He also volunteered to help victims of a natural disaster in Kashmir, before deciding on a career in photojournalism and taking on an assignment in war-torn Afghanistan. His first book, considered a masterpiece by many, was Selimut Debu (A Blanket of Dust) and chronicles his journey in Afghanistan. It was followed by Garis Batas (Borderlines: A Journey Through Central Asia), which examines issues of borderlines across ex-Soviet republics, including psychological [...]

December 5, 2013 // 0 Comments

[Audio] UWRF2013: Memoir

  Ubud Writers and Readers Festival 2013 Memoir : Bernice Chauly, Salena Godden, Agustinus Wibowo & Janet Steele In life there are short stories, big stories, stories that end well & ones that don’t. Would you share them all, or put a shiny & more exciting glaze over them? How do these writers go about writing their memoir – how much is truth & how much is fiction? Left Bank, 13 October 2013 http://www.ubudwritersfestival.com/audio/memoir-bernice-chauly-salena-godden-agustinus-wibowo-janet-steele/ Featuring: Bernice Chauly Bernice Chauly is a Malaysian writer, poet and teacher. Born in George Town, Penang, to Chinese-Punjabi teachers, she read Education and English Literature in Canada as a government scholar. For over 20 years, she has worked extensively in the creative industries as a writer, photographer, actor and film maker and has won multiple awards for her work and her contribution to the arts. In 1998, she began organising literary events and, in 2005, founded Readings and CeritAku, which continue to be important platforms for established and emerging writers and poets in Kuala Lumpur. In 2011, she was Festival Director for the Writers Unlimited Tour Kuala Lumpur/Makassar and invited to be Festival Curator of the George Town Literary Festival in Penang, now in its [...]

December 5, 2013 // 0 Comments

Koran Sindo (2013): Lebih Akrab dengan Arab

http://www.koran-sindo.com/node/348056 Lebih Akrab dengan Arab Ada banyak cara untuk mengenal sebuah kebudayaan. Nah yang punya banyak uang dan waktu, biasanya melakukan traveling, sementara yang belum punya, salah satu dari dua hal tersebut bisa membaca buku tentang sebuah kebudayaan. Tapi ada satu cara kreatif yang bisa dilakukan selain dua kegiatan tersebut, yaitu datang ke sebuah festival kebudayaan seperti Arab Festdi Universitas Padjadjaran (Unpad). Acara keren ini baru saja selesai digelar temanteman dari Fakultas Ilmu Budaya (FIB) pada 7-9 November lalu. Mengapa acaranya keren? Soalnya, kegiatannya superseru! Ada diskusi dengan penjelajah sekaligus penulis beken Agustinus Wibowo, fashion showbusana Arab, sampai lomba makan makanan Arab. Keseruan bahkan sudah dimulai sejak pengunjung masuk ke gerbangnya. Pas masuk gerbang, banyak orang yang berpakaian khas Timur Tengah berseliweran di mana-mana. Sementara di pertengahan area, ada gerbang kuning dengan tulisan Arab. Lokasi ini jadi tempat yang paling banyak dikerumuni karena banyak pengunjung yang pengin narsis, berfoto-foto di dekat replika mumi yang disandarkan di gerbang. Di gerbang ini, pengunjung juga bisa mengorek langsung segala hal tentang budaya Mesir dari mahasiswa Sastra Arab yang seolah-olah menjadi tour guide. Pada hari pertama Arab Fest, ada diskusi seru tentang travelingke Timur Tengah dengan pembicara Agustinus Wibowo. Nah yang belum tahu, Mas [...]

November 30, 2013 // 0 Comments

Jakarta Globe (2013): Learning By Traveling

  http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/blogs/agustinus-wibowo-learning-by-traveling/   Agustinus Wibowo: Learning By Traveling By Annisa Dewi Yustita on 1:36 pm November 28, 2013. Category Blogs, Cultural Musings Tags: Indonesia author, travel Villagers traveling on the truck in Afghanistan western provinces. The central route of Afghanistan connecting Herat to Kabul is unpaved for about 900 km. (Agency Photo) Traveling is more than just spending time in a particular place. On a deeper level it enables us to learn many things from our destination, such as the language, culture and its people. Agustinus Wibowo is an Indonesian travel writer whose travel experiences have taken him through Asia and the Middle East. He said that he was fascinated by the world’s cultures and traditions and was curious about how the world works despite its historical and cultural divisions. Agustinus started his journey going around Asia with just US$2,000 from his savings during his study at Tshinghua University in Beijing, China. When he ran out of money, he stayed for a while with local people and worked with them to collect money and continued his journey again. “I loved traveling from when I was a student in China. I used to be a homeboy and scared of going around [...]

November 28, 2013 // 1 Comment

Travel and Escape (2013): Are Travel Writers Obsolete?

  http://www.travelandescape.ca/2013/11/are-travel-writers-obsolete/ Not too long ago, travellers communicated with home via letters and the beloved blue-paper aerogram. Nowadays we text, email and update social media from even some of the farthest reaches of the world. It’s easy to tell our stories and the internet is flooded with blogs, Facebook updates and reviews from travellers worldwide. With this new information-sharing culture, are traditional travel writers and their stories going to become obsolete?This was the question asked of travel writing experts—Tony Wheeler, founder of Lonely Planet, Don George, editor of National Geographic Traveller, and Agustinus Wibowo, a leading Indonesian travel writer—at the 2013 Ubud Writers and Readers Festival in Bali. Here are their responses:Credit: Victoria Watts   Tony Wheeler: I don’t think travel writers will become obsolete. People are still going to want information in a trusted fashion. However, the way we get that information is changing. We read as many words as we ever did, we just don’t always read them on paper—we read them on screen, on our phones and through the internet. But we still read those words, so the demand for information is still there. Agustinus Wibowo: The world is constantly changing, the way we travel is changing [...]

November 27, 2013 // 0 Comments

National Geographic (2013): Literary Magic in Bali

http://intelligenttravel.nationalgeographic.com/2013/11/12/literary-magic-in-bali/   Literary Magic in Bali Posted by Don George of National Geographic Traveler in Travel with Heart on November 12, 2013 Last month I had the opportunity to participate for the second year in a row in the Ubud Writers & Readers Festival on the Indonesian island of Bali. At the six-day festival, I taught two travel writing workshops, spoke on a panel about the evolution of the genre, and hosted a luncheon conversation with the co-founders of Lonely Planet, Maureen and Tony Wheeler. Celebrating its tenth anniversary, this year’s fest was the biggest gathering yet, with more than 200 authors, musicians, and performers from more than 20 countries participating, and many hundreds of literature-lovers from around the Pacific Rim, Southeast Asia, and beyond attending. As with last year, I was exhilarated to encounter in panels and dinners and performances acclaimed and groundbreaking journalists, novelists, poets, and nonfiction writers from Indonesia, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, India, Sri Lanka, Australia, Egypt, Syria, Germany, France, Ireland, and England, as well as bright-eyed, book-hugging readers inspired by what these writers create. One of the festival’s highlights was the aforementioned travel writing panel, facilitated by Lisa Dempster, director of the Melbourne Writers Festival. [...]

November 12, 2013 // 0 Comments

1 8 9 10 11 12 34