See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/280009190 Politics of Language and Language of Politics: Theory and practice of the 'Nation-of-Intent' as articulated in Malaysia Conference Paper · March 2013 CITATIONS READS 4 1,408 1 author: A.B. Shamsul Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 109 PUBLICATIONS 1,209 CITATIONS SEE PROFILE Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects: grant perpaduan di malaysia View project All content following this page was uploaded by A.B. Shamsul on 13 July 2015. The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file. Politics of Language and Language of Politics: Theory and Practice of the ‘Nation-of-Intent’ as articulated in Malaysia Shamsul A.B. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM (UKM Ethnic Studies Paper Series) Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA) Bangi 2015 iii Cetakan Pertama / First Printing, 2015 Hak cipta / Copyright Penulis / Author Institut Kajian Etnik (KITA) Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, 2015 Hak cipta terpelihara. Tiada bahagian daripada terbitan ini boleh diterbitkan semula, disimpan untuk pengeluaran atau ditukarkan ke dalam sebarang bentuk atau dengan sebarang alat juga pun, sama ada dengan cara elektronik, gambar serta rakaman dan sebagainya tanpa kebenaran bertulis daripada Institut Kajian Etnik (KITA), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia terlebih dahulu. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical including photocopy, recording, or any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia. Diterbitkan di Malaysia oleh / Published in Malaysia by Institut Kajian Etnik, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 43600 Bangi, Selangor D.E., Malaysia Dicetak di Malaysia oleh / Printed in Malaysia by Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 43600 UKM Bangi,Selangor D.E Malaysia http:/pkukmweb.ukm.my/~penerbit/ Perpustakaan Negara Malaysia Data-Pengkatalogan-dalam Penerbitan Cataloguing-in-Publication-Data Shamsul Amri Baharuddin, 1951 Politics of Language and Language of Politics: Theory and Practice of the ‘Nation-of-Intent’ as articulated in Malaysia/Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. (Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 35/2015) Bibliography: page 25 ISBN 978-967-0741-10-9 1. Language and languages-Political aspects. 2. Nationstate. 3.Malaysia-Ethnic relations-Political aspects. I. Title. II. Series. 320.014 iv Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM (UKM Ethnic Studies Paper Series) Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2008. Hubungan Etnik di Malaysia: Mencari dan Mengekal Kejernihan dalam Kekeruhan. Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil.1 (November) ISBN 978-983-44318-0-8 Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2008. Many Ethnicities, Many Cultures, One Nation: The Malaysian Experience. Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 2 (November) ISBN 978983-44318-1-5 Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2009. Culture and Governance in Malaysia’s Survival as a Nation. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 3 (September). ISSN 2180-1193 Sun Mee Lee. 2009. Construction of Moken Identity in Thailand: A Case Study in Kuraburi. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 4 (Oktober). ISSN 2180-1193 Eric Schubert Ansah. 2009. Shaping A New Africa: What Malaysians Should Know about the Transformation in Africa. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 5 (November). ISSN 2180-1193 Thock Ker Pong. 2009. Tsunami Politik 2008 dan Hala Tuju Perkembangan Pilitik MCA: Krisis dan Dilema di Sepanjang Jalan. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 6 (Disember). ISSN 2180-1193 v Sharifah Zaleha Syed Hassan. 2010. Negotiating Islamism: The Experiences of the Muslim Youth Movement of Malaysia. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 7 (Jun). ISSN 2180-1193 Korakit Choomgrant. 2010. Expression of Sexuality and Lifestyle in Singapore and Bangkok: A Case Study of Singaporean Homosexual Men. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 8 (Julai). ISSN 2180-1193 Michael Banton. 2010. Ethnic Relations: An International Perspective on the Malaysian Initiative of 2007. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 9 (Ogos). ISSN 2180-1193 Jean-Sébastian Guy. 2010. Toward a Second-Order Theory of Globalization. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 10 (Ogos). ISSN 2180-1193 Lennart Niemelä. 2010. WALK! Framing a Successful Agrarian Reform Campaign in the Philippines. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 11 (September). ISSN 2180-1193 Elinor Lumbang Boayes. 2010. The Deadliest Free Press in Asia: A case study of the Philippines. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 12 (September). ISSN 2180-1193 Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2010. Unity in Diversity: The Malaysian Experience. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 13 (Oktober). ISSN 2180-1193 vi Ong Puay Hoon, Dick Yong, Ong Puay Liu & Ong Puay Tee. 2010. The Silent Burden: What it Means to be Dyslexic. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 14 (Oktober). ISSN 2180-1193 Shazlin Amir Hamzah. 2010. Branding Malaysia through Tourism: When Ads Permeate Our Consciousness, What Happens to Our Identity? Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 15 (November). ISSN 2180-1193 Tallyn Gray. 2010. Justice and the Khmer Rouge: Ideas of a Just Response to the Atrocities of Democratic Kampuchea in Buddhism and the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 16 (Disember). ISSN 2180-1193 Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2011. ’Ilmu Kolonial’ dalam Pembentukan Sejarah Intelektual Malaysia: Sebuah Pandangan. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 17 (Januari). ISSN 2180-1193 Shamsul A.B. & Anis Y. Yusoff. 2011. Managing Peace in Malaysia: A Case Study. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 18 (Mei). ISSN 2180-1193 Clive S. Kessler. 2012. What Every Malaysian Needs to Know about Race. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 19 (Mac). ISSN 2180-1193 Pue Giok Hun & Shamsul A.B. 2012. Peranakan as a Social Concept. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 20 (April). ISSN 2180-1193 vii Denison Jayasooria & Teo Lee Ken (Editors). 2012. Issues Pertaining to Malaysia’s Ratification of The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (ICERD) 1965. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 21 (Oktober). ISSN 21801193 Hasan Mat Nor. 2012. Kompilasi Beranotasi mengenai Orang Asli: Bahan Bertulis dalam Bahasa Melayu di UKM. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 22 (November). ISSN 2180-1193 Denison Jayasooria. 2012. Malaysia: The Need for Inclusiveness. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 23 (Disember). ISSN 2180-1193 Denison Jayasooria. 2012. Issues Pertaining to Malaysia introducing a New National Harmony Act. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 24 (Disember). ISSN 2180-1193 James T. Collins. 