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I5EA5 Institute of Southeast Asian Studies The Institute of Southeast Asian Studies was established as an autonomous organization in May 1968. It is a regional research centre for scholars and other specialists concerned with modern Southeast Asia. The Institute's research interest is focused on the many-faceted problems of development and modernization, and political and social change in Southeast Asia. The Institute is governed by a twenty-two-member Board of Trustees on which are representatives from the National University of Singapore, appointees from the government, as well as representatives from a broad range of professional and civic organizations and groups. A ten-man Executive Committee oversees day-to-day operations; it is chaired by the Director, the Institute's chief academic and administrative officer. The responsibility for facts and opinions expressed in this publication rests exclusively with the author and his interpretations do not necessarily reflect the views or the policy of the Institute or its supporters.
MODERN MALAY LITERARY CULTURE A Historical Perspective Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia
Research Notes and Discussions Paper No. 62 INSTITUTE OF SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES 1987
Published by Institute of Southeast Asian Studies Heng Mui Keng Terrace Pasir Panjang Singapore 0511 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the prior permission of the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies.
© 1987 Institute of Southeast Asian Studies The responsibility for facts and opinions expressed in this publication rests exclusively with the author, and her interpretations do not necessarily reflect the views or the policy of the Institute or its supporters. Cataloguing in Publication Data Maimunah Mohd. Tahir, Ungku Modem Malay literary culture: A historical perspective (Research notes and discussions paper/ Institute of Southeast Asian Studies; no. 62) 1. Malay literature -- 20th century -- History and criticism. I. Institute of Southeast Asian Studies II. Title. III. Series. DS501 I596 no. 62 1987 ISBN 9971-988-52-6 ISSN 0219-8828 Printed in Singapore by General Printing & Publishing Services Pte Ltd
CONTENTS
Introduction
1
The Impact of the West: Education in Colonial Malaya
2
The Beginning of Modem Malay Literature
20
Literary Conventions in Pre-War Writing
25
Post-War Literature: ASAS 50
32
Conventions in Immediate Post-War Literature
43
The Literature of Independence
46
Conventions in Post-Independence Literature
53
Malay Literature in the 1970s
56
The 1970s: Literary Conventions
68
Conclusion
70
MODERN MALAY LITERARY CULTURE: A HISTORICAL PERSPECTIVE
Introduction An approach often adopted in the study of modern Malay literature is to separate literary texts from the environment which produces them. Literature is seen as discrete, whose understanding calls for
scrutiny of
its
structural
technique, rhythm and the like. the study of literature. aspects
are
survey
of
important modern
socio-political
only
such
as theme,
This paper, however, contends that both and
Malay
changes
elements
Context, is often peripheral to
attempts literary
which
the
to
integrate
culture. country
them
It
in
its
traces
underwent
the
from
the
period of British colonialism to the present nation state, and sees
this
historical
influenced
the
formative
force
context as an extra-textual
literature are
the
produced. literary
No
less
conventions
factor which
important which
as
a
writers
inherit, how they adopt and adapt their literary heritage in the process of evolving a literary mode for their own situation and also their own unique role as they, as writers, influence the literary environment in which they operate. The survey also highlights writers' response to their immediate social realities and
how
society.
this
shapes
and
colours
their
perceptions
of
their
Couched in literary expression, these perceptions draw
attention to the prejudices,
in short, the value orientations 1
2
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
evident factors,
in
modern
Malay
literary works.
In
discussing
these
this study seeks to point out developments which take
place as well as show continuity which persists in modern Malay literature. The paper is organized into periods, not as an attempt at periodization
of modern Malay literary history,
facilitate understanding.
but merely to
However, the basic assumption remains
that appreciation of specific historical
and cultural
bases is
crucial for a clearer understanding of modern Malay literature on its own terms.
The Impact of the West:
Education in Colonial Malaya
The various policies introduced into the Malay states by British colonial administration wrought a major transformation especially of the social and economic landscape of the Malay peninsular. particular
its
education
policy
was
to
have
In
far-reaching
implications on the production of Malay literature and culture. This
was
education
especially was
true
introduced
of
the
into
the
early
years
when
country.
In
secular order
to
appreciate the impact of British presence in general and their education
policy
in
particular,
it
is
necessary
to
have
an
understanding of the structure of Malay society prior to British colonialism. Traditional Malay society exhibited a rigid division between the
ruling elite
(bangsawan)
and
its subjects
(rakyat).
This
division was based on birth and was strengthened by belief and custom.
It was believed, for example, that rulers were vested
with divine majesty (daulat) and that any infringement (derhaka)
Modern Malay Literary Culture
3
on this daulat would incur a tulah (retribution). This served to consolidate the rulers' position as one which admitted no challenge. Custom also helped to perpetuate the stratification by laying down as desirable and proper such conduct as absolute obedience and respect for elders and chiefs. The subject class was therefore obliged to serve their superiors without question. In this highly stratified society, control of virtually all aspects of life lay in the hands of the ruling elite. This elite class in traditional Malay society was made up of two groups, the ascriptive and functional, which sometimes The former were royal kinsmen who automatically overlapped. belonged to the Malay upper-class by virtue of birth. The latter exercised administrative and political functions, and as such enjoyed the authority and power which attended their social role. Within this functional elite, the sultan constituted the supreme authority as the head of state, the largest territorial unit consisting of districts which, in turn, were composed of villages. As the head, he had rights to land under his jurisdiction and was empowered to collect revenue from his subjects, usually in the form of goods, tolls and taxes on trade and produce. He was assisted by a number of greater and lesser chiefs who were heads of districts. These chiefs in turn were assisted by several officials, the lowest being the penghulu (headman) who was in charge of a kampung (village), the smallest political unit. A penghulu served, by and large, as a mediator between the ruling and subject classes, and was responsible for maintaining order in his village, assisting revenue collection and organizing compulsory labour (kerah) for the ruling class. Within this system, mobility from the lower to the upper strata, while not altogether impossible, was rare. When British presence was first felt in the Malay states, in the mid-nineteenth century, social structure within those states had become
4
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
prescribed, and was resistant to change (Roff 1967; Kennedy 1962; Tilman 1964; Syed Husin Ali 1965, 1977). British penetration of Malaya began with the foundation of Penang in 1786.
In 1826, the British grouped Penang with Malacca
Singapore to
and
form
the
Straits
Sett 1ements.
In 187 4,
the
British signed the Pangkor Treaty with the Sultan of Perak, and this
saw the appointment of a British Resident
to advise the
Sultan on all matters of government except those which pertained to
Malay
religion
po 1 it i ca 1
and
stability
culture.
was
The
necessary
British
for
subsequent exp 1oitat ion of the country's wealth.
As
such,
they
saw
as
their
the
recognized
that
deve 1opment
and
natura 1 resources and principal
purpose
the
creation and rna i ntenance of law and order a 1 ong the lines Western-type importance,
governments. was
the
Alongside
principle
of
this
aim,
but
responsibility
of
of
less
for
the
"advancement" of the Malays, a policy which was to be achieved without destroying the traditional
fabric of Malay life.
This
dual purpose, introducing innovations where necessary on the one hand, and preserving traditional Malay life on the other, was to characterize British occupation of the Malay states, especially Perak, Negri Sembilan, Pahang and Selangor which came to be known as the Federated Malay States in 1896. In implementing their colonial policy, the British retained, and indeed, reinforced the demographic pattern preva 1ent in the country.
Prior to the coming of the British, the bulk of the
indigenous
population,
ethnically
Malay,
were
engaged
in
semi-subsistence agricultural production of wet rice in the rural areas.
Some were fishermen and petty traders, while a few lived
in the towns, especially around the royal courts, and worked as petty
bureaucrats
and
engaged in tin-mining.
artisans.
Initially,
some
Malays
were
However, when the Chinese entered this
Modern Malay Literary Culture
5
field, the Malay's traditional method of panning for surface tin soon rendered economically unviable beside the Chinese
was
Further
underground.
tin
mine
to
able
was
which
water-pump
improvements in methods of mining and cheap labour imported from greater
expansion
British
economic
a
industry,
the
of
process
to
accelerated
by
on
heavily
relied
which
infiltration
led
tin,
for
demand
world
greater
by
accompanied
China,
Chinese
By the middle of the nineteenth century tin-mining
middlemen.
was a large scale enterprise virtually controlled by the Chinese areas
mining
These
labourers.
Chinese
employing
and
developed into urban centres such as Taiping and
soon
Ipoh with an
overwhelmingly Chinese population. the
Towards
this
entering
from
The Malays,
into Malaya.
introduced
industry
rubber pre-war
soon
and
by
the
With
infiltration,
especially
accelerated
of
intensification
the
tin-mining
and
the
areas.
urban
Meanwhile,
the
Malays
British
industry became
rubber
full-scale capitalist enterprises with their commercial in
the
labourers
Tamil
India to w0rk the rubber estates,
expanded,
boom.
rubber
capitalist
and
rulers
their
British, and laws to this effect were passed. were thus imported from
was
however, were discouraged by
both
field
new
rubber
century
nineteenth
the
of
end
centres in their
remained
semi-subsistence economy which was confined mainly to the rural areas. The
growth
of
urban
centres
and
i nst itut ions for the
resulted in the development of educational children of the urban dwellers. occurred were
in
the Straits
established
by
At first, missionaries
purpose of disseminating their religion. in
the
Malay
states
the
and as had already
Settlements during the
Christian London
population
settled
a
1830s,
schools
the
primary
for
In setting up schools
Missionary
Society
sought
to
6
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
promote
Christianity
through
education.
Bryson,
for
example,
observed that "the missionaries were there to preach the Gospel and seek converts to Christianity as a first duty; education was merely
a
means
association
to
with
that
end"
(Bryson
Christianity
of
1970,
schools
p.
in
14).
The
general,
and
English-medium schools in particular, was not without its effect on the Muslim Malays. education
and
"modern"
It engendered hostility and opposition to
effectively
education
alienated
available
to
the
the
Malays
general
the
only
population.
from
So
strong was the opposition that even when mission schools offered secular education, Malay suspicion could not be allayed. Alongside
the
mission
schools,
the
British
colonial
government also started government-aided English schools. came about in the need for English-educated low-level and subordinate staff, private sector.
This
clerical
both in the government service and the
Such posts thus far had been filled by clerks
and other functionaries expatriated from the Indian Civil Service and from Sri Lanka (Ceylon).
With increased British involvement
in the Malay states, the need for such staff became more acute, and it was considered economical to train local these
subordinate
posts.
So
between
1883
people to fill
and
1885
a
government English schools were opened in Perak and Selangor.
few In
opening these schools, however, the British were careful to do so sparingly and, areas.
more
importantly,
to
confine them to the urban
It was clear that the British tended to tread carefully
in the sphere of education, warning
of
danger to
the be
demographic
Resident-General,
guarded
indiscriminately"
a caution
against
is
reflected
Frank an
pattern
already
referred
Swettenham:
attempt
(cited in Loh 1975, p. to,
in the stern
to teach
15). the
"The
one
English
In view of the concentration
of
schools in urban areas meant that they were not available to the bulk
of the
indigenous
population.
In
effect,
it was mainly
Modern Ma 1ay Literary Culture of
members
the
immigrant
communities
who
were
able to
7
avail
themselves of the modern education offered by these schools. The passing of the Britain, that
however,
the
state
education
for
signified was
its
colonial
Education
British
morally
people,
ground in Europe. the
Elementary and
a
Bill
adoption
legally
of
of 1870 in
the
entitled
principle which was
principle to
provide
also gaining
In line with these developments in Britain,
administrators
in
late
nineteenth
century Malaya
began to turn their attention to the question
of an expanded
state education system for the indigenous population. cantly
then,
for
the
colonial
meant education for the Ma 1ays.
administrators
state
Signifieducation
Furthermore, in conformity with
their policy of preservation and innovation, the British de vi sed an education policy which would retain intact the class division and the demographic pattern existing in the country. the
provision
of
two
quite
separate
and
This meant
distinct
education
systems, one for the elite and another for the masses. Where education for the masses was concerned, the British held
fast
to their
traditional
society
policy and
of its
preserving the
fabric
peasant
Introduction
base.
of Malay of
education, especially English education for the masses, would be seen as
a breach of this
anxious
to
avoid
what
policy.
had
come
Moreover, to
be
the British were
seen
as
"Macaulay's
'singularly tactless and blundering championship' of the English education" which had resulted in the anglicization of India and, as the British saw it, the problem of over-education which it entailed
(cited
in
Loh
1975,
p.
15).
