Popular Magazine Indonesia Pdf

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This is a list of women's magazines from around the world. These are magazines that have been published primarily for a readership of women. See also history of women's magazines.

Currently published[edit]

  • 10 Magazine (UK - distributed worldwide)
  • Al Jamila (Saudi Arabia)
  • All You (US)
  • Allure (US)
  • Alt for Damerne (Denmark)
  • Amina (France and Africa)
  • An an (Japan)
  • ASOS.com Magazine (online)
  • Avantages (France)
  • Azerbaijan Gadini (Azerbaijan)
  • Bella (UK)
  • Best (UK)
  • Better Homes and Gardens (US)
  • Better Homes and Gardens (Australia)
  • Bild der Frau (Germany)
  • Bis (Japan)
  • Bitch (US)
  • Brigitte (Germany)
  • Burda Style (Germany)
  • Bust (US)
  • Bustle (US)
  • Candis (UK)
  • Carrusel (Colombia)
  • Chat (UK)
  • Chatelaine (Canada)
  • Claudia (Brazil)
  • Clean Eating (US)
  • Cleo (Australia)
  • Closer (UK and France)
  • Cosmopolitan (US-based)
  • Costume (Finland)
  • Courageous Woman (US)
  • criativa (Brazil)
  • Croissant (Japan)
  • Damernas Värld (Sweden)
  • Darling (US)
  • Destiny (South Africa)
  • Diva (UK)
  • Donna Moderna (Italy)
  • Dziriet (Algeria)
  • Elevate Jiu Jitsu Mag (US)
  • elle (Brazil)
  • Enterprising Women (US)
  • Essence (US)
  • Ettelaat-e Banuvan (Iran)
  • Eve.com.mt (Malta)
  • Family Circle (US)
  • Femina (Denmark)
  • Femina (India)
  • Femina (Indonesia)
  • Femmes d’Aujourd’hui (Belgium)
  • Filament (UK)
  • First for Women (US)
  • Flare (Canada)
  • Fucsia (Colombia)
  • Gael (Belgium)
  • gal-dem (magazine) (UK)
  • Gloria (Croatia)
  • Gloria [fi] (Finland)
  • Gloss (Brazil)
  • Good Housekeeping (US and UK)
  • Grand Hotel (Italy)
  • Grazia (Italian-based)
  • Guitar Girl Magazine (US)
  • Gynaika (Greece)
  • Hänt Extra (Sweden)
  • Harrods Magazine (UK)
  • Heat (UK)
  • Hello! (UK)
  • Hennes (Sweden)
  • HGTV Magazine (US)
  • Hia (Saudi Arabia)
  • Homemakers (Canada)
  • Horn OK Please (India)
  • In Touch Weekly (US)
  • IO Donna (Italy)
  • Jamalouki (Lebanon)
  • JFW (India)
  • JJ (Japan)
  • Kotiliesi (Finland)
  • Kvinner og Klær (Norway)
  • Ladies' Home Journal (US)
  • The Lady (UK)
  • LaIsha (Israel)
  • Latina (US)
  • Lepota & Zdravlje (Serbia)
  • Life & Style (US)
  • Lone Wolf (US)
  • Lonny (US)
  • Look (UK)