2013. On Malay Manuscripts: Lessons from the Seventeenth Century. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 25 (Januari). ISSN 2180-1193 Azmi Aziz dan Shamsul Amri Baharuddin. 2013. Pluralisme dan Pluralisme Agama: Sebuah Wacana Konseptual. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 26 (April). ISSN 2180-1193 (not in print) Denison Jayasooria dan Muhammad Ismail Aminuddin. 2013. Satu pendekatan dalam membina kesepaduan sosial melalui penyertaan komuniti. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 27 (April). ISSN 2180-1193 viii Wendy Smith. 2013. Managing Ethnic Diversity in a Japanese Joint Venture in Malaysia. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 28 (April). ISSN 2180-1193 (not in print) Denison Jayasooria (ed.). 2013. Building an Inclusive Society on the Foundation of Human Rights and Responsibilities. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 29 (April). ISSN 2180-1193 Pue Giok Hun (pnyt.). 2013. Menyelusuri Cabaran Kepelbagaian: Pengalaman Malaysia Terkini. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 30 (Mei). ISSN 2180-1193 Leong Kar Yen. 2013. The State and Unseen Realm: State Ideology, History and Memory in Indonesia. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 31 (Julai). ISSN 21801193 Kartini Aboo Talib @ Khalid. 2014. Consociation In Plural Society: Accommodating Contemporary Malaysia Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Bil. 32 (September). ISSN 2180-1193 Kartini Aboo Talib @ Khalid. 2014. Moderation and Power Sharing in Malaysia: Accommodating concept and practice. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik Bil. 33 (September), ISSN 2180-1193 Eric Olmedo Panal. 2014. “MAMAKIZATION” Food and Social Cohesion in Malaysia: A Tentative Framework. Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik Bil. 34 (November), ISBN 978967-0741-03-1 ix About the UKM Ethnic Studies Paper Series UKM Ethnic Studies Paper Series marks the inaugural publication of the Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA), UKM. The purpose of this Paper Series is in line with UKM’s official status as a research university under the 9th Malaysia Plan. The Series provides a premise for the dissemination of research findings and theoretical debates among academics and researchers in Malaysia and world-wide regarding issues related with ethnic studies. All articles submitted for this Series will be refereed by at least one reviewer before publication. Opinions expressed in this Series are solely those of the writer(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views and policies of KITA. The first two papers published in November 2008 under this Series had the ISBN code. For 2009, the Series carries the ISSN Code. However, the Series reverts to the ISBN code with the publication of number 34, November 2014. For further information, please contact: Prof. Dr. Ong Puay Liu Chief Editor UKM Ethnic Studies Paper Series Committee Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA) Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 43600 Bangi, Selangor, Malaysia Website : http://www.kita.ukm.my email: pliu@ukm.edu.my; puayliu@yahoo.com Mengenai Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM menandakan penerbitan ulung Institut Kajian Etnik (KITA). Tujuan penerbitan bersiri ini adalah selaras dengan status rasmi UKM sebagai sebuah universiti penyelidikan dalam Rancangan Malaysia Ke-9. Penerbitan Kertas bersiri ini memberi peluang kepada para akademik dan penyelidik di Malaysia dan luar negara untuk menyebar penemuan-penemuan kajian dan idea-idea teoretikal masing-masing mengenai isu-isu berkaitan dengan kajian etnik. Artikel-artikel yang dihantar untuk tujuan penerbitan akan diwasit oleh sekurang-kurangnya seorang penilai. Segala pandangan yang diungkapkan oleh penulis artikel dalam penerbitan bersiri ini adalah pandangan penulis berkenaan dan tidak semestinya mewakili atau mencerminkan pandangan dan polisi KITA. Dua kertas yang diterbitkan pada bulan November 2008 di bawah Siri ini mempunyai kod ISBN. Mulai tahun 2009, Siri Kertas Kajian Etnik UKM ini membawa kod ISSN. Namun, kod diubah balik ke ISBN bermula dengan penerbitan nombor 34, November 2014. x CONTENTS 1. Introduction … 2 2. States without Nation … 3 3. Competing Nations-of-Intent in Malaysia … 6 4. Define and Rule: Conquest … 10 The Colonial Epistemological 5. Language, Education and Culture: Bargaining & Negotiating within ‘Nations-of-Intent’ Framework … 16 References … 25 About KITA … 26 xi Politics of Language and Language of Politics: Theory and Practice of the ‘Nation-of-Intent’ as articulated in Malaysia1 Shamsul A.B.2 “Nationalism and its imperatives have been a potent force in the history of modern Southeast Asia. The driver and repository of anticolonial freedom movements, nationalist ideas have also been a means of determining who is within and who without, what political scientist Benedict Anderson has called ‘imagined communities’ of modern nation-states and anthropologist Shamsul A.B., their ‘nations-ofintent.’” (Owen 2005: 252) “Writing about nations has been especially vulnerable to teleology. Nationalists themselves tend to seek ancient historical origins for the nations they support, while the main theories of nationalism – Smith’s primordialism, and the constructivism of Hobsbawm, Gellner and Anderson – tend to be deterministic: people do not choose national identity but rather have that identity thrust upon them by ethnicity or historical experience. In this context, it is useful to draw on the writings of an eminent Malaysian sociologist, Shamsul A.B., who has coined the term ‘nation-of-intent’ as a way of highlighting the fact that different kinds of nation may seem possible at particular times and that people choose consciously between these possibilities not because they already ‘belong’ 1 to one of them (as both the primordialists and the constructivists imply) but because that possibility offers the most attractive potential for the future.” (Cribb 2004) 1. Introduction When I first wrote and published an essay, in 1996, entitled “Nations-of-Intent in Malaysia,” it was meant to elaborate and explain, at the theoretical level, why the use of the term ‘nation-state’ in Asia is problematic. In my own anthropological research on the Malay world I discovered that, at the empirical level, the ‘state’ and ‘nation,’ at most times, are disconnected. What then existed has been ‘nations without state’ (e.g. Moro nation) and ‘states without nation’ (Malaysia and Singapore). I found it was rather difficult to establish the existence of the idealised European ‘nation-state’ in the region, perhaps with the example of Brunei with its Islam-Melayu-Beraja nation. The disconnected cases seem to be represented by the post-colonial countries of Southeast Asia.3 However, it was not the political scientists who appreciated the significance of this observation but the historians [see, the abovementioned quotations] who were looking at not only cases found within Southeast Asia but also Asia in general, for example, the case of Burma, Indonesia, The Philippines, Vietnam, and Mongolia. This paper is my latest attempt to share the ‘nation-ofintent’ theoretical-conceptual framework with researchers on Malaysia and Southeast Asia, in the field of public policy, language studies and education, with the aim of expanding and widening the empirical 2 content of the conceptual framework. The theme of this panel - ‘negotiating the culture and politics of language choice’ – indeed falls within the ambit of the said framework. Through this framework, I am suggesting that it is in ‘states without nation’ that the notion of ‘nations-of-intent’ continue to flourish thus opening up socio-political space for contestation, bargaining and negotiation by different groups within the society over a broader range of issues, macro and micro, and in the context of choice- and decision-making. 