Silencing Opposition in The Act of Killing (2012) & The Look of Silence (2014)
Description
After spending a number of episodes in the past, today we're jumping to the 2010's. We're looking at two documentaries from Joshua Oppenheimer; The Act of Killing (2012) and The Look of Silence (2014). These docs reveal two different aspects of the chilling aftermath of Indonesia’s 1965-66 anticommunist massacres, one looking at the perpetrators and one looking at the legacy of the victims.
We also draw on Vincent Bevins’ book The Jakarta Method: Washington's Anticommunist Crusade and the Mass Murder Program that Shaped Our World for our discussion on how the Washington-backed violence helped install a regime where the perpetrators not only won but shaped the official history ever since. Through state-sponsored propaganda, like Treachery of G30S/PKI (1984), and the active erasure of victims’ stories from cultural memory, the truth went largely unaddressed within broader Indonesian society for decades.
What makes these films deeply unsettling isn’t just the brutality (although that is unsettling), but also the lessons they carry for the present. The rhetoric of the need to annihilate political opposition, once used to justify state terror in Indonesia, echoes in today’s right-wing American discourse, where the constant invocation of civil war and the erasure of history are frighteningly familiar.
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