  • Love It! (UK)
  • Lucire (New Zealand)
  • M2woman (New Zealand)
  • Madame (Germany)
  • Madame Figaro (France)
  • Mais feliz (Brazil)
  • Martha Stewart Living (US)
  • Máxima (Portugal)
  • Me Naiset (Finland)
  • Mindful Soul Center (online)
  • Moda Brasil (Brazil)
  • Moda moldes (Brazil)
  • Modern Grace Magazine (US)
  • Moondance (online)
  • Ms. (US)
  • My Weekly (UK)
  • Naaree.com (online India)
  • Naj (Poland)
  • Nargis magazine (Azerbaijan)
  • Nesf El Donya (Egypt)
  • new! (London, France)
  • New Idea (Australia)
  • New Woman (India)
  • The Next Women (UK)
  • Nők Lapja (Hungary)
  • Nona (Malaysia)
  • Nova beleza (Brazil)
  • NOW (UK)
  • O: The Oprah Magazine (US)
  • OK! (UK celebrity)
  • Olivia (Finland)
  • Oxygen (US)
  • Paperbagg (Algeria)
  • Parenting (US)
  • Parents (US)
  • The People's Friend (UK)
  • Pick Me Up! (UK)
  • The Pin Up (US)
  • Pink (US)
  • Plaza (Sweden)
  • Pleine Vie (France)
  • Prima (UK)
  • Pronto (Spain)
  • Rabotnitsa (Soviet Union)
  • Real People (UK)
  • Real Simple (US)
  • Red (UK)
  • Re(de)fining Magazine (online)[1]
  • Reveal (UK)
  • River Valley Woman (US)
  • The REVIVAL Zine (US)
  • Sakhi (Karnataka, India)
  • Salty (US)
  • Sapna magazine (US-based, for South Asians)
  • Sayidaty (Saudi Arabia)
  • Shape (US)
  • She's SINGLE (US)
  • Siempre Mujer (US)
  • Star (UK)
  • StylishandTrendy.com (online)
  • Stylist (UK)
  • Suitcase (magazine) (UK)
  • Take a Break (UK)
  • Tatler (UK)
  • Tea Moderna (Macedonia)
  • Telva (Spain)
  • Texas Family (US)
  • THAT (Istanbul, Turkey)
  • That's Life! (UK)
  • Today's Black Woman (US)
  • Tom Tom Mag (US)
  • TPM (Brazil)
  • Urban Woman Magazine[2]
  • Vanitha (India)
  • VeckoRevyn (Sweden)
  • Verily (US)
  • Verve (India)
  • View Woman Magazine[3]
  • Vintage Life (UK)
  • VIVmag (online)
  • W (US)
  • We Women Today (India)
  • Wilma (Wilmington, US)
  • With (Japan; has Chinese version)
  • Woman (UK)
  • Woman & Home (UK)
  • Woman Engineer[4] (US)
  • Womankind (Australia)
  • Womanly Magazine (US)
  • Woman's Day (Australia)
  • Woman's Day (US)
  • Woman's Era (India)
  • Woman's Own (UK)
  • Woman's Weekly (UK)
  • Woman's World (US)
  • Women: Total Health & Wellness (US)
  • Women's Health (US)
  • Women's Post Magazine (Canada)
  • Women's Running (US)
  • Yours (UK, women 50+)
  • Zan-e Rooz (Iran)