2. States without Nation We learnt from the post-colonial countries that, firstly, we cannot assume the term ‘state’ could be used interchangeably with the term ‘nation-state’ because the range of historical trajectories shaping the postcolonial countries is quite wide. Secondly, the term ‘nation-state’ could be used in a number of different fashions. For example, we are aware of the existence of ‘state-nation,’ such as Singapore, in which the ‘state’, instead of society, not only defines and engineers but also reinvents the ‘nation’ almost at will to suit the changing demand of the ‘state’. In some other cases, there are ‘nations-without-state’, such as in the case of the Moro of the Southern Philippine, in which, it has a ‘nation,’ or a few competing ‘nations-ofintent,’ but is yet to successfully establish a full-fledged bona fide ‘state.’ Of course, there are also cases of ‘states-without-nation.’ Malaysia is one such case. The existence of these variations has conceptual and empirical implications that we intend to address in this present discourse. Conceptually, the ‘state,’ defined as “an entity that has a rule of a law, a territory and 3 citizenship,” especially in post-colonial countries, could be separated from the ‘nation,’ defined as “an imagined community imbued with a notion of a nation-of-intent,” because the former has already existed during the colonial period fulfilling colonial needs. Once a country achieved its independence and despite the fact that the natives are at the helm, its main structure of governance remains almost the same as that of the colonial state. Depending on how independence was negotiated, the ‘nation’ or ‘how the nation should be,’ in most postcolonial countries, remains unfinished agenda because the struggle for independence during the colonial era rarely takes a homogenous form, especially, in multi-ethnic or multi-cultural societies, such as Burma, Malaysia, Indonesia, The Philippines and Vietnam. In these countries, the ‘state’ exists for many decades after independence without an established nation. Sometimes, bloody civil wars occur, such as Indonesia, because different ethnic groups within a post-colonial country prefer to pursue their own nation-of-intent. In the wider context of Asia, as in the case of India, the Muslim anti-colonial nationalist movement broke away to form its own state called Pakistan, consisting of West and East Pakistan. A few decades later East Pakistan broke away to form what we know today as Bangladesh. We would like to argue, based upon the empirical evidence outlined above, that the ‘modern states’ and/or ‘nation-states’ in Southeast Asia, and other post-colonial countries, are a distinct lot, for historical and a host of other reasons, when compared to the European ones which have been for so long the main 4 conceptual and empirical source, indeed benchmark, for theorization in the construction of theories about ‘the state’ and ‘nation-state’ for the rest of the world. Indeed, in many of the Asian cases, the ‘state’ and the ‘nation’ are two quite separate entities. The former is solidly established and usually promotes a version of the latter. The latter, on the other hand, is often being contested by different social groups, hence the proliferation of notions of the nation-of-intent. We have chosen this strategy for two main reasons. First, most analyses of Malaysia’s modernization project tend to emphasise the material process. Whereas this, of course, is necessary, we believe we should also try to grasp the ideological, and in many ways ‘abstract’ contestation that goes with modernization. There is a need to explore what happens in the political space, beyond politics of parties and numbers, particularly in the realm of ideas, symbols and perceptions. Second, in so doing we have outlined some of the origins of the present ‘abstract’ ideological struggle over the definition of the cultural principle that should underpin the functioning of the political unit, both amongst the elites and non-elites. The latter are particularly concerned about the practical consequences of various concepts of community for their everyday lives and the future, such as their children’s education, the usefulness of their mother tongue and other cultural practices. Such concerns, mundane as they seem, are closely linked to the larger issue of Malaysia’s future as a ‘united Malaysia nation’ or Bangsa Malaysia, or Malaysia as a state with a number of competing ‘nations-of-intent.’ 5 3. Competing nations-of-intent in Malaysia By nation-of-intent we mean a more or less precisely defined idea of the form of a nation-state, i.e. its territory, population, language, culture, symbols and institutions. The idea must be shared by a number of people who perceive themselves as members of that nation, and who feel that it unites them. A nation-ofintent may imply a radical transformation of a given state, and the exclusion or inclusion of certain groups of people. It may also imply the creation of a new state, but it does not necessarily imply an aspiration for political self-rule on the part of the group of people who are advancing their nation-of-intent. It may be an inclusive construct, open to others, which is employed as the basis for apolitical platform voicing dissent or a challenge to the established notion of nation. In any case, the concept nation-of-intent depicts an idea of a nation-state that still needs to be constructed or reconstructed. It promises the citizens (or some of them) an opportunity to participate in a ‘grand project’ which they can claim as theirs. It therefore bridges the authority-defined and the everyday-defined idea of a nation. In the Malaysian case, as admitted by Mahathir (Malaysia’s Prime Minister 1981-2003), the ‘united Malaysian nation-state’ is yet to be born. Hence, various social groups in Malaysia can still voice their different nation-of-intent. In some aspects, conceptually, ‘nation-of-intent’ is not dissimilar to Anderson’s concept of ‘imagined political community.’4 By ‘imagine’, he does not necessarily mean ‘invented’, but rather the members of the said community ‘will never know most of their fellowmembers, meet them, or even hear them, yet in the 6 minds of each lives the image of their communion’. However, nation-of-intent is more