Max Lane has been engaged with Indonesia for over 50 years. In the 1970s, he translated W.S. Rendra’s play The Struggle of the Naga Tribe, which was performed in English in Australia and Malaysia. He spent time with Rendra’s group, Bengkel Teater. In the 1980s, he worked in the Australian Embassy in Jakarta when he started translating Pramoedya Ananta Toer’s This Earth of Mankind and its three sequels, together now known as the Buru Quartet. He was withdrawn from the Embassy by the Australian government for translating these banned books. He later translated Pramoedya’s novel Arok Dedes and historical work, The Chinese in Indonesia. He was almost two years as Second Secretary (Development Assistance) at the Australian Embassy in Jakarta afters being on the Southeast Asia deskin in Canberra. He had responsibility for Embassy liaison with a number of development projects in Indonesia. Returning to Australia, as its first editor, he helped found INSIDE INDONESIA magazine. During 1980s, he also spent time as the Principal Research Officer for the Senate Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade io the Australian Parliament in Canberra. He also wrote on Indonesian political affairs for the Canberra Times newspaper and other media. In the 1990s, he actively supported the democracy movements in Indonesia and East Timor and as a journalist wrote hundreds of articles about Indonesia. Since the early 200os, has written several books on Indonesia, including Unfinished Nation: Indonesia Before and After Suharto, Catastrophe in Indonesia, An Introduction to the Politics of the Indonesian Union Movement and Indonesia and Not, Poems and Otherwise: Anecdotes Scattered. His new book Indonesia Out of Exile: How Pramoedya’s Buru Quarter Killed a Dictatorship is being released in Singapore by Penguin Books in November, 2022. Some of his writings have been published in Indonesian alongside other original writings. He has lectured at the University of Sydney and Victoria University, Melbourne and at universities in Indonesia, Southeast Asia, Europe, and the United States. He has been a research fellow at Murdoch University, the National University of Singapore, and the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies – Yusof Ishak Institute, also in Singapore. He is married to Indonesian playwright and theatre producer, Faiza Mardzoeki.
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