Defunct women's magazines[edit]

  • Ainslee's Magazine (1897–1926, United States)
  • Ain't I a Woman? (1970–1971, United States)
  • Al Fatat (1892–1894, Egypt)
  • All You (2004–2015, United States)
  • The American Home (1928–1977, United States)
  • The American Jewess (1895–1899, United States)
  • Arthur's Lady's Home Magazine (1852–ca.1898, United States)
  • Arthur's Magazine (1844–1846, United States), merged with Godey's Lady's Book
  • Audrey (2003–2015, United States)
  • Australian Woman's Mirror (1924–1961, Australia)
  • Blueprint: Design Your Life (2006–2008, United States)
  • Candida (1972, United Kingdom)
  • Children's Party Magazine of Washington, D.C. (1991–1996, United States)
  • Chrysalis (1977–1980, United States)
  • Conditions (1976–1990, United States)
  • Cookie (2005–2009, United States)
  • The Delineator (1873–1937, United States)
  • Domino (2005–2009, United States)
  • Elevate Jiu Jitsu Mag (2016–2017, United States)
  • The Englishwoman's Domestic Magazine (1852–1879, England)
  • Elle Girl (2001–2006, United States)
  • Ewomen (online magazine, for women from the Indian subcontinent)
  • Family Health (1969–1991, United States)
  • The Farmer's Wife (1897–1939, United States)
  • Femina (198?–2010, South Africa)
  • Fit Pregnancy (1993–2015, United States)
  • Fitness (1992–2015, United States)
  • Focus: A Journal for Lesbians (1970–1983, United States)
  • g3 (British magazine) (2001–2013, United Kingdom)
  • Girl Germs (1990, United States)
  • Girlfriends (1993–2006, United States)
  • Glamour (1939–2019, United States)
  • Godey's Lady's Book (1830–1878, United States)
  • The Green Book Magazine (1909–1921, United States)
  • Harpies and Quines (1992–1994, United Kingdom)
  • Hearth and Home (1868–1875, United States)
  • Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics (1977–1992, United States)
  • Holland's Magazine (1876–1953, United States)
  • The Home (1920–1942, Australia)
  • Home Chat, (1895–1959, United Kingdom)
  • Home Notes, (1894–1958, United Kingdom)
  • Home Monthly (1896–1900, United States)
  • Honey (1960–1986, United Kingdom)
  • The Household Magazine (1900–1958, United States)
  • I Confess (1922–1932, United States)
  • Indianapolis Woman Magazine (1994–2012, United States)
  • Jane (1997–2007, United States)
  • Janus (1975–1980, United States)
  • Kadınca (1978–1998, Turkey)
  • Kim (1992–1999, Turkey)
  • La Belle Assemblée (1806–1868, United Kingdom)
  • The Ladder (1956–1972, United States)
  • Ladies' Magazine (1827, Boston, United States)
  • The Ladies' Mercury (1693, England)
  • The Lady's Magazine (1770–1847, England)
  • The Lady's Monthly Museum (1798–1832, England)
  • The Lady's Realm (1896–1915, England)
  • Lear's (1988–1994, United States)
  • Lucky (2000–2015, United States)
  • Mademoiselle (1935–2001)
  • McCall's (1897–2002, United States)
  • Mirabella (1989–2000, United States)
  • Missbehave (2006–2009, United States)
  • MODE (1997–2001, United States)
  • Modern Homemaking, The American Needlewoman (1929, Maine, United States)
  • Modern Priscilla (1887–1930, United States)
  • More (1997–2016, United States)
  • More: for New Zealand women (1983–1996, New Zealand)
  • Mothering (1976–2011, United States)
  • Muslim Girl (2007, Canada/United States)
  • New England Offering (1847–1850, United States)
  • New York Woman (1986–1992, United States)
  • Nova (1965–1975)
  • off our backs (1970–2008, United States)
  • On the Issues (1983–2008, United States)
  • On Our Backs (1984–2006, United States)
  • Pandora (1971–1979, United States)
  • Peg's Paper (1919–1940, United Kingdom)
  • Peterson's Magazine (1842–1898, United States)
  • Pictorial Review (1899–1939, United States)
  • Playgirl (1973–2016, United States)
  • ROCKRGRL (1994–2005, United States)
  • Quarante (1984–1990, United States)
  • Redbook (1903–2019, United States)
  • Rosie (2001–2003, United States)
  • Smith's Magazine (1905–1922, United States)
  • Sports Illustrated for Women (1999–2002, United States)
  • $pread (2005–2010, United States)
  • Sudden Weekly (1995–2015, Hong Kong)
  • Today's Housewife (1905–1928, United States)
  • Trouble & Strife (1983–2002, United Kingdom)
  • U.S. Lady (1955, United States)
  • Velvetpark (2002–2007, United States)
  • Venus Zine (1995–2010)
  • VIBE Vixen (2004–2013, United States)
  • Vice Versa (1947–1948, United States)
  • Viva (circa 1970s, United States)
  • The Woman Voter (1910–1917, United States)
  • Woman's Home Companion (1873–1957, United States)
  • Woman's Journal (1870–1931, United States)
  • Woman's Realm, merged with Woman's Weekly in 2001
  • Woman's Viewpoint (1923–1927, United States)
  • Women in Music (1935–1940, United States)
  • Women's Physique World (1984–2006, United States)
  • womenSports (1974–2000, United States)
  • Working Woman (1976–2001, United States)
  • Young Woman's Journal (1889–1929, United States)