positive, proactive, non-deterministic and forward-looking. It has a programmatic plan of action articulated in real politic which has, in the Malaysian case, emerged not only from a historical context of anti-colonialism but also in the post-colonial era. In the latter, it serves as an alternative way of formulating political intentions even though, mostly, it remains at the discourse level. However, in a number of cases, especially in particular localities, the idea of advancing alternative nations-ofintent has found concrete expression, hence political space. That is what has happened in the local provinces of Kelantan and Sabah. In both provinces, the local ruling party, during the period when they were on their own and opposed the Malaysian BN-dominated federal government, have made serious attempts not only to continue to articulate its own nation-of-intent but also to implement some aspects of it locally. Even though these attempts have met with limited success, they have demonstrated that it is possible to have and hold on to one’s nation-of-intent and implement it within the so-called ‘authoritarian’ political context in Malaysia. It is in this sense that the Malaysian situation, in some ways, is not unlike the African one. If the latter has been complicated by ‘tribal nationalism’ thus giving rise to a situation described as ‘one state, many nationalisms’, the Malaysian case could be described as a situation of ‘one state, several nations’, or more precisely, ‘nations-of-intent.’ The concept of a united Malaysian nation, proposed by Mahathir, could be interpreted in two ways: first, to 7 mean ‘the nation as a cultural community’, a kind of political innovation which suggests the idea of rural and urban, intra- and inter-ethnic, and inter-class solidarity, (clearly, here Mahathir is not using the term ‘nation’ in the traditional ‘aspiration for political selfrule’ sense); and, second, to mean the construction of a ‘national identity’, hence ‘national integration’. In fact, the latter has been the overriding, but as yet not realized, objective of the New Economic Policy, which was launched in 1971, implemented over two decades, and ended in 1990. Some observers have said that Mahathir’s concept of ‘a united Malaysian nation’, or Bangsa Malahysia, is not really different from the one proposed by Lee Kuan Yew in 1963, namely a ‘Malaysian Malaysia’ nation, when he was chief minister of Singapore and Singapore was still in Malaysia. However, some Malay bureaucratic intellectuals have answered that Mahathir’s concept is qualitatively different. Whereas Lee Kuan Yew argued for a nation-state in which everyone, irrespective of race, colour and creed, would enjoy equal status, Mahathir argues for a nation-state in which the constitutionally recognized bumiputera’s special position, hence bumiputera political dominance, is retained and accepted by all Malaysians. Therefore, it could be said that the shaping of the political agenda of Malaysia’s modernization project, as outlined by Mahathir, is contextualized within the existing legal-bureaucratic state structures, namely, the Malaysian Constitution and the federalist nature of the state. Lee Kuan Yew’s ‘Malaysian Malaysia’ agenda, on the other hand, demands a radical constitutional reform and perhaps the formation of an ‘absolutist’ 8 unitary state, such as the one in Singapore, which, according to many analysts, has not really been a ‘Singaporean Singapore’. In spite of that, the Democratic Action Party (DAP), the Chinese-controlled main opposition political party in Malaysia, has continued, from the late 1960s until the last general election of 2008, to call for a ‘Malaysian Malaysia’ as its nation-of-intent. Since it is unlikely that a radical constitutional reform will take place in Malaysia, by implication the formation of a unitary state in the mould of ‘Malaysian Malaysia’ is improbable. But, in Mahathir’s opinion, there is no reason why Malaysians should not strive to create a ‘united Malaysia nation-state’ and build their own ‘national identity’. Ironically, it is this very suggestion that keeps the debate open, about what kind of Bangsa Malaysia we should have, or at least that is the perception of many social groups in contemporary Malaysia. Hence the dialogue between various nationof-intent is alive and well in Malaysia at present, arguably, in a redefined political space. Therefore, it is not surprising that elites from various ethnic groups in Malaysia continue to articulate different nations-ofintent. These notions cannot be dismissed as wishful thinking, because some are actively articulated and operationalised in various institutional forms, such as through political parties, NGOs and cultural organizations. It is useful to trace, albeit briefly, the origin and the formation of the post-colonial Malaysian state, and the different nations-of-intent that were generated within, by taking a closer look at its modern history and how British colonialism has redefined, divided up and 9 constructed the lasting structure of what has been called ‘plural society’, which was first known as Malaya and later, in 1993, as Malaysia. 4. Define and Rule: The colonial epistemological conquest In Malaysia, most historians and other scholars in the humanities accept ‘colonial knowledge’ as the basis of Malaysian and Malay history. Moreover they do so in what seems like an almost unproblematized manner, even though politico-academic attempts are being made to ‘indigenise’ Malaysian history and the ‘Malay’ viewpoint has been privileged. Such attempts are admirable, and yet it is good to realize that this emphasis on the Malay perspective has been primarily motivated by a ‘nationalistic’ need to re-interpret history, and not by the urge to question the ways historical knowledge per se has been constructed. In Malaysia historical knowledge, a crucial element in every identity formation, is still based on colonial knowledge; in this connection the question of the good and bad sides of the paternalism which informed this knowledge is not a very relevant one. 5 In short, Malaysian historiography is a kind of ideological struggle involving different interest groups (ethnic, foreign, academic, political, and so on), an articulation of the ‘unfinished’ cultural/ethnic nationalist project in Malaysia. The situation is reminiscent of Ernest Renan’s famous essay ‘What is a Nation?’ in which history is placed at the centre of the ‘nationalist project’: the past requires a careful and selective interpretation, and in this process, Renan argues, ‘getting history wrong’ is the precondition of nationalist 10 history since it requires not only a collective remembering but also a collective forgetting. This forgetting ‘is a crucial factor in the creation of a nation, which is why progress in historical studies often constitutes a danger for [the principle of] nationality’.6 Renan’s essay points not only to contradictions in the creation of the historical substance of a ‘nation’ but also to the need to take note of the ‘identity’ of a particular form of historical knowledge and its construction – the very issues covered in this sketchy essay about the identity of Malaysian historical knowledge. These issues have escaped many scholars and analysts involved in the study of social and ethnic identity in Malaysia. If we were to take the discourse on Malay identity in Malaysia as an example, one could argue that the colonial methods of accumulating facts and insights and the resultant corpus of knowledge have been critical in providing not only substance but also sustenance to the endeavour of writing about ‘Malayness’. The sheer volume of ‘facts’ that have been accumulated and amassed by the British on, for instance, traditional Malay literature and the modern history of Malaya/Malaysia has established the hegemony of colonial knowledge in Malaysia’s intellectual realm, where the discussions about ‘Malay identity’ are taking place. Relevant here are the methods of accumulating facts that resulted in the formation and organization of the corpus of colonial knowledge. The approach anthropologist Bernard Cohn developed to make British rule in India more understandable is extremely useful. 11 The British managed to classify, categorize, and connect the vast social world that was India so it could be controlled by way of so-called ‘investigative modalities’, devises to collect and organize ‘facts’ which, together with translation works, enabled the British to conquer the ‘epistemological space’. 7 An investigative modality includes the definition of a body of information that is needed and the procedures by which appropriate knowledge is gathered, ordered and classified, and then transformed into usable forms such as published reports, statistical returns, histories, gazetteers, legal codes, and encyclopaedias. Some of these investigative modalities, such as historiography and museology, are of a general nature, whereas the survey and census modalities are more precisely defined and closely related to administrative needs. Some of these modalities were transformed into ‘sciences’ or ‘disciplines’, such as economics, ethnology, tropical medicine, comparative law, and cartography. Their practitioners became professionals. Each modality was tailored to specific elements and needs on the administrative agenda of British rule; each of them became institutionalised and routinized in the day-to-day practice of colonial bureaucracy. The ‘historiographic modality’, the most relevant one for my argument, had three important components. First, the production of settlement reports, which were prefaced on a district-by-district basis; they usually consisted of a description of local customs, histories and land tenure systems and a detailed account of how revenues were assessed and collected by local, indigenous regimes. Second, the descriptions of indigenous civilizations; these eventually provided the 12 space for the formation of the discourse that legitimised the British civilizing mission in the colony. Third, the history of the British presence in the colony; it evoked ‘emblematic heroes and villains’ and led to the erection of memorials and other ‘sacred spaces’ in the colony (and in the motherland as well). The ‘survey modality’ encompassed a wide range of practices, from mapping areas to collecting botanical specimens, from the recording of architectural and archaeological sites of historic significance to the minute measuring of peasant’s fields. When the British came to India, and later to the Malay lands, they sought to describe and classify every aspect of life in terms of zoology, geology, botany, ethnography, economic products, history and sociology by way of systematic surveys; they also created a colony-wide grid in which every site could be located for economic, social and political purposes. In short, ‘surveys’ came to cover every systematic and official investigation of the natural and social features of indigenous society through which vast amounts of knowledge were transformed into textual forms such as encyclopaedias and archives. The ‘enumerative modality’ enabled the British to categorize the indigenous society for administrative purposes, particularly by way of censuses that were to reflect basic sociological facts such as race, ethnic groups, culture, and language. The various forms of enumeration that were developed objectified and stultified social, cultural and linguistic differences among the indigenous peoples and the migrant population, and these differences were of great use for 13 the colonial bureaucracy and its army to explain and control conflicts and tensions. Control was primarily implemented by way of the ‘surveillance modality’: detailed information was collected on ‘peripheral’ or ‘minority’ groups and categories of people whose activities were perceived as a threat to social order and therefore should be closely observed. For surveillance reasons, methods such as anthropometry and fingerprinting systems were developed in order to be able to describe, classify and identify individuals rather accurately for ‘security’ and other general purposes. The ‘museological modality’ started out from the idea that a colony was a vast museum; its countryside, filled with ruins, was a source of collectibles, curiosities and artifacts that could fill local as well as European museums, botanical gardens, and zoos. This modality became an exercise in presenting the indigenous culture, history and society to both local and European public. The ‘travel modality’ complemented the museological one. If the latter provided the colonial administration with concrete representations of the natives, the former helped to create a repertoire of images and typifications, if not stereotypes, that determined what was significant to European eyes; architecture, costumes, cuisine, ritual performances, and historical sites were presented in ‘romantic’, ‘exotic’, and ‘picturesque’ terms. These aesthetic images and typifications were often expressed in paintings and prints as well as in novels and short stories, many 14 created by the colonial scholar-administrators, their wives, and their friends. These modalities represented a set of ‘officialising procedures’ which the British used to establish and extend their authority in numerous areas: ‘… control by defining and classifying space, making separations between public and private spheres, by recording transactions such as sale of property, by counting and classifying populations, replacing religious institutions as the registrar of births, marriages, and deaths, and by standardizing languages and scripts…’ (Cohn 1996:1). The colonial state introduced policies and rules that were organized by way of these investigative modalities; thus, the locals’ minds and actions were framed in an epistemological and practical grid. In different ways, the growth of public education and its rituals fostered beliefs in how things were and how they ought to be: schools were (and still are) crucial ‘civilizing’ institutions, seeking to produce good and productive citizens. By way of schools many ‘facts’ amassed through investigative modalities, and resultant officialising procedures, were channelled to the younger population; in