Given
their
Indian
experience, the British shrewdly adopted a policy of vernacular education
for
the
Malay
peasantry.1
As
R.H.
unofficial member of the Federal Council remarked:
Kenion,
an
8
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir The great object of education is to train a man to make his living •••• You can teach Malays so that they do not lose their sk"ill work.
and craft in fishing and jungle
Teach them the dignity of manu a 1 1abour so that
they do not all become kranies (clerks) and I am sure you will not have the trouble which has arisen in India through over-education (cited in Roff 1967, p. 126). The adoption of this principle meant that Malay vernacular education mainly
remained,
for
education, Alongside
at best, at a rudimentary level.
boys,2
the
schools
provided
and
teaching
was
confined
these
subjects,
school
a
four-year
to
vegetable
Catering
the
primary
"three
plots were used to
provide elementary instruction in agriculture.
Pupils were also
taught habits of cleanliness, punctuality and obedience. from
its
poor i nte 11 ectua 1 content,
Rs".
Aside
Ma 1 ay vernacu 1ar education
was to suffer from other handicaps, not the 1east of which was government
neglect.
Housed
usually
in
makeshift
premises,
schools were badly equipped with instructional material, the only reading
material
available
being
Sejarah
Melayu
[The
Malay
Annals], Hikayat Hang Tuah [The story of Hang Tuah] and the daily Utusan
Melayu.
Wilkinson,
The
dearth
the Federal
of
reading
material
appalled
Inspector of Schools from 1903 to 1906,
who arranged for Ma 1 ay romances to be copied down.
This move
notwithstanding, shortage of reading material remained a critical problem.
To augment the situation, teachers were ill-trained and
were poorly paid. this
poor
However,
standard,
Frank
inspite of, or indeed, Swettenham
was
satisfied
because of with
it,
considering it "sufficient for the ordinary requirements of Malay boys,
who
wi 11
become
bullock-wagon
drivers,
padi
growers,
fishermen, etc." (cited in Chai 1964, p. 249). The British efforts to keep the Malay masses tied to the
Modern Malay Literary Culture fields were clearly successful. were
effectively
government,
the
cut
With their Malay education, they
off from employment opportunities
professions
and
the
commercial
which made knowledge of English compulsory. who
graduated
clerk.3
from
Malay
9
schools
in
in the
world,
all
of
Of the 2,900 boys
1903,
only
one
became
a
The efficacy of the education policy in minimizing the
aspirations
of
the
Malay
masses
was
to
occasion
Birch,
the
"It is very satisfactory to know
Resident of Perak, to comment:
that this system does not over-educate the boys ••• (who) almost all
followed
the
avocations
of
their
parents
or
relations,
chiefly in agricultural pursuits" (cited in Roff 1967, p. 25). If Malay vernacular education met with the approval of the British,
clearly
it
did
not
satisfy
the
bulk
of
the
Malay
population who began to realize its limited scope and barriers. The fact that it wrought little economic benefit was thrown into greater relief by the economic prosperity enjoyed by the other ethnic groups. English
In the light of this reality, Malay demand for
education
soon
voca 1 •
became
In
1913,
Ma 1ay
the
villagers in the Lenggong and Krian districts of Perak, asked for English
schools
to
be
established
in
their
Winstedt, then the District Officer of Matang, the
request.
In
1916,
the
residents
of
villages. Perak, Klang,
R.O.
rejected Selangor,
petitioned for an English class to be started in the Malay school in Klang.
This petition was approved, and an English class was
started in January, only to be closed in April of the same year. The reason for this sudden termination was given by David Bishop, the
then
Inspector
of
Schoo 1s
Se 1angor,
for
misunderstanding
as
to
as:
the
"There was
apparently
some
experiment,
it being regarded as an unauthorized innovation in
educational policy" (cited in Loh 1975, p. 53). petition
was
forwarded,
Despite
these
repeated
but
it
failures,
was
nature
the
In 1919, another
similarly
Malay
of
demand
turned for
down. English
10
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
education increased and the British found themselves faced with voices of protest which could not be ignored. The British were not unaware of the contradictions inherent in the Malay vernacular education. As early as the 1890s, W.H. Treacher, then the Resident of Selangor, pointed out the marginal prospect of government employment for graduates of Malay schools, a situation clearly inconsistent with a Malay state. Further, as Wilkinson made clear, Malay vernacular education had not produced a core of highly-educated Malays who could lead the mass of the population. Education such as deemed worthy for the Malay peasants clearly could not produce civil functionaries. Inspite of this, the British remained unbending in their policy, determined not to over-educate the Malay peasantry. However, faced with growing protests, the British conceded that Malay vernacular education needed improvement. At the same time, they were determined not to alter the prevailing policy of keeping the masses tied to agricultural pursuits. To see to the improvements Wi nstedt, who was then an Assistant Director of Education (Malay), was charged with the responsibility of making recommendations for Malay vernacular education. Sent to Java and the Philippines in 1916 to study the situations there, Winstedt's recommendations were to have far-reaching implications on Malay education and modern Malay culture as a whole. 11
11
,
Winstedt's ideas were put into force in 1917, and showed an unswerving fidelity to the British policy of preservation of Malay traditional life. As the Federal Council Proceedings of 1920 indicated: It is no real education that qualifies a pupil in reading, writing and arithmetic and leaves him with a distaste, or perhaps even a contempt, for the
Modern Malay Literary Culture honourable
pursuits
of
husbandry
and
handicraft.
11
It
will not only be a disaster to, but a violation of the whole spirit and traditions of, the Malay race if the result of our vernacular education is to lure the whole of the youth from the kampung to the town
(cited in
Roff 1967, p. 138). It was thus that Wi nstedt 's propos a 1 s were to i nst i tut i onalize the concept of "rural popu 1at ion of the co 1ony. colonial
government
bias" in the education of the Malay Centra 1 to the scheme adopted by the
was
a
teacher-t raining
co 11 ege
whose
graduates wou 1d return to the vi 11 ages to influence the genera 1 well-being of the Malay pesantry. This
college,
the
Sultan
named after Sultan Idri s Ibni
Idris
Training
College
(SITC),
Iskandar of Perak, was opened at
Tanjung Malim in 1922, following the closing down of the existing teachers' training colleges in Matang and Malacca.
It drew its
students from the peasantry, mainly sons of fishermen and peasant farmers. the
Selected by an examination, students came from all over
country,
and
by
students
a
remained
elementary
year.
the
The
1920s
SITC
curriculum
and
included
was
for
taking its
in
about
three-year
arithmetic,
course
drawing,
Malay
language, Malay literature, hygiene, geography and history. addition,
students
were
religious instruction. down,
handicraft,
became essential
given
two
hours
a
week
of
In conformity with the rural
basketry, features
gardening,
especially
of the curriculum
In
Muslim
bias
the
120
laid
latter,
(Awang Had Salleh
1980, pp. 89-104). Under 0. T. Dussek, the first pri nci pa 1 of the co 11 ege, who was to remain in the position for seventeen years, SITC was to take on a distinct character.
Dussek had a great love for the
12
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Malay language and culture and saw in SITC a potential educational Thus,
for an
centre far bigger than that envisaged by Winstedt.
while
biases,
he
widened considerably the scope of the college's activities.
In
on
1924,
adhering
his
to
the
initiative,
rural
the
and
Malay
transferred from Kuala Lumpur to SITC.
practical
Translation
Bureau
was
Both he and Za 'aba, the
principal translator, had envisaged the role of the bureau to be like that of the Netherlands idea was
mooted,
however,
refusing to be seen as several
handicaps,
forty-eight
textbooks
Indies'
Balai
Pustaka.
"imitating" the Dutch.
between in
When the
Winstedt turned it down, 1924-32
the
its Malay School
reportedly
Inspite of its bureau
Series.
produced In 1929 it
started the Malay Home Series which made available to the now literate peasantry classical popular Island
English and
literature
the
like.
Malay stories and translations of such
In
as
Robinson
addition,
the
Crusoe, staff
Treasure
produced
a
fortnightly newspaper which featured their own literary writings and those of the able students.
In concert with these efforts to
foster indigenous language and culture, Dussek insisted that all teaching
should
be
teaching of English:
in
Malay,
and
categorically
forbade
the
"The Malay schools must be run for those
Malays who will and must remain in the villages.
They must have
no connection and no point of contact with English; English and Vernacular make very poor bed-fellows" (Straits Times, 15 August 1935). With
this
emphasis
clearly marked out,
Dussek strove and
succeeded in instilling in his students a sense of responsibility towards their language, literature and culture.
A common theme
in his speeches to the college students was the need to preserve the dignity of one's religion, culture, language and literature in order to ensure the perpetuation of one's race. his tutelage
SITC emerged
as
a centre for
Thus, under
literary activity.
Modern Malay Literary Culture
13
Students and staff alike, almost all of whom were Malays except for
the
principal
and
literary and cultural literary
writings
his
assistant,
became
life of the college.
and
cultural
involved
performances were
activities which the college diligently fostered. of college 1 ife, Dussek wrote: cultural
and
in the
Debates, speeches, some of the Of this aspect
"every activity that is genuinely
genuinely Malay has flourished
in an astonishing
manner" (cited in Roff 1967, p. 143). Whilst SITC may symbolize a concrete effort to improve Malay vernacular education,
and Dussek's own
initiatives in widening
the scope of the college curricula were commendab 1 e, it must be borne in mind that the position of Malay education in terms of employment opportunities remained very much the same.
Students
with Ma 1ay education went back to the fie 1ds or were emp 1 oyed as 1abourers and gardeners, whilst employment in the government and the
professions
remained
completely
sealed
off
from
them.
Graduates of SITC went back to their villages to teach in rura 1 schools
from
whence
they
themselves
originated.
Winstedt's
"vision"
of a strong peasantry capable of providing continued
supply of staple food and adept at making waste-paper baskets and trays, handicrafts whose marketable value he himself doubted, was to remain a decisive factor in the colonial education policy for the Malay peasantry. If the education po 1 icy for the masses tied them to their land
and
the
different. followed
villages,
that
for
the
elite
was
decidedly
British penetration of the Malay states had always the
traditional co-operation
logic
elite. and
of
recognizing the
ruling position of the
Alliances concluded with them ensured their by
extension
that
of
the
masses.
This was
especially true in the context of a society in which the elite provided leadership for a subservient mass.
The prudence of such
14
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
a policy was perhaps reflected in a confidential letter from the High Commissioner to the Secretary of State, 1928:
"I think it
is all important to maintain the Malay rulers and leading chiefs in considerable affluence. mind essential
asset.
Politically they are a real and to my
But for them the Malays would become a
mob" (cited in Loh 1975, p. 89). It
was
decided
that
the
traditional
elite,
unlike
the
masses, should be trained in matters of government, in conformity with
the
provision useful
aim
stated
of
special
public
English
in
the
facilities
servants"
the
Education
language
(cited of
to
Report to
instruct
in
Roff
government,
Malays
1967, it
see to
p.
"the
to become 100).
followed
With
that
the
traditional elite was to be provided with English education. early as 1890, members of the various
royal
As
houses were given
access to English education, a move made possible by the fact that
most
royal
courts
were
in
the
urban
areas.
In
cases, the young scions were sent to Britain to study. the
pattern
century
that
when
characteristic necessary
to
persisted
education form. place
for To
it
until the
the
the
of
traditional
understand
in
end
this
context
the
elite
certain Such was
nineteenth took
development,
of demands
on it
facing
a is
the
British colonial administration at the time. In
line
with
their
manifest
aim
to
acquaint
the Malays
especially the elite with a modern form of government, British policy had provided for the inclusion of high-ranking Malays in positions of administrative this
ideal
might
responsibility.
have seemed in theory,
However attractive
it was,
in
practice,
difficult to carry out.