See also[edit]

  • List of teen magazines, the readership of many of which are primarily young women
Popular Magazine Indonesia Pdf

References[edit]

  1. ^Re(de)fining Magazine
  2. ^Urban Woman Magazine
  3. ^View Woman Magazine
  4. ^Woman Engineer
Popular Magazine Indonesia Pdf
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_women%27s_magazines&oldid=1038159530'
Magazine

A trove of newly declassified diplomatic cables reveals a surprising degree of American involvement in a brutal anti-communist purge in Indonesia half-a-century ago.

In Indonesia in October 1965, Suharto, a powerful Indonesian military leader, accused the Indonesian Communist Party (PKI) of organizing a brutal coup attempt, following the kidnapping and murder of six high-ranking army officers. Over the months that followed, he oversaw the systematic extermination of up to a million Indonesians for affiliation with the party, or simply for being accused of harboring leftist sympathies. He then took power and ruled as dictator, with U.S. support, until 1998.

This week, the non-profit National Security Archive, along with the National Declassification Center, published a batch of U.S. diplomatic cables covering that dark period. While the newly declassified documents further illustrated the horror of Indonesia’s 1965 mass murder, they also confirmed that U.S. authorities backed Suharto’s purge. Perhaps even more striking: As the documents show, U.S. officials knew most of his victims were entirely innocent. U.S. embassy officials even received updates on the executions and offered help to suppress media coverage. While crucial documents that could provide insight into U.S. and Indonesian activities at the time are still lacking, the broad outlines of the atrocity and America’s role are there for anyone who cares to look them up.

What is often sorely lacking, however, is an appreciation of the importance of the event or how fundamental the violence was to achieving U.S. goals at the time. Compared with the Vietnam War or a subsequent series of right-wing coups in Latin America, Indonesia 1965 is virtually unknown. But considering the U.S. government’s foreign-policy goals at the time—halting the spread of communism and bringing countries around the world into its sphere of influence—Suharto’s bloody purge was a huge win. The decimation of the PKI and Suharto's rise to power constituted a major turning point in the Cold War

John Roosa is an associate professor of history at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, and author of a seminal book on Indonesia in 1965. After reviewing the new documents and their media coverage this week, he told me that much “of the U.S. foreign policy establishment viewed it as a great victory that they were able to sort of ‘flip’ Indonesia very quickly.” Indonesia is the world's fourth-largest country by population size, and its communist party was the world's third-largest, after China and the Soviet Union.

Roosa added that a major problem with framing the events of 1965 is that it's often claimed the United States simply “stood by,” as the bloodbath occurred, which is incorrect. “It's easy for American commentators to fall into that approach, but the U.S. was part and parcel of the operation, strategizing with the Indonesian army and encouraging them to go after the PKI.”

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Popular magazine indonesia pdf file

Some elements within the U.S. government had been trying to undermine or overthrow Sukarno, Indonesia's anti-colonial independence leader and first president, far before 1965. In 1958, the CIA backed armed regional rebellions against the central government, only calling off operations after American pilot Allen Pope was captured while conducting bombing operations that killed Indonesian soldiers and civilians. Agents reportedly went so far as to stage and produce a pornographic film starring a man wearing a Sukarno mask, which they hoped to employ to discredit him. It was never used. Then for years, the United States trained and strengthened the Indonesian army. After John F. Kennedy's death derailed a planned presidential visit to Jakarta and relations worsened with the Johnson administration, Sukarno strengthened alliances with communist countries and employed anti-American rhetoric in 1964.