this process governments directed the people’s perception of how social reality was organized. What is more, with the creation of Chinese, Malay, Tamil and English schools, ethnic boundaries became real, and ethnic identities became stultified and essentialised by way of language and cultural practices. The most powerful and most pervasive by-products of colonial knowledge on the colonized have been the idea that the modern ‘nation-state’ is the natural 15 embodiment of history, territory and society. In other words, colonial knowledge, as a form of epistemological conquest, first and foremost, has provided the framework for the colonial state to ‘define and rule’ a colonial society that became the basis of its ‘divide and rule’ policy in managing a ‘plural society’ that it had successfully created. Without doubt, the post-colonial state has become dependent on colonial knowledge and its ways of determining, codifying, controlling, and representing the past as well as documenting and standardizing the information that has formed the basis of government. Modern Malaysians have become familiar with ‘facts’ that appear in reports and statistical data on commerce and trade, health, demography, crime, transportation, industry and so on; these facts and their accumulation, conducted in the modalities that were designed to shape colonial knowledge, lie at the foundation of the modern, post-colonial state of Malaysia. The citizens of Malaysia rarely question these facts, fine and often invisible manifestations of the process of Westernisation. 5. Language, Education and Culture: Bargaining and Negotiation within ‘Nations-of-Intent’ Framework There is always a tension between the government’s mainstream ‘authority-defined’ top-down approach and the social actors’ bottom-up ‘everyday-defined’ perspective. This is not only happening today but has always been there in Malaysian history as a result of, partly, to the demographic nature of the ‘plural society’, where no single ethnic group could claim, 16 numerically, as an absolute majority group, like the Chinese in Singapore and the pribumi in Indonesia. What Malaysia has is a competing group of ‘small majorities.’ This social reality has had a broader longterm and short-term sociological and political economy implication. The lasting impact of this social reality is articulated best in the political arena of Malaysia. Politically, we have witnessed as of the last GE12 in 2008, that any attempt to wrest power from the present Barisan Nasional must be done by a coalition of multiethnic political parties, even in a makeshift form as Pakatan Rakyat has managed to do. In other words, only another coalition could challenge the incumbent coalition government. Another impact of this social reality of ‘small majorities’ is that Malaysia exhibits two notions of majority, which is rarely discussed in the context of Malaysian studies. It has a highly influential impact on the process of negotiation and bargaining within the realm of language, education and culture in Malaysia. It could be said that the space for contestation is possible in Malaysia because of the existence of ‘small majorities’ as well as the two meanings of majority that informed the conduct of social processes and inter-group relations in the country. The first meaning of majority relates to the demography and numbers of physical bodies. In the simple numerical demographic sense it has been said time and again that the Malays/Bumiputera is the majority, constituting some 60% of the total population in the country. However, in the economic and wealth 17 sense, having numerical demographic majority, small or big, is indeed not so relevant. What is relevant is the ownership of the economic wealth not the number of physical bodies or demographic majority. For instance, in Indonesia, although the total Chinese population is about 5% of the 240 million, a study conducted by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT), Australia, in 1995, on ‘Overseas Chinese Business Networks in Asia’ claimed that the majority of Indonesia’s wealth is in the hands of a smaller group of super rich Chinese entrepreneurs. The second meaning of majority relates to numerical size of economic and wealth ownership, and not of physical bodies of individuals. In the Malaysian case, if the Malays/Bumiputera is struggling to fulfill the 30% quota of the economy and wealth in the country, then the 70% must be owned not by the struggling Malays but others, in the form of family businesses or large corporations. But academic research and analysis on who owns/constitutes the remaining 70% is almost non-existent. Indeed, there is a huge collection of published books and articles on the ‘affirmative action policy,’ or the NEP, published in the last 40 years, the latest released in December 2012.8 It is not a surprise therefore that some researchers thought that the overemphasis on the NEP is a form of ‘ethnicization of knowledge’ in Malaysia because the majority of the authors and researchers who have published mainly criticisms on the NEP, has been overwhelmingly not Malay/Bumiputera authors and researchers. Many of them are also authors and reporters of the mass media from Europe, USA and Australia.9 18 What is relevant to our discussion today is to identify what is the mainstream authority-defined top-down approach adopted by the current government of Barisan Nasional, a coalition of Malay, Chinese, Indian, Kadazan, and Iban political parties, in terms of education and language in the country, with impact on cultures of the various ethnic groups. The Federal Constitution has been the framework within which the mainstream approach has been embedded since 1957 and the grid that became vehicle of public policy formulation and implementation, many of which are openly contested by many groups throughout the country. Also relevant to be discussed is the non-mainstream, bottom-up everyday-defined approach of the different social groups (ethnic and non-ethnic) reaction, mainly in the form of contestation (read negotiation and bargaining), to various policy and implementation aspects of the mainstream education, language and cultural policy. I have decided that it is a worthwhile effort to make sense of these contestations and on other topics relating to Malaysian social life by employing a theoretic-conceptual analytical tool that I have developed since 1996, called the ‘nation-of-intent’ as well as the ‘authority-defined’ vs. ‘everyday-defined’ framework, which I have explained at length in the earlier parts of the paper. In this context, I wish to examine the three central issues, namely, education, language and culture, which have dominated discourses at various levels in Malaysian society even before its independence in 1957. They have to be dealt with simultaneously in view of the sociological fact that 19 language is the custodian of every culture and only through formal and informal education using the same language, over time, could build a collective understanding and sharing of the cultural values belonging to the group, and eventually, the cultural boundaries of ‘us’ and ‘them’, of the ‘insider’ and ‘outsider.’ Before the colonial period, there was already a private education system conducted in rural Malaysia by Islamic religious teachers in pondok (lit. huts-based schools) and in Sufi-centric centres found in and around urban port cities. The texts used were written in Jawi/Arabic alphabet scripts and the languages used as medium of instruction were Arabic and Malay. These schools continued to exist until after the advent of colonial rule and during in the postcolonial era. Necessarily they went through important changes in form and content. There are those schools teaching only theological subjects while others combine theological subject with Western secular subjects. They now used textbooks written both Jawi and Rumi (Roman alphabet) scripts. These schools are run mostly privately with a few supported by both the state and federal government. Chinese/Mandarin and Indian/Tamil schools were established during the colonial era. So, too, did the English medium school and the Rumi-script Malay schools. The Chinese and Tamil schools were mainly private. Some of the English schools were private, too, but the Malay schools, with only primary level education, were all colonial state funded. There was no secondary and tertiary level education for Malay and Tamil, but there was for the English, Mandarin and 20 Arabic medium schools. Those who wished to pursue tertiary education in English, Mandarin and Arabic have to go abroad to Europe, China and Taiwan and the Middle East, respectively. The sociological significance of this multi-lingual medium of instruction is greatly relevant to the eventual development of the nation-of-intent framework on two counts, first, the emergence of group cohesiveness and, second, the opportunity to turn this cohesiveness into a socio-political platform for the competing small majorities. The contestation is usually shaped by the different groups’ general perspectives and ideas on the kind of Malaysia they would like to have from the loosely structured form to the more clearly defined ones. The latter often leads to the emergence of formal associations or political parties. This was what exactly happened within the Malay nationalist group before and after Second World War. They were divided into three, namely, those educated in English, in Malay and in Jawi/Arabic. The ones educated in English promoted the idea of ‘Malaydominated plural society nation’, those educated in Malay and leftist in political orientation promoted the ‘Melayu Raya nation’ (lit. Greater Malay world nation), and those educated in the religious schools with Jawi/Arabic medium promoted the ‘Islamic nationstate.’ It implies that education and language that became the medium of instruction has been critical in developing these social groups, in the case of the Malays intra-Malay groups and each promoted its own nations-of-intent. What is equally important is to observe the kind of cultural contestation among Malay 21 elites, namely, between the traditional-religious elites vs. the modern English-educated elites vs. the Malay school educated elites. Issues on ‘adat vs. Islam’, ‘haram and halal’ and ‘sanctity of the royal family’ have been, though sensitive to many, openly discussed. 10 In other words, UMNO may have dominated the BN in the last 60 years, but the idea that the Malays have been politically homogenous and united is totally erroneous. It is also useful to observe the inter-ethnic cultural contestations because this is highlighted in this panel today.11 Let us take a look at its evolution in the last 60 years. At independence in 1957, the then Malayan society comprised three major ethnic communities, namely, the indigenous community or bumiputera (lit. sons of the soil), who accounted for 50 per cent of the population, and two sizeable originally migrant communities, one Chinese (37 percent) and the other Indian (11 per cent). Since then, the Censuses of 1970, 1980, 1990, 2000 and 2010 have shown that, in spite of the general increase in the population, from about 10 to 28 million, the ethnic composition has not changed significantly. However, to most Malaysians, it is the bumiputera and non-bumiputera ethnic divide that is perceived as significant, used in official government documents as well as the idiom of everyday interaction, despite the fact that there is heterogeneity within both. Nonetheless, colloquially, the public referees to this ethnic divide simply as ‘bumi’ and non-bumi, reflecting the delicate demographic balance between the two categories, each constituting about 60:40 ratio of Malay/Bumiputera to nonMalay/non-Bumiputera. This has important wider 22 implications in the social life of Malaysians, especially in political terms. One of those involves the attempt to make ‘the cultural principle’ (read the different notions of ‘nations-ofintent’) and the political unit (read ‘the state’) congruent. At the level of ‘authority-defined social reality’, which bumiputera-dominated, the cultural principle question, or in popular idiom referred to as the issue of ‘national identity’, is perceived by the state as a non-issue because its basis and content has been spelt out in a number of policy documents within the framework of the Malaysian constitution. It is a bumiputera-defined cultural principle that has privileged many aspects of bumiputera culture as the ‘core’ of the Malaysian national identity while recognizing, if peripherally, the cultural symbols of other ethnic groups. On the other hand, at the level of ‘everyday social reality’, the authority-defined cultural principle has been challenged by three groups, namely, the nonbumiputera group, led by the Chinese, and two bumiputera ones, the non-Muslim bumiputera group and the radical Islamic bumiputera group, each offering its own nation-of-intent, i.e. its own vision of what the cultural principle should be for the political unit (the state), based on a particular ideological framework. The non-bumiputera rejects the bumiputera-based and bumiputera-defined cultural principle in preference for a more ‘ pluralised’ one, in which the culture of each ethnic group in Malaysia is accorded a position equal to that of the bumiputera. For instance, the Chinese suggest that Chinese language and rituals should be considered as an integral part of the cultural principle 23 or national identity.12 Although both the non-Muslim bumiputera and the radical Islamic bumiputera accept the authority-defined bumiputera-based cultural principle, the former suggest that Christianity and ‘native religions’ be accorded equal status to that of Islam, as components within it; the latter, on the contrary, rejects what it sees as the secular, modernist Islamic component of the identity in preference for a ‘truer and purer’ Islam, hence the idea of the Islamic state. The Kadazan of Sabah argue forcefully for the non-Muslim bumiputera case and the Parti Islam, whose core is in Kelantan, for the radical Islamic bumiputera group. Those who believe that Malaysia is an authoritarian state, with bumiputera hegemony well entrenched, view the opposition