The Malay traditional elite was on the
whole
Western-type
unfamiliar
with
complexities of its administration.
government
and
all
the
Further, the rapid growth of
commercial centres called for specialized skill and knowledge in
Modern Malay Literary Culture
15
specialized areas, both of which the Malay elite lacked. In the face of this reality, the recruitment of European staff from the point of view of practical considerations was found to be necessary. This practice prevailed until 1896 when the Federated Ma 1ay States were formed. The new po 1it i ca 1 entity necessitated the establishment of a more unified Malayan Civil Service which, in turn, created greater demand for the services of the European staff. By the turn of the century, the Federated Malay States were to see the dominance of European staff in its The high cost of maintaining European staff administration. called for cutting down their number, which in turn necessitated the creation of a Malay administrative cadre. This move also came about in the 1i ght of protests from the Ma 1ay rulers, who saw their power seriously curtailed by British "indirect" rule, in contrast to the relative autonomy enjoyed by the Sultans in the Unfederated Malay States of Trengganu, Perlis, Kelantan, The matter was raised at the Rulers' Kedah and Johore.4 with the contentious issue of the together 1903, of Conference virtual absence of Malays in the Malayan Civil Service (MCS). As late as 1904, the MCS had only two Malays in its lower rank and five others in minor services ( Khasnor Johan 1969, pp. 29-30). This dismal figure reflected poorly on the so-called British commitment to instruct the Malays in matters of government. British commitments and the Sultans' grievances aside, the question of demographic composition was no less important in The influencing British policy towards the Malay elite. of influx the to led British the by adopted open-door policy immigrants particularly from China and India, and before lo~g the Malay states were to see a marked increase in the immigrant population. Regarded as aliens, British policy towards these immigrants was to allow them freedom of economic pursuit but to bar them from the political and administrative sphere, which was
16
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
manifestly to remain the preserve of the indigenous population, especially the elite. However, whilst this might be a stated policy, the British seriously considered the possibility of non-Malays encroaching upon governmental and political spheres of the country, a possibility not altogether remote given the growing strength of the non-Malays especially the Chinese. Faced with this possibility, Clementi, the then Govenor, urged for the restoration of more power to the traditional elite comparable to that enj eyed by the Rulers of the Unfederated Ma 1ay States. It was argued that in a country which was becoming multi-ethnic, and alongside the fact that the power of the traditional elite was more symbolic than real, greater Malay participation in the administration would serve as "buffer", and also help to perpetuate what Roff ca 11 s "the myth of cant i nued Ma 1ay sovereignty" (Roff 1967, p. 24). Political expediency, financial considerations and British commitments thus combined together to bring about a school geared towards producing a generation of Malay civil servants who could be tailored to British needs and objectives, in short, civil servants who would bear the British impress. This concern with the "British stamp" was to determine the form and character of the school. With the idea of the "right" background as ideal for public services gaining ground in Britain, the Malay College Kua 1a Kangsar (MCKK) ( Khasnor Johan 1969), as the schoo 1 1ater came to be known, was to be run along the lines of English public schoo 1s. Concomitant with this was its decidedly c1ass bias and the attendant notion of elitism. Opened on 2 January 1905, the school counted among its first boarders the son of the Sultan of Perak, a few re 1at i ves of the Sultan of Selangor, the brothers of the Yam Tuan of Negri Sembilan, the son of the late Raja Muda of Perak, and the son of
Modern Malay Literary Culture
17
the Raja Muda of Selangor. Others were either members of the various royal houses or sons of chiefs. Attempts to take in commoners were strongly opposed by the Sultans, and MCKK held In the main, MCKK's fast to the policy of exclusiveness. curriculum was in line with that of English day schools in the country, and showed a markedly "English" orientation. English history and English literature, for example, featured prominently in the syllabus. In MCKK, however, the English bias was especially stressed and acquisition of the English language with emphasis on fluency and "purity" of accent was made a top priority. Concomitant with this the college conducted elocution classes because it was deemed proper that a prestigious schoo 1 such as MCKK shou 1d cultivate a pub 1 i c schoo 1 accent among its students. MCKK was to prove successful in this endeavour and its graduates' English, both in terms of fluency and "purity" of accent, was considered among the best in the country. Whilst the English bias was decidedly the principle, Malay language and literature, optional subjects in the English day schools, were also taught in MCKK. Po 1it i ca 1 expediency pointed to the need for the boys to retain their "Malayness", while imbibing the ethics of British civil servants. As Khasnor Johan points out, "these boys in the school were in the future to be the link between the British and the Malay masses. Under the circumstances Malay studies could not be disregarded" (Khasnor Johan 1969, pp. 75-6). Further, in conformity with the specific socio-political role its graduates were to play, the college curriculum was tailored to lay emphasis on character-building, deportment and the inculcation of gentlemanly qualities, all of which were deemed crucial to the proper image of the British civil servant. To this end, the college was staffed by Europeans who were selected by the Co 1oni a 1 Office in London, and were themse 1ves the product of public schools. Placed in charge of the boys' welfare, these teachers were to serve as mode 1s for their charge to ernul ate.
18
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Along with these were the trappings of the public school such as the monitorial and prefect systems, prep, the High Table and the saying of "grace" and also its high priority on ext ra-curri cu l urn activities such as sports, the scouts and cadets.
In the light
of these measures, it was little wonder that MCKK soon acquired the name, "The Eton of the East".
With its strict observance of
the English bias, MCKK students were consciously and deliberately moulded into bureaucrats who were anglicized. In
the
light
of
the
political
role
for
which
it
was
designed, MCKK was not placed under the Education Department, but designated
a
"federal
institution",
supervision of the Resident-General
and
came
under
the
assisted by the Director of
Education working in close touch with the headmaster.
In 1901,
the government launched a scheme to facilitate the creation of a Malay administrative cadre called the Scheme for the Employment of Malays (Higher Subordinate Class) which was later changed to Malay Probationer Scheme
(Roff 1967,
p.
104).
It allowed for
those who had passed the Standard VI I ex ami nation to undergo a further three-year course of study at the college.
Selected from
among the promising students in the college, the "probationers", as
they
were
Assistants
called,
(later
were,
changed
on to
graduation, Malay
admitted as
Officers)
to
Malay
the
Malay
Administrative Service (MAS), a junior branch of the prestigious Malayan
Civil
Service.
In
the main,
appointments
within
MAS
remained non-administrative.5 Notwithstanding the non-administrative nature, positions in MAS must be understood within the context of Malay society as a whole. birth
MAS had great political and social implications. to
a
new
English-speaking,
leadership imbibed
group
with
that
Western
was ideas
It gave
Western-educated, and
values,
and
whose association with the British administration endowed it with
Modern Malay Literary Culture a considerable measure of social colonial
Malaya
in
which
the
prestige.
traditional
19
In the context of framework
of Malay
society was largely intact, the position of this group was thus a privileged
one
and
removed
from
the
masses.
Further,
MAS
constituted the culmination of an education policy symbolized in the MCKK,
the two becoming almost synonymous.
This, in turn,
means that MAS appointments could be made possible only by the British, who, in turn, reserved them for the traditional elite. This served to further consolidate the position of the aristocratic class, and left little room for mobility within the social structure.
More importantly,
it reinforced the class division
prevalent in Malay society. By the turn of the twentieth century, then, colonial Malaya had
felt
the
full
preservation
of
innovation.
British
force
of
traditional
British Malay
penetration
two-pronged
life
of
and
the
Malay
policy
of
introduction
of
states
brought
about an ordered form of government, introduced communication and transport,
and
fostered
creating commercial
the
growth
of
a
monetized
centres where none existed before.
economy, In the
process, it created a demographic structure which bore a distinct character, with the indigenous population overwhelmingly confined to the rural areas.
More importantly, it kept Malay society tied
to a semi-subsistence agricultural economy, effectively isolating it
from
framework
the
mainstream
of traditional
of
urbanization.
Malay society,
Within
the
social
British policy allied
itself with the elite, and though depriving the latter of much of its power, it retained virtually intact its structural form, and indeed, helped to reinforce it further.
Its education policy was
beset with cant radi ct ions, and wittingly or otherwise, it was to have far-reaching effects on other areas of Malay life, not the least of which was
its
language,
literature and culture.
In
understanding this aspect of British policy, the MCKK and the
20
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
SITC stood to epitomize its inherent fundamental dichotomy. draws
a
striking
difference
between
the
two
Roff
educational
institutions: At
Kuala
Kangsar,
traditional
there
were
the
sons
of
the
ruling class, and the wealthy, undergoing
training for entry into the English-speaking world of government
and
professions;
administration
on the other,
and
occasionally
the
at SITC, the sons of the
peasantry and the poor, undergoing training for return to
the
Malay-speaking
world
of
the
rural
village
school. With the political role assigned to it, MCKK was to retain its notion of elitism,
borne partly from the students'
impeccable
geneao logy and social status, and partly from the Western ethos which it proudly strove to maintain.
However, the utilitarian
role assigned to the peasant-based SITC was to be increasingly associated
with
Dussek's
Malay-oriented
policy.
The
class
division which British education policy served to reinforce was also to highlight a cultural component in that division. language,
literature
and
genuinely
•••
enshrined
Malay",
culture, in
"every
activity
Malay
that
vernacular education,
is thus
came to be seen as non-elite cultural forms.6
The Beginning of Modern Malay literature? The dichotomy in the colonial
education policy meant that the
elite
participation
were
distanced
from
production of Malay literature.
in
the
on-going
Literature came to be centred in
the Malay-educated, who were largely teachers and journalists.
A
Modern Malay Literary Culture
21
study of modern Ma 1ay 1 iterature has to take cognizance of this fact.
Modern Malay literature was the product of the non-elite
who were predominantly of rural
background and whose education
upheld the rural bias with its intention of strengthening the tie between the land and the village world.
This close link between
literature and the peasantry was to have a far-reaching effect on modern Malay literature as a whole. Prior
to
the
appearance
of
the
Penulis
Guru,
as
the
teacher-writers were known, and the Penulis Wartawan (journalistwriters), the Malay literary scene already bore the imprint of the efforts of a group called Penulis Agama (religion-writers). These were Middle-Eastern educated Ma 1 ays who, influenced by the Islamic reformism of Turkey and Egypt, took home with them a new understanding
of
an
insight
into
Islam.
Their
ideas
were
vigorously expressed and debated in the newspapers and magazines, foremost amongst which were Al-Imam (1906-09, terminal unclear)
and
later Al-Ikhwan
(1926-31)
and
Saudara
date is
(1928-41).
The old ulama or authorities on religion, who were closely allied to the traditional elite as advisors on matters of religion, did not accept the new ideas, and the disagreement culminated in the famous
Kaum Tua
-
Kaum Muda clash
(Roff
1967).
Syed Sheikh
Al-hadi, a prolific campaigner of the new understanding, carried his ideas
into the realm of fiction in the first Malay novel,
Hikayat Setia Asyik kepada Maksyuknya atau Syafik Afandi dengan Faridah Hanum [The story of a lover's faithfulness to his beloved or Syafik Afandi Finding fiction
and Faridah Hanum],8 which was well writing a lucrative enterprise,
he
received. produced a
series of romantic stories, mainly adaptations from Egyptian and Turkish
literature,
[Life's
fantasies],
under and
entitled, Cerita Rokambul
the
also
tit 1 e, a
series
Angan-Angan of
detective
Kehi dupan stories
[The story of Rokambul], all of which
were pub 1 i shed by his own Je 1 utong press.
While the presence of
22
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
the religion-writers was not inconsequential, they constituted a small
group
compared
to
the
Malay-educated
teachers
and
journalists who dominated the literary scene. The fact that Malay school
teachers assumed a significant
role in Malay 1 iterary hi story should be seen in terms of the environment
at
SITC.
As
stated
above,
Dussek's
initiatives
created a climate favourable to the growth of Malay literature, language and culture.
Further, the Malay Translation Bureau made
Western literary works available to the students, while novels published by the Netherlands Indies' Balai Pustaka were purchased for
the
college
teachers
alike,
personally
library.
From
enthusiastic
subscribed
to
the
mid-l920s,
for
literary
Indonesian
students
and
publications, such
periodicals
as
Sri
Pustaka and later Panji Pustaka, Suluh Rakyat Indonesia and the like.
Za'aba's enthusiasm for Pujangga Baru, expressed openly in
a letter to Armijin Pane in 1932, similarly underlined contact with and awareness of the Indonesian literary renaissance of this period (Foulcher 1974, p. 198).
These periodicals, together with
local magazines and newspapers, became essential reading material for
the
college
students. magazine,
literary
works
In
November
Cend ra
besides
1923,
Mat a, its
which
reports
the
students
accommodated on
college
started
a
students' activities.
Further, through the efforts of its graduates, the Majalah Guru came into being in 1924 and became a channel contributions
of
Wart a Malaya was aside
a
column
the
teacher-writers
published specifically
in
1930 for
(Ali
for the literary
Ahmad
(terminated
SITC
1975). 1941 ) ,
students.
students also wrote for Majlis (1931-41) and Saudara.
When it
These
set same
Indeed, it
was not unknown for SITC students and graduates to become special correspondents for the papers. Aside from the conducive environment for literary activity,
Modern Malay Literary Culture there
was
the
responsible. Malacca
more
important
Earlier
maintained
factor
teacher-training
students'
for
which
colleges
parochial
in
identities
23
SITC
was
Matang
and
by
housing
those from the same state in the same dormitory or block. deliberately did away with this state identification.