In 1965, when General Suharto blamed the military purge on a PKI coup plot, the CIA supplied communications equipment to help him spread his false reports before moving into power and overseeing the industrial-scale slaughter, as previously released government documents showed. Several of the documentsreleased this week indicate that the U.S. embassy had reliable information that placed blame on rank-and-file PKI members—information that was entirely inaccurate, but nevertheless had encouraged the army to exploit this narrative.

It has long been known that the United States provided Suharto with active support: In 1990, a U.S. embassy staff member admitted he handed over a list of communists to the Indonesian military as the terror was underway. “It really was a big help to the army,” Robert J. Martens, a former member of the embassy's political section, told The Washington Post. “They probably killed a lot of people, and I probably have a lot of blood on my hands, but that's not all bad.”

Much of the American press at the time did not take a radically different view. In a June 1966 column in The New York Times, entitled “A Gleam of Light in Asia,” James Reston wrote that “The savage transformation of Indonesia from a pro-Chinese policy under Sukarno to a defiantly anti-communist policy under General Suharto is the most important of these [hopeful] developments. Washington is being careful not to claim any credit ... but this does not mean Washington had nothing to do with it.”

It should not be entirely surprising that Washington would tolerate the deaths of so many civilians to further its Cold War goals. In Vietnam, the U.S. military may have killed up to 2 million civilians. But Indonesia was different: the PKI was a legal, unarmed party, operating openly in Indonesia’s political system. It had gained influence through elections and community outreach, but was nevertheless treated like an insurgency.

Earlier this month in Central Java at the Sekretariat Bersama 1965, one of Indonesia's main organizations for the remembrance of these events, I met a survivor of the 1965 massacre. “I believed in President Sukarno and our revolution. At the time our country had the official ‘NASAKOM’ ideology, which meant that Nationalists [NAS, from Nasionalisme], Muslim groups [A, for agama, or ‘religion’ in Indonesian] and Communists [Komunisme] were all supposed to work together to build the country,” he said. “Yes, I worked on the left side of politics, broadly under ‘KOM,’ and there was nothing wrong with that.”

Though he worked as a schoolteacher and not as an actual PKI member, he said he was arrested and tortured for days, before watching his cellmates dragged off one by one, never to return. He was spared, for reasons he never understood, and spent over a decade in prison. But it wasn't only communists and leftists who were victimized. Untold numbers of people were tortured, raped, and killed for being accused of being communists, or for belonging to an ethnic minority, or simply being an enemy of some member of the officially-sanctioned death squads.

Another common problem with the framing of Indonesia 1965 is that the mass violence is often couched as coincidental to Suharto's rise to power, rather than serving as a prerequisite for it. Historians broadly agree that the anti-communists in the military could have never taken power without crushing the PKI by some means.

“Suharto could not have come to power without the extermination of the PKI,” said Brad Simpson, the historian at the University of Connecticut who worked with the National Security Archive to digitize and publish U.S. embassy documents this week. He agrees with Roosa that the depiction of the United States as simply a bystander is problematic.

More documents revealing what happened in Indonesia in 1965 are likely to come, Simpson tells me. But they’re unlikely to offer a complete picture of what both governments were up to in 1965—they won’t for instance, include information from the U.S. military and the CIA. The Indonesian government has offered practically nothing. “Literally no Indonesian official records are publicly available anywhere, so we're really reliant on Western archives,” Simpson said.

This is because much of Indonesia's political elite still relies on Suharto's original—and false—narrative for their legitimacy. The country's powerful military leaders fight any investigations that might lay blame on them. Suharto's government produced a crude, wildly inaccurate propaganda film depicting Communists torturing and killing military officers while communist women perform a wild dance.

The methods Suharto used may have inspired other Washington-backed right-wing putsches around the world. According to severalaccounts of Santiago, Chile, in the days before the U.S.-backed coup that deposed Salvador Allende, cryptic graffiti showed up on walls around the city. Referring to the capital of Indonesia, they read, “Jakarta is coming.”