to the authority-defined cultural principle as an anomaly, a social aberration, or as minority voices, which the state allows as an act of benevolence or a form of ‘social tokenism’. This view is informed, conceptually, by a ‘benevolent state’ thesis which stresses the fact that bumiputera dominance is a foregone conclusion. Hence dissenting voices find space at the behest of the bumiputera ruling class, who, in return, use this to demonstrate that ‘democracy’ is well and alive in Malaysia. We find that this approach, albeit unwittingly, favours a kind of master narrative that downplays and in an ironic twist, belittles many of the oppositions and differences of human experience that characterize everyday human life in Malaysia. Their ‘hegemonic developmentalist’ approach ignores most of what is going on behind the public scene. We thought it more instructive to give equal weight to the dominant and the dominated, each representing a 24 different view or approach, and each articulating dissimilar interest. This opens the way for uncertainties, ruptures and tensions. With such an approach we are in a better position to highlight the alternatives, their attendant differences, however slight, the distances between them and, most significantly, the dialogue between them, fruitful or futile, eventful or mundane. As one would have noticed from the above, this is the strategy of my presentation. It is an effort to make sense of dissenting voices in the Malaysian present-day social milieu with regard to the question of ‘the cultural principle’ as expressed by the presentation in this panel. In doing so, we are offering a discourse analysis on the origin, social roots and bureaucratic management of contemporary contestation regarding Malaysia’s cultural principle or national identity and the implication it has on education and language policy. References Cribb, Robert 2004. ‘Nations-of-Intent in Colonial Indonesia’. Paper presented at the 18th IAHA Conference, Taipei, 6-10 December 2004. Cohn, Bernard. 1996. Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge: The British Rule in India. Princeton: Princeton Owen, Norman G. (ed.). 2005. The Emergence of Modern Southeast Asia: A New History, Honolulu: University of Hawai’i Press. 25 About KITA The Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA) was officially established on 8 October 2007 by Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM) to undertake academic research on subjects pertaining to ethnic studies in Malaysia. This research institute is ‘only one of its kind’ in Malaysia, focusing specifically on ‘ethnic studies’ with thematic studies orientation. The Institute emerged out of the need to maintain at home the present peaceful inter- and intra-ethnic existence against worldwide problematic, and sometimes violent ethnic situations. Organisationally, KITA has five research clusters, each being led by a prominent scholar or a highly experienced professional person. The five research clusters are: Social Theory and Ethnic Studies; Ethnicity and Religion; Ethnicity at Workplace; Ethnicity and Consumerism; and The Arts and Social Integration. KITA’s postgraduate program (PhD and Masters) was launched in December 2009. Mengenai KITA Institut Kajian Etnik (KITA) ditubuhkan secara rasmi oleh Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia pada 8 Oktober 2007. KITA merupakan satu-satunya institut penyelidikan di Malaysia yang memberi tumpuan sepenuhnya kepada segala kajian berkaitan dengan ‘etnik’ dan ‘etnisiti’. Dari segi organisasi, KITA mempunyai lima rumpun penyelidikan. Setiap satu rumpun diketuai oleh seorang sarjana atau ahli profesional yang mempunyai rekod prestasi cemerlang. Lima rumpun penyelidikan berkenaan adalah: Teori Sosial dan Kajian Etnik; Etnisiti dan Agama; Etnisiti di Tempat Kerja; Etnisiti dan Konsumerisme; dan Kesenian dan Integrasi Sosial. Mulai Disember 2009, KITA menawarkan program siswazah (PhD dan Sarjana). 26 This publication is based on a paper presented at a Panel on “Negotiating the Culture and Politics of Language Choice in Contemporary Malaysia”, at the AAS 2013 San Diego, (Sections I and II). 1 Shamsul A.B. is a Distinguished Professor and, currently, Founding Director, Institute of Ethnic Studies (KITA), Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia (UKM), Bangi. He has researched, written and lectured extensively, in the last 25 years, on the theme “politics, culture and economic development,” with an empirical focus on Malaysia and Southeast Asia. Most of his publications are available on his website: <https://ukm.academia.edu/ABshamsul> 2 See, Shamsul A.B. “Nations-of–Intent in Malaysia”, in Asian Forms of the Nation, edited by Stein Tonnesson & Han Antloev, London: Curzon Press, 1996, pp. 323-347. I have also discussed the idea of ‘nations-of-intent’ in an essay on identity formation in Malaysia. The essay introduces the ‘twotier social reality concept’ to capture the difference between ‘authority-defined social reality’ and ‘the everyday-defined social reality’ in the context of ‘nation-of-intent’ construction, see, Shamsul A.B., “Debating about Identity: A Discourse Analysis,” Tonan Ajia Kenkyu, 34(3) December, 1996, pp. 476-499. 3 Anderson, Benedict. 1983. The Imagined Communities, London: Verso. 4 5 Hirschman, Charles. 1986. ‘The Making of Race in Colonial Malaya: Political Economy and Racial Category’. Sociological Forum, Spring, pp. 330-61. 6 Renan, Ernest. 1990. ‘What is a Nation?’. In Nation and Narration, Homi Bhabha. London: Routledge. 7 Cohn, Bernard. 1996. Colonialism and Its Forms of Knowledge: The British Rule in India. Princeton: Princeton. 8 The latest is by Gomez, Edmund Terence and Johan Saravanamuttu (eds.). 2012. The New Economic Policy in Malaysia: Affirmative Action, Ethnic Inequalities and Social Justice, Singapore: NUS Press and ISEAS. 9 I raised the issue of ‘ethnicization of knowledge’ about 15 years ago in an essay entitled, Shamsul A.B., 1998. ‘Ethnicity, Class, Culture or Identity? Competing Paradigms in Malaysia Studies”. Akademika, 53, Julai 1998: 33-59. 10 See, Shamsul A.B., “A History of an Identity, an Identity of a History: The Idea and Practice of ‘Malayness’ in Malaysia Reconsidered, Journal of Southeast Asian Studies, 32 (3), 2001, pp 355-366. [Reprinted in Contesting Malayness: Malay Identity Across Boundaries; edited by Tim Barnard, Singapore University Press, Singapore, 2004, pp.135-148 & 291-294]. 11 I am avoiding the use of ‘multiculturalism’ as a concept when describing Malaysian society. I prefer the term multiethnic. Why? I have argued elsewhere that the use of ’multiculturalism’ in Malaysia has been too literal and in its application to the Malaysian case, and it is epistemologically erroneous, see Shamsul A.B., “How Knowledge Invents Boundaries: From Colonial Knowledge to Multiculturalism” in The Gaze of the West, Framings of the East, edited by Shanta-Nair Venugopal, London: Palgrave, 2012, pp. 107122. 12 Shamsul A.B., ‘Identity Contestation in Malaysia: A Comparative Commentary on ‘Malayness’ and ‘Chineseness,’ Akademika, 55, July 1999, pp. 17-37. View publication stats