SITC
Students
from all over the country were intermingled and a broader sense of Malayness was inculcated. their
common
cultural
The students were made to recognize
tradition
strength lay in unification.
and
heritage,
and
that their
This consciousness of a wider Malay
world which transcended state loyalty, in turn, generated among students
and
teachers
situation as a "race".
alike
an
awareness
of
their
The presence of a colonial
common
power which
had successfully pushed aside their own traditi anal
elite, the
inflow of immigrants which was left unchecked, the rapid growth of
a
monetized
economy
accessible
to
the
immigrants
but
effectively cut off from their own people, the flourishing of urban centres which generated mores and values alien to theirs, their
own
"inferior"
education
with
its
potentially
weak
bargaining power-- these were some of the political, economic and social
realities which forced themselves upon the students.
Their consciousness was fired even more by the struggles of the Indonesians
against
Dutch
rule,
news
of
which
reached
students through magazines and other reading material to
them.
movement,
In
1930,
inspired
by
the
Indonesian
the
available
nationalist
Ibrahim Yaakub, together with thirty-five fell ow SITC
students, formed the Belia Malaya, an organization modelled on similar youth groups in Java and Sumatra, and subscribed to the Partai
Nasional
Indonesia's
newspaper,
Fikiran
Rakyat.
Belia
Malaya sought to engender similar political nationalism among the college
students.
Around
this
time,
too,
SITC
students
had
contacts with Ojamaluddin Tamin of the Partai Republik Indonesia (PARI), who visited Malaya from time to time. discussions
about
the
Malay
situation
became
In the college, frequent,
and
24
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
students started to write to the dai 1ies, not under their own names,
which
was
forbidden,
but
under
pseudonyms.
The
consciousness bred in SITC was to remain with them when they went back to their villages. Equally important was the field of journalism to which those with
literary
bent
and
aspirations were attracted.
focus on current issues, newspapers weekly)
highlighted
economic
and
news
political
which
changes
With
it.s
(some issued bi-weekly and
centred taking
around
place
in
the the
social, country.
Saudara, Warta Malaya and Majlis, and later Utusan Melayu (1939), were among the papers which zealously brought to the attention of their
readers the crucial
issues
affecting the Malays such as
their education, political rights, economic welfare especially of the rural
Malays and their overall
pathetic poverty.9
Majlis,
under Abdul Rahim Kajai, for example, challenged the British to honour their ob 1i gat ions to the Ma 1ays.
Further,
readers were
invited to express their opinions on a wide variety of subjects which concerned them, in columns set aside for readers 1 letters. Wart a Ahad, Wart a Jenaka and Utusan Zaman, for examp 1e, started the column "Celoteh", literally "chit-chat", which took up the questions of Malay poverty and backwardness, and urged the Malays to
improve
inclusion
themselves, of
such
both
columns
economically
opened the
and
socially.
journalistic
writings which were not strictly berita (news).
The
horizon
Readers
1
to
views
and opinions soon took the form of short stories, and before long Warta Jenaka, a popular weekly, had a section specifically for short stories. Indeed, the notion of writers as social critics was not new. Seventy years earlier, Abdullah Munshi had laid the foundation, as it were, of social criticism of the Malays which included the
e1 ite
and the masses.
The same concern for the Ma 1ay situation
Modern Malay Literary Culture
25
had already found loud and cogent expression in the magazines and newspapers which proliferated at that time. the same medi urn,
that is,
And it was through
the magazines and newspapers, that
Malay literary works reached their readers.
This close link with
journalism reinforced the orientation towards social
criticism.
Given this fact, combined with the challenges of the time, and the writers' own perception of their role, literature thus became a medium by which writers articulated their thoughts and perceptions of their surroundings.
It was with the conscious intent to
teach and guide the readers, to make clear to them the realities surrounding them -- the blatant syphoning of their wealth to an ali en country and ali en pockets which 1eft them poor and disadvantaged in their own country, the intrusion of ideas, values and ways of life completely alien, and in most cases, antithetical to their own, and the crying need to do something about the situation which threatened to engulf them. the
urgent
sense
to
transform
literature came into being.
society
In short, it was with that
modern
Malay
This same context was to determine
the conventions which governed the new literary expression.
Litera~
Conventions in Pre-War Writing
In studying the form of pre-war Malay literature, it is important to note that the writers' Malay education precluded them from any significant contact with Western literary tradition.
The efforts
of the Malay Translation Bureau, which saw to the translation of works such as Robinson Crusoe, Gulliver's Travels and the like, did
not
acquaint
readers
with
Western
literary
tradition.
Interest in these nove 1s went 1itt 1e beyond that of the story itself.
The
finer
points
of
Western
literary
conventions
remained quite inaccessible to the majority of the Malay readers.
26
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir However, while pre-war writers might not have had access to
the Western literary tradition, they had available to them a rich oral heritage. writers
It was this tradition of story-telling that Malay
brought
to
bear
upon their modern
literary material.
Analysing pre-war short stories, Hashim Awang finds that these early literary efforts bore structural characteristics similar to those of oral narratives. familiarity marginal
with
and
influence
suggests
that
He attributes this close affinity to
availability of
other
of oral
literary
narratives
and
traditions.
He
the thus
pre-war s hart stories were largely an evolution
from the old literary tradition, and that they formed a bridge to the
modern
(Hashim
Awang
1975).10
The
close
tie
with
oral
narratives indicates, on the one hand, the link with the rural areas
where
such
stories
demonstrates how writers
flourished.
On
the
other,
it
adapted literary conventions at their
disposal to suit the needs of a changing soci o-cul tu ra l en vi ronment.
In appreciating modern Malay literature of the period, a
point to be borne in mind is the underlying motivation which prompted literary writings in the first place. this
factor,
the
question
of
genres
was
In the light of
irrelevant
to
the
writers, a point borne out by the dis regard for length, a criterion often used to distinguish between short stories and novels. The short stories of the period words.
ranged between 160 to 48,000
Writers were concerned with the more important question
of the purpose for which their writings were employed.
In this
respect Za'aba's definition of a short story, which appeared in Majalah
Guru
in
January
1926,
perhaps
best
demonstrates
ground rules which governed literary writings of the time: Cerita iktibar
yang dan
boleh
jadi
pengajaran
sebagainya.
Bukan
dan
tauladan dongeng
cerita-cerita aj a i b yang t i ada terupa pad a aka l i ni (cited in A. Bakar Hamid, ed. 1975, p. 344).
dan atau zaman
the
Modern Malay Literary Culture Stories which can serve as and the like.
27
lessons, examples, models
Not fairy-tales or fantasies which are
unacceptable to the minds of the people in this age. [My translation.] Short stories and
similar writings thus had to serve the
specific purpose of providing examples and morals which readers could
emulate.
This
was
consonant
with
perception of their role as social critics.
the
writers'
own
In the light of this
over-riding concern with literature as a "medium" to transform society, modern Malay literature of this period was inevitably didactic and tendentious. Hashim Awang's di dact i ve devices period.
study gives a comprehensive survey of the
evident in the short stories of the pre-war
It suffices here to cite a few examples of writers' use
of these devices as a means towards a specific end.
A glaring
example of this didactive device was the use of buah, literally a "fruit". appeared
This was a summary of the moral
after the cone l us ion of the narrative proper, in the
manner of an appendix. less
effective,
was
like
similar
which,
of the story which
Perhaps less b1 at ant than buah, but no the
use
of
literary
black/white devices,
characterization facilitated
easy
i dent ifi cation with the values, messages or moral of the story. Writers found in this convention a desirable and effective way to influence their readers towards an awareness of their situation, in what they saw as a critical period in the hi story of Malay society. The writers' unambiguous moral position in their narratives gives an insight into their intellectual and perceptual bent in respect to the questions and issues raised in their writings.
In
formulating their perception, writers brought to bear upon their
28
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
material the values and mores closely associated with their rural education
and
eventually
settled
background. in
Even
the
the
urban
journalist-writers
centres
were,
in
who
the main,
similarly the product of the rural environment and an education system
which
emphasized
the
rural
bias.
These
writers
thus
remained largely on the periphery of modernization and alien to the
ethos
of
urbanization.
It
was
thus
from
the
rural
perspective that writers confronted the many questions which they raised in their writings. The Ma 1 ay writers'
concern,
by and 1a rge, centred on the
presence of a 1i ens in their midst, and the threat they posed to the
economic
religious
position
values.
of
While
the
Malays
Malay
and
their
cultural
and
writers were sensitive to the
presence of a colonial power, their writings, especially of the early
period,
government.
were not
vocal
on the question
of politics or
To a certain extent, this could be due to the fact
that Malay school
teachers were bound by a General
prohibited them from i nvo 1 vement
Order wich
in po 1it i cs and government .ll
Whilst there is no reference in the Order to 1 iter a ry writings (with political overtones), it could be argued that it could well have
served
as
a
deterrent
anti-colonial sentiment. it
a
policy
religious
or
not
to
the
expression
of
any
overt
Indeed, Majalah Guru, for example, made
accept
political
to or
issues.
publish Further,
writings the
which
fact
raised
that
Malay
sultans had British advisors could also contribute to writers' hesitation to express openly their anti-colonial views. this
is
not
to
nationalistic
suggest
that
sentiments,
for
Malay
literature
works
which
was
However, devoid
demonstrated
of
this
fervour were evident, such as Ishak Hj. Muhammad's Rumah Besar Tiang
Sebatang
[A
big
house
with
a
pillar]
(Warta
Ahad,
7
December 1941) which categorically called the British arrogant and treacherous
(Hashim Awang
1975,
p.
75).
There were also
Modern Malay Literary Culture
29
works which alluded to British deceit in stripping Malay leaders of
their
However,
power.
instances,
and
became
such
evident
sentiments
only
in
the
were
years
isolated
immediately
before World War II. While
the
British
presence
caused
resentment
among
some
writers, it was rna in ly the other non-Mal ays in the country whom they found objectionable, and whose presence they categorically rejected.
Rejection of the Chinese was closely tied up with the
larger issue of Malay poverty, an issue, as we have observed, popular among the Malay writers. economic
backwardness
often
Stories which highlighted Malay underlined
as
its
cause,
the
twin factors of Chinese economic aggression and Malay habits and pastimes which inhibited economic development.
On the one hand,
writers admonished the Malays for their laziness, their penchant for
extravagances
especially
in
wedding
feasts
and
their
partiality for getting into debt, and urged them to instil themselves,
in
a sense of diligence, frugality and the like as a
means of combating their economic plight.
On the other hand,
writers cautioned their readers to be wary of the devious and deceitful
Chinese and their limitless
greed for wealth.
They
perceived the Chinese as unscrupulous and bent on seducing the Malays
positive
economic
endeavours to opium-smoking, gambling and prostitution.
especially
the
young
men
away
from
Further,
the Chinese exploited Malay leaders' weaknesses by placing them in situations where they were susceptible to or were recipients of bribes.
Whilst such portrayals might show the Malay leaders
in a poor light,
the focus of the stories was on the Chinese
whose unscrupulousness included "buying" influence. the
Chinese,
Malay
writers
also
rejected
the
Apart from DKKs
(Darah
Keturunan Keling -- Indian Muslims) and the DKAs (Darah Keturunan Arab -- those of Arabic descent), generally referred to by the derogatory
terms
kacukan
(hybrid)
or
peranakan
(mixed
race).
30
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Stories which featured DKKs and the DKAs often centred on the crucial
question
of
takrif
Melayu
(what
constituted
a
Malay), and of writers' rejection of them as "not Malay".
true These
characters were similarly portrayed as unscrupulous opportunists who would
resort
to
any means
to
acquire wealth
quickly
and
easily, and thence to use it to sully the purity of the Malay "race"
(bangsa) by marrying into Malay families.
Together with
the Chinese, and to a certain extent, the British, the DKKs and the DKAs were bracketed as a group apart from the Malays, and presence
whose
was
both
undesirable
and
detrimental
to
the
from
the
general well-being of the Malays as a whole. Another
major
concern
which
similarly
stemmed
presence of non-Malays in the country, was the adverse effects on traditional
Malay
Westernization areas.
and
life
and
values
modernization,
from
as
an
encounter
symbolized
in
the
with urban
The writers' rural perspective gave rise to a myopic view
of the city which they perceived as a negation of both Ma 1 ay culture and religion. sordid
aspects
whatever
of
positive
Portrayal of the city thus centred on the
city-life,
and
writers
influence
the
city
tended
could
to
discount
offer.
Their
rejection of the city was either boldly stated or implied in the stereotypes
and
symbols
associated
with
it,
such
as
alcohol,
dance-hostesses, gamb 1 i ng, nightclubs, prostitutes and the 1 ike. That
such
symbols
came
readily
to
the
writers'
minds
is
understandab 1 e in the light of the occupation a 1 patterns of the Malays
and
non-Malays,
especially
the
Chinese,
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. items were which
were
"merchandise" in
great
among
the
the
late
Alcohol and such-like
for which the Malays demand
in
had no use but
Chinese.
Further,
non-Malays constituted the suppliers of these merchandise (Tham 1977). to
Writers
everyday
thus
Malay
rejected
life
and
them were
because proscribed
they by
were Islam.
alien As
Modern Malay Literary Culture
31
narrative symbols they were a powerful expression of rejection of the city. Concomitant with rejection of the city and the urban ethos was the writers' idealization of the village.
By and large, the
rural area was associated with moral excellence, good conduct and positive va 1ues such as honesty and diligence, and was seen as everything that
the
city was
not.
Common among writers were
stories of morally good village youths meeting their ruin in the city or of young girls ending up as prostitutes when they left the sanctuary of their vi 11 age homes.
Or, working in reverse,
writers also suggested that the moral
degenerates of the city
could find salvation in the village.
A classic example of this
kind of perception was Gelombang Hidup [The waves of life] (Bulan Melayu,
May
1933)
in
which
the
writer
described
how
the
protagonist was destroyed by alcohol, gambling and prostitution in the city.
The mora 1 of the story further asserted that the
village alone could save him and restore dignity to his life. the
sum,
value
system
which
underpinned
literary
In
works
emphasized, explicitly or otherwise, the moral superiority of the village to the city. Closely tied up with the question of values and mores was the position of Islam.
The moral framework of pre-war stories
asserted that Islam and its teachings were valid and should serve as a point of reference for a 11 which
portrayed
other
religions,
often
upheld
embrace
the
situations such
as
validity
in in of
manners of conduct.
which
Islam was
pitted against
inter-ethnic/religious Islam
by
marriages,
having the
non-Muslim
Islam before a marriage could be contracted.
affirmations superficial
of
Islam
religious
were
found
upbringing
or
in a
stories
Stories
which
lackadaisical
Further posited attitude
towards religion as the root cause of the downfall of the Malays
32
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
as a whole.
In approaching the position of Islam in literary
works, a point to be borne in mind is that the moral framework of the narratives asserted that Malay culture and religion were not differentiated, and that positive "cultural" values were seen as Thus, stories which upheld synonymous with "Islamic" values. what could be seen as Malay "cultural" values became, implicitly or otherwise, an affirmation of Islam and its values, and vice versa. Shaped by socio-political
circumstances brought into being
by late nineteenth and early twentieth century British colonial a both developed general in literature pre-war policy, characteristic literary form and by implication a concept of what it was to be a Malay. Divorced from the elite by socio-political forces, Malay literature came to be the expression of champions of the masses against "outsiders" and the "city" by writers who origin and not far
were themselves of rural masses. rural,
removed from the
Hence the image of "Malay identity" was crystallized as poor,
but
disadvantaged
moral centre in Islam.
nonetheless
virtuous,
with
its
Alongside this notion of Malay identity
was a literary form which, while superficially Western-derived, cultural and literary was actually much closer to rural traditions.
All
these
characteristics were
reinforced
by the
link with journalism.
Post-War literature: A study of modern
ASAS 50 Malay
literature of the immediate post-war
years inevitably points to the role of Singapore as the centre of literary activity. After the war, Singapore ranked as the most important port in the region, attracting trade and business from
Modern Malay Literary Culture
33
all over the world.
As a cosmopolitan city, it was a focus for foreign tourists, artists and scholars and held the promise of a
1 ively
cultural
1 ife.
Its
many 1 ibraries,
the University of Malaya {1949) and Nanyang University {1955) combined to make it an ideal centre for literary activity. However, Singapore's importance, especially in the context of the development of Malay literature of the period, lies not only in its strategic location as an international sea-port. It is also tied up with the larger and more important over a 11 c 1 i mate of the day. In Singapore, political, social and economic forces combined to create an environment which brought into being a style of literary activity which was to leave a distinct mark in the history of modern Malay 1iterature. The 1940s were significant in the Asian region as a period of intense struggle for independence from colonial rule, with Indonesia gaining its independence in 1945, India in 1947, and Burma in 1948. Under the influence especially of the political struggles in Indonesia, the 1930s saw the growth in Malaya of a number of political organizations in Pahang, Negri Sembilan and Perak. In May 1937, Ibrahim Yaakub and a few others including Ishak Hj. Mohammad founded the Kesatuan Melayu Muda (KMM -- Young Malays Association). Openly anti-British and radical in outlook, the organization advocated fighting for independence by aligning itself with Indonesia. During the Japanese occupation, progressive political movements were encouraged and Pembela Tanah Air (PETA -- Defenders of the Motherland) was formed. This was a paramilitary group supported by the Japanese. After the Japanese surrendered and British took over control of the country, the Partai Kebangsaan Melayu Sa-Malaya (PKM -- Malay Nationalist Party) was founded. However, following the stepping up of Chinese-dominated communist activities, with murders of several Europeans, the colonial government imposed a State of Emergency
34
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
throughout
Malaya
1948.
in
This
resulted
in
the
banning
of
political organizations suspected of being "left" or in sympathy with anti -government activities. and
both
its
subsidiaries,
Among those banned were PKMM
Angkatan
Wanita
Sedar
(AWAS
Organization of Aware Women) and Angkatan Pemuda Insaf (API-Organization of Awakened Youth).
Alongside political
agitation
against colonial rule, the period was a1so marked by an upsurge in Malay communalistic feelings in terms of their position as the This came to a head in 1946
indigenous people of the country.
when the British tried to introduce the Malayan Union, a proposal which, among other things, would have dispossessed the sultans of their
sovereignty
Moreover,
by
transferring
citizenship
was
to
irrespective of ethnic group. Union was so great that
it
be
to made
the
British
available
Crown. to
all
Malay opposition to the Malayan
it was
revoked and replaced with the
Federation of Malaya of 1948 which, among other things, retained the
sovereignty
of the sultans
and made citizenship available
only after fifteen years of residence.
The event was significant
in that it underlined the political strength of Malay solidarity in respect to their position and identity.
This climate of keen
political
importantly
consciousness
was
to
feature
in
the
development of the literature of the period. Following the imposition of the Emergency, many leaders and supporters
of
Singapore.
As
the a
banned colony
political outside
the
organizations Federation
fled
of
to
Malaya,
Singapore was not stringently affected by the Emergency law and was thus considered relatively "safe".
Aside from providing a
haven for nationalists under threat, Singapore was also important as a thriving city with ample employment opportunities.
After
the war, there was a steady stream of migration to Singapore of youths from rural areas in search of jobs.
These youths brought
with them their Malay education which they obtained in their
Modern Malay Literary Culture
35
villages and which equipped them for lowly jobs such as dockyard labourers,
drivers
and
special
constables.
These
newcomers
joined the mainstream of Malays in Singapore who represented, by and large, the lower strata of society.
Equally important to the
understanding of the literary development of the period was the fact that Singapore was also important as a centre for printing and publishing.
The rapid growth of its publishing houses such
as the Pustaka Melayu Raya Press,
Pustaka H.M. Ali, Qalam and
Harmy and the proliferation of magazines such as Mastika, Hiburan and Mutiara and especially the newspaper, Utusan Melayu, made it emerge
as
an
important centre for
sponsoring and di stri buti ng
literature. After
the
war,
particularly
between
1947-51,
Singapore
attracted from the Federation of Malaya a number of journalists and
aspiring
journalists
and
writers.
Alongside
its
active
journalistic world, the Kesatuan Guru-Guru Melayu Singapura (KGMS Singapore Malay Teachers Organization) was one of the most active organizations
in
Malaya.
It
was,
at
the
time,
various social, cultural and literary activities.
involved
in
There was also
the Sahabat Pena (Pen-Pals), a group which encouraged exchange of ideas through letter-writing.
There thus developed in Singapore
a group of people enthusiastic about 1 iterature and keen to see it
grow and develop.
initiative
of
journalists
and
On
Sahabat
Pena,
teachers,
Sasterawan 50 or ASAS 50. journalists
played
a
26 August
group
of
largely through the young
came together to found
men,
mostly
the Angkatan
As in the pre-war years, teachers and
crucial
literature of the period.
a
1950,
role
in
the
development
of the
A sample of the membership of ASAS 50
in 1954 testified to the fact: Teachers
27
Journalists
14
36 Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir Policemen Workers (farmers and shopkeepers) Students Clerks (+ 2 copy-writers) Hospital attendants Laboratory assistants Electricians Storekeepers Others (including an abattoir worker, a typesetter, an operator, a labourer, an actress and an advertisement worker) Source:
14 11 7
6 3 2 2
2
7
Syed Husin Ali (1959), p. 24.
Of these writers, the journalists were the most prolific. However, as in the pre-war years, modern Malay literature of the 1950s was the work of representatives of the Malay-educated masses. There was hardly any participation from the Malay elite. Members of the ASAS 50 were young people in their early twenties, energetic and full of ideas and ideals. Their main aim in forming the organization was to promote the growth of the Malay language as a means of achieving independence and to initiate changes which would bring about a more equitable society, as stressed in their Memoranda ASAS 50, 1956: Dari mula ia didirikan Augustus 1950 Angkatan Sasterawan '50 telah bergerak bersama-sama dengan (kerabat-kerabat kongres ini khususnya dan) seluruh masyarakat umumnya dengan sikap dan pendirian yang tegas bahawa bahasa dan kesusteraan adalah alat untuk perpaduan kebangsaan dan perjuangan kemerdekaan; bahawa bahasa da kesusteraan ada 1ah juga a 1at untuk memaj ukan
Modern Malay Literary Culture fikiran
rakyat
masyarakat,
sesuai
dengan
kemakmuran,
cita-cita
keamanan
dan
37
keadilan
perdamaian
hidup
(Memoranda Kumpulan ••• 1962; p. 39). From its inception -- August 1950, Angkatan Sasterawan '50 has moved together with (members of this Congress in
particular,
attitude
and
and)
society as
standpoint,
a whole,
namely
that
with a firm language
and
literature are a means towards creating nationalism and a tool in the fight for independence; that language and literature
are
a
means
towards
uplifting
people's
thoughts, in line with the ideals of social equality, prosperity, peace and harmony.
[My translation.]
Between 1950-56, ASAS 50 was led by Kamal udd in Mohammad or Keri s Mas and Asraf, with help from Usman Awang or Tongkat Warrant, the 1 atter as a committee member and later as its Secretary.
These
three men were to play a crucial role in ASAS 50, both in their capacity as organizers and leaders of the organization as well as writers in their own right. Much has been written on ASAS 50 and it suffices here to highlight a few salient points (Ismail Hussein 1959; Syed Husin Ali 1959; Noriyah Hussain 1975-76; Warisan ASAS 50, 1981).
ASAS
50 was a literary group governed by no political party and had no political affiliations.
Nevertheless, it was a product of an age
which was politically conscious and determined to shake off the colonial yoke.
Further, its members, and significantly those at
the
links
helm,
had
organizations of the
and
sympathy
period.
with
progressive
political
Keri s Mas, for ex amp 1e, was the
Information Officer of the banned PKMM, Temerloh branch.l2
Asraf
was an active member of the banned API, whi 1e Tongkat Warrant, though
not
a
member
of
any
political
organization,
was
38
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
sympathetic positions
to as
the
nationalist
journalists
movement.
with
Utusan
In
Melayu
addition, brought
their
them
in
contact with a number or political veterans, such as Dahari Ali and Sa ll eh Daud, each of whom had at one time or other been the Secretary of PKMM.
The implications of this were enormous.
political
aspirations
channel.
Whilst ASAS 50 members were aware that they were not a
political
group, they nevertheless realized they could act as a
pressure
group
in
terminated
the
by the Emergency found
The
politics
of
language
and
a new
literature.
Indeed, ASAS 50 laid down the promotion of the Malay language and literature as
one
of
its
main
aims.
ASAS
50
recognized
the
reality of British education policy which promoted the English language and made it the "passport" of the new emerging society. English
was
therefore
seen
as
growth of the Malay language. would
only
grow
colonialism.
in
a
responsible
for
retarding
the
ASAS 50 believed that the language
climate
free
Freedom from colonial
from
the
restrictions
of
rule was thus perceived as
integral to the literary struggle. While significant from the point of view of language growth, British presence was tied up also with the more important and broader issue of the socio-economic structure of Malay society. As pointed out above, British colonial policy retained the rigid division of Malay society into the ruling elite and the masses. It also produced a new phenomenon of the bureaucracy, a new group of Malay leaders, which served to reinforce the stratification. The bureaucracy served as a channel the
public.
Officer
(DO)
At
the
district
between the government and
level,
there
was
the
District
and the various heads of departments who were in
charge of civil, legal and educational matters, with the headman, whose function
in
pre-British days was to mediate between the
sultan and the masses, becoming the lowest member of the state machinery.
The members of the bureaucracy were a minority group
Modern Malay Literary Culture who
enjoyed
both
social
status
and
economic
well-being,
39 and
aligned with the British in the colonial government, they found themse 1 ves drawn into increasing prominence in the 1 i ght of the anti-colonial struggle of the period. privileged
group
was
the
vast
Alongside this relatively
majority
of
the
masses
whose
poverty was confirmed by the soci a 1 rea 1 i ty which surrounded the writers
in Singapore.
As
Ismail
Hussein
points out,
in
1947
Singapore had a population of 940,824 of which only 72,154 were Ma 1 ays, the majority of whom 1 i ved on the outer is 1ands or in congested areas in the city such as Geyl ang and Kampung Me 1 ayu. Further, they p1 ayed a peri phera 1 ro 1e in the soci a 1 structure of the
city,
with
the
majority
working
as
labourers,
dockyard
workers, drivers or junior clerks (Ismail Hussein 1976, p. 311). Indeed,
the
writers
themselves
were
part
of
this
class.
As
further confirmation of the economic backwardness of the Malay masses, newspapers of the day reiterated again and again the fact of Malay
poverty.
glaring social the writers
The
presence of a
colonial
~lite
the
inequality which it produced were to develop in
a form
of class
consciousness,
and encourage the
expression of protest not only against colonial the
power and
of
their
own
"race".
As
in
the
rule, but also pre-war
years,
1 iterature became a medium for expressing a critique of society. It sought to highlight how society malfunctioned, and did so by exposing what it saw as the ills which plagued it.
However, it
did not venture to suggest so 1 uti ons to remedy these ills. was
primarily
concerned
with
drawing
attention
to
It
social
injustices, in its attempts to elicit sympathy for the sufferings of the poor.
Asraf saw this critique as its ultimate task and
urged writers to reflect the truth about the masses in all their writings
(Asraf 1981, p. 43).
It is in this respect that the
1 iterature of this period is often he 1d up as the "1 iteratu re of the underdogs".
It
is for the same reason, too, that
it was
various 1y referred to as sastera teri kat (commit ted 1 iteratu re),
40
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
sastera
bertendens
(directed
literature),
sastera
propaganda
(propaganda literature) and sastera prates (protest literature). Indeed, the conditions for protest literature were all there, and significantly it was the protest not of outsiders or observers but of participants,
people who were actively involved in, and
were a product of, the social realities they described.
It was
in the light of the role they assigned to literature, and the consciousness which underpinned it, that ASAS 50 crystallized its attitudes
in
its
slogan,
Sastera untuk Masyarakat or "Art for
Society". The importance of the slogan in determining the character of the literature of the period cannot be underestimated.
It was
given much publicity and was enunciated, discussed and elaborated in the newspapers, on radio as well as at gatherings of literary enthusiasts.
Indeed, it was so crucial as the basis of the ASAS
50 struggle that a polemic occurred between Asraf and Hamzah, the latter, also an ASAS 50 member, favouring seni untuk seni or "art for art's sake". into personal
The polemic, some which at times degenerated
clashes, was extended to exchanges in newspapers
and magazines, thereby giving it more publicity.
It ended with
Hamzah pulling out of ASAS 50 to found the Persatuan Angkatan Persuratan Melayu Baru
in April
1954.
However, as a literary
group the latter was eclipsed by the more forceful ASAS 50.
This
served to confirm the ASAS 50 standpoint, and the slogan "Art for Society" was to
remain the hallmark of the
literature of the
1950s. ASAS 50 and its slogan were able to hold sway for several reasons, the most important of which was the close link between literature and journalism.
As in the pre-war years, most of the
writers
and
were
newspapers.
journalists More
importantly,
teachers the
who
newspapers
also and
wrote
for
magazines
Modern Malay Literary Culture
41
constituted the only medium by which literary works reached the readers.
This was especially crucial
in terms of the ASAS 50
era. It is a well-known fact that the most established newspaper of the period, and one which enjoyed the widest circulation, was Utusan Mel ayu and its off -shoot publications, Utusan Zaman and Mastika.
All three publications carried literary columns, and
Mastika, in particular, enjoyed "respectable and strict", that is, stalwarts of ASAS 50 were directly Keris Mas started working with Utusan
a reputation of being of a high standard. The linked with Utusan Melayu. Melayu in 1947, and by the
time ASAS 50 made its mark as a literary organization, Keris Mas' reputation and position at Utusan Mel ayu was we 11 entrenched. Indeed, in 1948, at a time when Mastika was showing signs of weakening, Keris Mas was given sole responsibility for its rejuvenation on whatever terms he envisaged best. He turned it into a magazine devoted solely to literary writings and essays. Asraf and Tongkat Warrant, together with another ASAS 50 member, Awam-il-Sarkam, similarly worked with Utusan Mel ayu and Utusan Zaman. And for a time Keris Mas, Asraf and Tongkat Warrant shared the editorship of Mastika and Utusan Zaman. With
ASAS
50
stalwarts
"based"
advantageously
in
Utusan
Melayu, there was a virtual monopoly of the medium by ASAS 50 members, and this had far-reaching effects. On the one hand, their positions with Utusan Melayu made it possible for them to ensure that their works were published. Keris Mas admitted to writing and publishing short stories and essays regularly in the weekly, Utusan Zaman, and the monthly, Mastika, under several pseudonyms including his famous "Keris Mas", "Kamal" and several others.
On
the
other,
it
placed the ASAS
50 members
in
a
position to publish or reject literary works sent to the media for publication. It is highly likely that only works which upheld ASAS 50 ideals were published.
Syed Husi n Ali observes
42
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
that
of
the
nine
writers
whose
works
appeared
regularly
in
Mastika, six of them were well-known ASAS 50 members, including Keris Mas, Tongkat Warrclnt, Asraf, Mas, Masuri S.N. and Hamzah (Syed Husin Ali
1959,
p.
25).
Indeed, the effect of ASAS 50
monopoly of the media on the literature of the period has been pointed out that the
repeatedly.
media which
Ismail
a few
Hussein,
key
figures
for example, observes controlled
gave them
unlimited opportunity to determine the 1 iterary development for the following two decades (Ismail Hussein 1981, p. 76).
In sum,
it could be said that ASAS 50 exploited its advantageous position within
Utusan
Melayu
to
generate
and
perpetuate a
literature
which conformed to its ideals and demands. Less important than the newspapers, but nonethe 1ess serving to enhance ASAS radio,
50
influence on
the
general
public,
was the
where ASAS 50 members were invited to talk on various
issues.
These
addition, reputation
talks
were
later
the
three
leaders
of
as
tokoh
(figures
published
the
of
group
in in
authority),
Mastika. time
with
gained Keris
In a Mas
referred to as the cerpenis (short story writer), Tongkat Warrant as the penyajak (poet) and Asraf as the kritik (literary critic). As
tokoh
they
were
often
invited
to
give
ta 1 ks
at
meetings and gatherings, or to offer kelas bimbingan classes in literary writing). models which were emulated.
1 iterary (guidance
Moreover, their works soon became All these factors meant that it was
the ASAS 50 and its principles which determined the nature of Malay literary production during the 1950s.
Conventions in Immediate Post-War literature Although overt didacticism of the pre-war years was no longer as evident,
writers
of the
1950s
continued to
be
guided
by the
Modern Malay Literary Culture motivation to inform their readers. evident
in
their
society
and
the
Indeed, this was especially
single-minded desire subsequent
efforts
43
to
expose
geared
the
towards
ills of
producing,
maintaining and perpetuating a literature tailored to the maxim of
"art for
society".
To this end, there was thus the same
concern with making their message clear.
The literature of the
1950s thus showed structural similarities with pre-war works in so far as they showed a heavy reliance on literary conventions which facilitated easy identification of and with the moral of the story. As
an
expression
of
the
consciousness
which
pervaded
literary production during this period, the writers' own social position and the overall condition of Malay society at the time, the literature of the 1950s took on a di st i net character.
This
interplay of forces generated forms of perceptions which held the Malay masses
as
victims of colonialism and feudalism.
literature of the
1950s
In the
as a whole, there thus took shape a
distinct perception of social inequality in terms of "them" and "us".
In the one camp were grouped the British and the Malay
elite, the privileged of society who constituted "them".
In the
other, were the masses be they in the city or the rural areas, all of whom were characterized by their common socio-economic relation to society as a whole. They were perceived essentially as the socially-deprived and disadvantaged, and writers expressed their sense of common identity and solidarity with them. With this division clearly mapped out, the literature of the period ethical
began
to make
issues which
clear
its thematic concerns.
largely dominated
Moral
pre-war writings
and still
appeared in post-wars works, but their importance was diminished. They were superseded by other issues which were largely social in nature.
Narrative preoccupations of the 1950s cent red, on the
44
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
one
hand,
on
the
hardship
survive in an environment prevalent was this
of the
poor and their efforts
host i 1e to their needs.
picture that
Ismail
to
Indeed, so
Hussein aptly calls it
metos yang menyayukan or "a touching myth" (Ismail Hussein 1974, p. 15).
On the other, were stories of "them" which centred on
the life styles of the rich and the upper-class. this,
the
aristocrats
with
and
British
and
the
Malay
elite,
especially the bureaucrats,
Concomitant
including
were perceived
the as
those with administrative responsibilities within the government machinery.
More importantly, they were seen as those furnished
with the authority to initiate changes, especially changes for the
betterment
of
the
masses.
On
the
rural
scene
were
the
headmen and religious leaders such as the lebai (mosque official} and the imam (leader of congregational prayer) who, like their urban
counterparts,
were
similarly
perceived
as
figures
of
authority with some measure of power over the peasants. Hand in hand with this categorization was a value perception that was dichotomous.
The poor and the oppressed were assigned
positive qualities and virtues, while the elite and the rich were denied any good at a 11.
A common trait was the port ray a l of the
poor as diligent, patient and steadfast in the face of hardship and with a high sense of religious piety.
On the other hand, the
British were seen as patronizing hypocrites
bent on flaunting
their supposed superiority while the Malay leaders were callous, uncaring of their own people and guilty of betraying their own "race".
The
Western-educated
bureaucrats
were
portrayed
as
excessively Westernized, if not completely sold to the "yellow culture".
They were usually presented as irreligious, steeped in
vice
and
Like
their
villages
obsessed urban
were
with
the pursuit
counterparts,
similarly
cast
the as
of sensual authority hypocrites
positions to further their own selfish ends.
gratification. figures
who
used
in
the
their
In particular, the
Modern Malay Literary Culture
45
religious leaders, usually old men, made use of their titles such (one who has performed the pilgrimage to Mecca), 1ebai
as haj i
and imam, and the attendant favourable association these evoked to persuade parents into giving their young daughters to them in marriage. Within that
it
the total
entailed,
perception of social
the
city
was
no
inequality and all
longer
singled
distinct enemy, as was the case in pre-war years. portrayal
in
an
unfavourable light
remained.
out
as
a
However, its
Symbols
such as
alcohol, women, nightclubs and the like, associated in pre-war writings with the city and used largely in a moral and ethical context
to
denote
moral
laxity,
persisted
retained the same va 1ue connotations. served to
in
the
1950s
and
The use of these symbo 1s
validate the negative percept·ion of the upper class
with whom such symbols were often associated, and also the city as
a
place
where
these
"merchandise"
could
be
found.
implication, the absence of these symbols in the rural
By
setting
served to cast the village environment in a morally favourable 1 i ght.
The 1 iterature of the 1950s was a product of an era marked by socio-political agitation.
Championing the masses, it bore a
distinct continuity with the pre-war years in its perception of its role as a means towards a specific end. literature
which
was
both
conscious
and
Indeed, it was a
proud
of this
role.
Within the framework of its objectives, it strove to expose what it saw as the prevailing social
maladies, and in so doing, it
moved towards a clearer definition of the "enemy". token,
it also made clear its biases.
the poor, class
both rura 1 and urban,
with
common,
literature, too,
identifiable
By the same
Within this literature,
were bracketed together as a allegiances.
Within
this
"Malayness" came specifically to be associated
46
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
with the
masses
as
against
the
elite.
Concomitant with this
division was a value perception which made clear its sympathies with the masses, as it did its rejection of the elite.
The Literature of Independence The 1960s signalled the beginning of a totally new phase in the history of the country.
Malaya
gained its independence on 31
August 1957, and as a result the 1960s were characterized by a complex interplay of the political, brought
into
being
post-independence
by
the
social
circumstances
Inevitably,
era.
and economic forces
during these years made themselves
the felt
of
an
complexity
immediate of
events
in certain significant
ways in the literary development of the period. The
1960s
were
generally
referred
to
as
zaman
mengisi
kemerdekaan or an era in which to give substance to (the meaning of)
independence.
In
line
with
this
aspiration,
the
administrative sector undertook to accelerate what was known as the process of Malayanization. committee
was
recommended
that
Malayan Civil 1957
and
set
up
for
to every
Prior to independence in 1955, a
look
into
this
five
officers
process, recruited
Service (MCS),13 four should be Malays.
1962,
the
number
of
British
officers
in
and into
it the
Between the
MCS
decreased from 220 to 26, while that of Malays increased from 128 to 219. 709.
By 1968, the number of these Malay officers had reached
The 1960s were thus to witness the emergence of these MCS
officers as a distinct Malay group. there also grew a
group which
came
Alongside the MCS officers, about as
a
result of the
adoption of parliamentary democracy, namely the parliamentarians and
councillors
(Wakil
Rakyat).14
Together
with
the
MCS
Modern Malay Literary Culture officers,
they
drew
attention
leadership as a whole. earlier years,
to
the
phenomenon
of
47
Malay
To be sure, this question was evident in
but it became more pertinent in the context of
independent Malaya where the leadership of the country was now solely in the hands of the indigenous population. society in particular, the Wakil especially
the
latter
ministries and the
with
their
various
Within Malay
Rakyat and the MCS officers, pervasive
statutory
presence
in
all
bodies, were seen as the
body with the authority and power to shape the fortunes of the Malays. Alongside
this
development
were
more
opportunities
for
English education for the Malays.
Through an expanded Special
Malay
were
Class
scheme,
Malay
pupils
admitted
into
English
schools after three or four years of Malay vernacular education. Placed in Special pupils
then
Malay Classes for two to three years, these
joined
the mainstream
English
education.
Besides
education, various economic policies were introduced to stimulate economic
growth,
eradicate
poverty,
provide
employment
opportunities and ensure economic equitability among the various ethnic
groups.
Such
policies
had
been
introduced
before
independence itself with the Draft Development Plan of 1950-55, but independence saw a more concerted effort towards this end. The
question
various
rural
of
rural
poverty
development
received
programmes
to
much
increase the
status of the rural population were launched. Plan
(1961-65),
rice-growing predominated.
for
sector
example, of
the
was rural
attention,
economic
The Second Malaya
especially economy
and
devoted
where
the
to
the
Malays
However, while the economic growth of the country
proved impressive, rural poverty remained a serious problem.
As
late as 1970, for example, of the 49.3 per cent of all households in Peninsula Malaysia which had incomes below the poverty line. eight-six
per
cent
were
rural,
and
of
these.
the
Malays
48
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
constituted 1 itt 1e
the
change
continued
in
Malay
majority. the
Independence
economic
poverty
impotence of Malay leadership. be
especially
1960s.
Malay
status
underlined
clearly of
what
the
was
had
wrought
peasantry,
perceived
and
and the
This was a factor which proved to
significant for the literary development poverty
as
its
relation
to the
of the
newly emerging
Malay administrative class came to be a pervasive issue in the literary production of the period. Within the 1 iterary world itself, the 1960s were to witness sever a 1 changes, at the same time as certain 1 i nes of continuity were rna i nta i ned.
Foremost amongst these changes was the coming
to an end of the ASAS 50 monopoly on the actual writing of Malay literature.
By
the
1960s
its
members
were
ceasing
to
be
productive, and ASAS 50 as a literary organization showed a rapid decline.
This process coincided with and was accelerated by the
demise of Singapore as the centre of Malay literary activity, and the
emergence
of
Kuala
Lumpur
as
the
new
centre,
a
change
associated largely with the move to Kuala Lumpur of institutions such as
the Department of Malay Studies,
(1959),
Dewan
Bahasa
dan
Pustaka
University of Malaya
(1957),
several
publishing
enterprises such as Utusan Melayu and the opening of a new office in
Kua 1 a Lumpur by Oxford University
Press.
By 1958 a 11
the
Malaya-born journalist-writers who worked with Utusan Melayu had moved
to
Kua 1a Lumpur.
In
1959,
the Maktab Pergu ruan
Bahasa
(Language Institute) was opened, and in 1961 Persatuan PenulisPenulis founded.
Nasional
(PENA -- Federation
of National
Writers)
was
This was followed by the formation of other literary
groups and organizations. The
move
contrast to
to
Kuala
the ASAS
Lumpur
had
several
implications.
In
50 era in which the 1 iterary wor 1d was
virtually confined to Singapore and to ASAS-50 members, the 1960s
Modern Malay Literary Culture witnessed an
opening
up
49
1iterary hori zan with greater
of the
participation by writers from all over the country.
At the same
time, writers of the 1960s were, by and large, better educated than
their
earlier
counterparts.
education,
while a few,
tertiary
education.
socio-economic Ismail
of
them
Together
with
similarly
showed a marked
survey
of
this,
literary writers
1959-69 points to their
relatively
p.
314).
While
English
Ismail's
survey
is
the
had
writers'
improvement.
in
Kuala
Lumpur
comfortable income
with only twenty per cent earning 1ow income 1974.£_,
had
such as Kassim Ahmad and Ajikik,
position
Muhammad's
between
Some
(Ismail
Muhammad
confined to
Kuala
Lumpur, the same may be said of writers outside the capital city. Indeed, subsequent years showed writers enjoying the same measure of economic security, and, in some cases, cons i derab 1 e comfort. At the same time, by virtue of their higher education they were, by
the
end
of
themse 1ves
of
the the
decade,
in
products
a
of
better
position
i nte 11 ectua 1
to
and
avail
1 i terary
traditions from international sources. While certain variations were taking place on the literary scene, however, members of the ASAS 50 continued to influence the direction of literary development during this period.
This was
due, in large measure, to its members' advantaged position within the
publishing
world.
Certain
key
figures
of
occupied positions of importance in the dailies,
the
ASAS
50
Utusan Melayu
and Berita Harian, and also in Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
After
the move to Kuala Lumpur, Asraf joined Oxford University Press as an
editor,
while Awam-il-Sarkam and Usman Awang joined Utusan
Melayu, the latter to take charge of Utusan Zaman and Mastika. Later he joined Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka and became the editor of its publication, Dewan Masyarakat. dan
Pustaka
important
to
as
editor
note
that
of as
its
Keris Mas joined Dewan Bahasa
journal,
publications
Dewan of
Bahasa.
Dewan
It
Bahasa
is dan
50
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Pustaka, the highest government agency associated with Malay language and literature, Dewan Bahasa and Dewan Masyarakat enjoyed a reputation for literary respectability, and works published in these two journals soon became a yardstick by which good literary products were measured. As editors whose main responsibility was to select writings to be included in the magazines, Keri s Mas and Usman Awang were thus able to exert a considerable influence on the literature of the period. Equally important was the reputation of these figures as figures of authority in matters of literature, a reputation enhanced by their association with Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka. Moreover, former ASAS 50 figures were prominent recipients of official penghargaan (tokens of recognition) which included trips, special appointments and decorations, overseas responsibilities, participation in seminars and conferences and the like. Both Keris Mas and Usman Awang, for example, were recipients of the maximum eleven different types of recognition. In 1983, Usman Awang was awarded an honorary Doctor of Philosophy by University of Malaya. As "authority" figures, their views and advice on matters of 1iterature were often solicited and respected. During this time, too, their works and also those of other ASAS 50 members were compiled and published by Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka and Oxford University Press, and were thus easily available in book form. No less important was the role of Abdul Samad Ismail.l5 Never a member of ASAS 50, Samad was nevertheless regarded as the "brains" behind the organization during its heyday and was also Keris Mas' and Usman Awang's "teacher" especially in the field of journalism. As the editor of the influential newspaper, Berita Harian, and with a reputation as one of the leading journalists in the country, Samad was in a position to determine Be rita
Modern Malay Literary Culture Hari an's po 1 icy in respect of 1iteratu re.
51
Between 1959-65, for
example, when Berita Harian held short story competitions, Keris Mas was selected as one of the judges.
Indeed, it was claimed
that Samad made the Berita Harian columns available to literary writings
which
upheld
the
ideals
of
ASAS
50
(Ismail
Muhammed
1974.£). Another factor which helped ASAS 50 to exert considerable influence on the 1 iterature of the day was the absence of any other
clear
focus
PENA,
which
was
of
literary development
founded
with
the
aim
of
during
the
period.
uniting
the
various
1 iterary groups that had mushroomed during the period, failed to effect this union.
This was largely due to the fact that its
activities were confined to Kuala Lumpur.
Writers and literary
groups outside Kua 1 a Lumpur thus remained very much on their own with
little
diffuse
or
no
rapport
with
literary environment,
PENA.
In
the continued
the
light
of
this
prominence of ASAS
50's key figures served as a clear focus for the Malay writers. Indeed, the continued influence of ASAS 50 on the literature of the
1960s was
a characteristic feature
of the period
and the
practice of emulating ASAS 50 works became a trend which claimed among its many fo 11 owers those who were significant writers in their own right such as Shahnon Ahmad, S. Othman Kelantan, Ajkik, Arena Wati
and several
others.
In sum, it could be said that
a 1 though the s 1 oganeeri ng of ASAS 50 was absent, its cont ro 1 over literary orientation was clearly evident. The 1 iterature of 1960s must be seen within the context of the
interplay
of
this
literary
orientation
and
the
socio-
po 1 it i ca 1 rea 1 ity which high 1 i ghted the failure of the new breed of leaders to bring about economic betterment to the poor Malays. Given
this
scenario,
social comment.
literature
became
a
conscious
area
for
Like the previous years, literature attempted to
52
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
expose the ills of society, drawing attention to them so that they could be remedied.
By the same token,
it demonstrated a
sustained concern for the plight of the Malay poor. Alongside important
this
in
development was
characterizing
the
another
literary
which
was
environment
equally of
the
1960s.
This was the change taking place in the Malay publishing
world.
The period saw a growing demand for cheap entertainment
fiction.
With
a
ready
market,
book
publishing
and
printing
became economically viable, and it was indeed no coincidence that in the ear 1y
1960s severa 1 book
stores
such
as
Pustaka Abbas
Bandong and Pustaka Melayu Baru extended their business scope to include
publishing.
Between
1960 and
1969,
no
less
than
200
nove 1s by seventy writers were pub 1 i shed, with 1967 showing a record high of sixty-two novels for that year alone.
This figure
was especially impressive when compared with the sixty-two novels by eleven writers produced between 1945-58.
Out of this tot a 1
output, ninety per cent were "light" novels produced for purposes of meeting the demand for popular entertainment (A. Bakar Hamid 1973, p. 352).
Central to such novels was the preoccupation with
sex, and they were various 1y referred to as nove 1 1 ucah (obscene novels), novel porno (pornographic novels) or novel picisan (dime nove 1 s).
"Pornography" was defined as:
gambaran
sejelas-jelasnya perlakuan
seks yang
berlaku
dan diungkap sejelas mungkin dalam cerita, semata-mata untuk tujuan
perangsang nafsu dan perniagaan
(Supardi
Muradi 1978-79, p. 170). The
explicit
portrayal
of
sexual
acts
in
the
story
which is couched in the clearest terms possible, solely with
the
aim
to
commercial gains.
arouse
desire
and
[My translation.]
for
purposes
of
Modern Malay Literary Culture
53
The immense commercial success of these novels in the 1960s made them an established feature of the writing and publishing world. In
the
years
undiminished. Amir
to
follow,
their
proliferation
remained
In fact, the monopoly publishers of these novels,
Enterprise
and
Penerbitan
Pena
Sendirian
Berhad,
soon
started a "Siri Kisah Cinta" (Love Story Series) to accommodate such
novels
exclusively.
It was
during this
period too that
Yahaya Samah made a name for himself as the writer of sex novels. According to Supardi, readership
from
by and
among
large,
factory
such novels claimed their
workers,
junior
clerks
and
office-boys.
Conventions in Post-Independence Literature Over the years, Malay literature developed a measure of stylistic sophistication with blatant didacticism fast disappearing by the time of the 1960s.
Stereotypes persisted, however, as did the
dual preoccupation with the plight of the poor and the conduct of the
leaders
of
the
country,
1 iterature of previous years.
which
largely
characterized
the
By and 1 arge, the 1 atter concern
tended to dominate the 1 iter a ry scene.
In giving expression to
this concern, however, the literature of the period was to show a slight variation in focus.
In line with the change of leadership
from the British to 1ocal bureaucrats on the political scene, the literature shifted its focus to this new breed of leaders.
It
presented them in their position as the sole administrators of the
country,
depiction
of
and
their
response
to
this
new administrative
this class,
Ma 1 ay 1eaders seen in the 1950s preva i 1 ed. MCS officers, who were va ri ou sly
new
role.
In
the
the perception of When portraying the
referred to as Pegawa i
Kanan
54
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
(Senior Officer), Pegawi Division Satu (Division One Officer) or Tuan DO (Mr DO or Mr Di strict Officer), writers tended to dwe 11 on their English or Western education which adversely gave rise to a new 1 ife-styl e of "vice and moral depravity". of
these young
betrayed their their
own
leaders
to them as
defenders
people and become strangers
society.
berkiblat ke Barat ~
pointed
Concomitant
with
Descriptions
and
this,
who
had
alienated from
phrases
such
as
(facing towards the West) and bukan Melayu
(no longer Malay), highly perjorative in connotation, became
common usage when these 1 eaders were described, both in and out of fiction. The Wak il Rakyat ( s) fared no better as targets for negative portrayals.
They were perceived as "irresponsible and
devious 1eaders" who put their own interests above those of the masses. making
They were seen as particularly glib, and excelling in promises
portrayed as
they
had
no
intention
of
keeping
having a propensity for illicit sex.
and
were
Within the
rura 1 setting writers were apt to identify two groups of vi 11 age 1eaders.
The first group were the headmen while the second were
religious leaders made up of the haji, the imam, the khatib ( the person who de 1 i vers the sermon) and the bil a 1 (muezzin). the
former were apt
assigned
the
to
latter
was
abuse
power,
their
Wh i 1 e
the stereotype generally
polygamous
inclinations.
This
negative perception of the leaders suggests, by implication, a continued
sympathy
with
the
undifferentiated
victims of their corrupt 1eaders, disadvantaged.
masses
remained neglected,
who,
as
poor and
This perception of the Malay poor was reminiscent
of the past years. As far as the so-ca 11 ed pornographic nove 1 s are concerned, Malay
critics
non-literature. of seriousness
on
the
whole
simply
dismissed
them
as
Ramli Isin, for example, suggests that its lack leaves
little or
no
lasting impression on the
readers (Ramli Isin n.d., p. 48), while Diskusi Sastera points to
Modern Malay Literary Culture
55
the absence of the aspect of humanity, an aspect it deems crucial in a literary work.
It further suggests that such sensational
issues were more suitable as news than as creative works Bakar Hamid, ed. 1975, p. 184).
(A.
Such dismissals notwithstanding,
these novels pro vi de an insight into the writers' perception of their environment and the material they dealt with.
Absence of
religious upbringing and the influence of what writers considered as the morally decadent West were often cited as some of the causes of the moral downfall of the Malays, especially the youth. Further, it is interesting to note that in "pornographic" novels the city almost always featured as the setting of the story, with writers
fully
availing
themselves
of the
vice and depravity associated with it.
stereotypes
of sin,
It is worth noting that
some of these perceptions are reminiscent of those which were prevalent in earlier Malay literature, especially of the pre-war years. In the literature of the 1960s
in general , there was an
attempt to narrow down the "enemy" to the Malay leaders. In doing so, the literature of the period highlighted a perception of
class
sympathy
in for
Westernization
Malay the
society.
masses.
among
the
By
implication,
Through leaders,
its it
it
demonstrated
depiction maintained
of excessive the
implicit
concept of genuine Malay identity as being "of the masses", the theme which was prevalent in the 1950s.
It is important to note
that these perceptions were the result of a conscious choice for, unlike their predecessors, the writers of the 1960s were, by and large, better educated and economically more prosperous. This orientation, together with the conception of the social role of literature, both of which had spanned the entire development of modern Malay inherited.
literature,
were
the
legacy
which
the
1970s
56
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Malay Literature in the 1970s A discussion of the context of Malay literary development in the 1970s inevitably begins with mention of the racial May 1969.
riots of 13
Among other things, the ethnic disturbances of this
time highlighted what was perceived as the basic problem of Malay poverty and the pervasive issue of economic i mba 1ance among the ethnic
groups.
Dissatisfied
with
position, Malays became more vocal
their
inferior
share in the wealth of their country.
In the face of mounting
pressure, the government introduced several outlined in the New Economic Policy (NEP). 1969,
the
rural
poverty,
planning, issue
question
was
to
that
economic strategies Implemented on 1 July
of eradicating poverty,
which
was
had
receive of
featured emphasis
eliminating
economic
in their demand for greater
especially that of
persistently yet
the
ethnic group and economic activity.
again.
close
in
economic
Alongside this
correlation
between
As such, the NEP strove to
make it possible for bumiputera(s) or the indigenous population and the Malays to own thirty per cent of the corporate sector by 1990.
To
bring about these objectives, the policy introduced
several
measures
rura 1
economy,
agriculture
and
geared towards reducing providing
generating a more
dependence economic
on
progressive
semi-subsistence
opportunities
for
participation in both the rural and the urban economy.
greater For the
Malays, the 1970s was to be a period of better opportunities and expanding prospects. saw
its
task
as
As underlined in the NEP, the government
that
of
maintaining
steady
economic growth,
developing the country and forging a nation in which the twin issues
of
activity
poverty could
and
begin
identification to
be
of
resolved.
race The
with era
of
economic "giving
substance to independence" of the 1960s was now to give way to what
was
common 1y
development).
known
as
zaman
pembangunan
(an
era
of
Modern Malay Literary Culture
57
While on the one hand, the period was marked by some measure of perceived economic success and also promises of even greater progress
in the economic sphere,
continuing problems showed a decline, towards
it was also a time in which
seemed to defy solution. especially in the rural
its eradication was
far
Although poverty
areas, the progress
from satisfactory.
Similarly,
other economic measures did not yield the desired results (Andaya and
Andaya
1982,
pp.
282-89).
Thus,
while
the
"era
of
development" generated a new kind of confidence, especially among the Malays, it also tempered it with a keen awareness of problems still awaiting solutions. Within
the
literary
world,
the
diffuseness
which
characterized the 1960s was to give way to changes in the 1970s, in line with the overall spirit of development.
In view of the
plethora of liter a ry groups scattered all over the country, and PENA 's failure to unite them, writers,
literary supporters and
enthusiasts deemed it expedient to establish a central serve as a rallying point. this
regard,
Penulis
PENA itself took the initiative in
and on 23 October 1970 GAPENA ( Gabungan Persatuan
Nasional
Malaysia
--
Federation
Writers' Association) was founded. principal
body to
aims
the
desire
to
of Malaysian
National
It underlined as one of its
bring
all
writers
and writers'
associations in the country under a single umbrella.
Based on
the principle of gabungan (federation), it professed to allow the respective member associations to have some say in the literary development of the country and retain their independence in their own internal affairs. been
led by
Ismail
{First Chairman).16 range
of
workshops
From its inception until today, GAPENA has Hussein,
literary
activities,
and
now
the
who has served as
its Ketua Satu
Since 1970, it has been the initiator of a including seminars,
familiar
which is held once in two years.
Hari
Sastera
conferences,
(Literature Day)
Also, in association with other
58
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
bodies and organizations such as ESSO, Yayasan Sabah and Bank Bumi put ra, it has organized several novel and short story writing competitions. Whilst one needs to exercise caution in assessing GAPENA's achievements especially in terms of the options it offers, the degree of literary consciousness it brings to Malaysian society and the literature it helps to promote, it cannot be denied that GAPENA has played a crucial role in Malay literary development since the 1970s. Under Ismail Hussein, GAPENA took on a distinct character, unequivocably declaring its basis to be concern with and commitment to the Malay masses. At a conference of ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) writers in 1977, Ismail Hussein elaborated this stand and made clear the ideological framework which underlined GAPENA's literary commitments. It is worthwhile to quote Ismail Hussein at length: Here I am talking about myself of course, because I was involved in GAPENA's movement since the very beginning. As a participant in the movement, I was conscious all the time where it was heading and it was a tactical move which I have supported openly. Acutely aware of the dominating and stifling power of the elite, I was concerned in protecting the non-elite, because they had been the backbone of our literary life for all this while and that the other group has hardly offered a convincing alternative as yet. Also the elitist group has hardly needed any protection, as they were strong enough to face any assault. But more than this I was trying to prove a point, that is' to provide an anti-thesis to the elitist literary development that was taking place in many metropolitan cities of was taking was not Southeast Asia. The stand
Modern Malay Literary Culture
59
essentially that of an anti-elite, it was the elitist mind or the elitist attitude that I was up against-the mind that tries to rna i nta in the status quo of the group,
indifferent to greater social
problems (Ismail
Hussein 1978, p. 154-55). In
pursuing
this
end,
Ismail
conceded
that
GAPENA's
leadership resorted to sloganeering for purposes of mass appeal. In his own words, "slogans for an agrarian literature, down with internationalism and cosmopolitanism, down with individualism and up
with
masses'
especially
in
its
creativity"
became
early days
of
GAPENA' s
vigorous
catch-phrases,
campaigning
(Ismail
Hussein 1978, p. 154). To be sure, Ismail's perception of elitist and non-elitist writers is open to question, and it is true that Ismail was far from c 1ear about the "alternative" which GAPENA offered or the 1 iteratu re concern
it
with
advocated. the
However,
masses,
GAPENA
in
1 i ne
worked
with
its
towards
stated greater
participation by the masses in the literary development of the country.
It saw its role as that of providing ordinary Malays
with opportunities to express their own situation, and to be able to do so in ways with which they were comfortable, without fear of feeling inferior or having to conform to the standard already "established" by well-known writers, especially those domiciled in Kuala Lumpur or other big cities.
To this end, it geared its
activities towards de-emphasising the city as the only legitimate cultural
centre,
and
"took
literature"
(bawa
sastera),
the
expression usually used, to the people in the various provincial towns. soon
Indeed, there was no mistaking GAPENA's orientation, and terms
literature)
such as
rakyat
(masses),
sastera agrari a
became identified with GAPENA.
(agrarian
This was projected
into special prominence at the Hari Sastera of 1976 which carried
60
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
telling theme, Penulisan Kreatif dari dan untuk Rakyat In his opening (Creative Writing from and for the Masses). speech on this occasion Ismail reiterated GAPENA's pro-masses stand, a theme which was to be heard repeatedly in Ismail's many speeches. Referring to GAPENA's first novel-writing competition,
the
for example, Ismail asserted that it was Sayembara Rakyat (Competition for the Masses), while the recipients of the Hadiah Budaya GAPENA which it initiated were termed Budayawan Rakyat (Cultural Figures of the Masses). Indeed, Ismail Hussein never tired of talking about the masses, of the Malay cultural tradition which was rooted in the intellectual peasantry and from which the elite was totally This subject was repeated so often that it was alienated. generally referred to as Ismail Hussein's "theme song". He also dedicated his book, Sastera dan Masya rakat, to "Shahnon, Lahuma, Jeha, Pak Senik, Awang Cik Teh dan kebangkitan masyarakat petani melayu umumnya" (Shahnon, Lahuma, Jeha, Pak Senik, Awang Cik Teh and the rising of the Malay peasantry as a whole) [Ismail Hussein, l974.Q_]. In sum, it may be said that Ismail and GAPENA consistently employed all the means at their disposal to generate a literary environment which ensured that literature was seen as In this sense belonging to the masses, of them and for them. then GAPENA's singular preoccupation with the masses may be seen as a continuation of the legacy of employing literature to serve society. GAPENA's role in the 1970s cannot be minimized. Both its ability to dominate the literary world of the period, and indeed, its continuing influence today are due to its role as a rallying point for the writers in the country. Claiming no less than twenty-one member associations from all over the country including Sa bah and Sa rawak, a feat never achieved before, it
Modern Ma 1ay Literary Culture
61
presented a massive front and assumed the position of spokesman not only for literature but also for the culture of the country. It
then
moves.
perpetuated Events
this
image
organized
by
by
means
GAPENA
of
often
various
tactical
i nvo 1 ved
cabinet
ministers and/or chief ministers of the various states, a move which would ensure massive coverage by the press and television. Being
literary
Sastera
and
activities
other
they
similar
also
found
magazines.
a
place
Further,
in
Dewan
GAPENA
often
worked in close association with the prestigious Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka to promote various literary activities. was
the
Conference
of
ASEAN
Writers
which
Of significance
helped to
enhance
GAPENA's image as the legitimate voice for Malaysian literature and culture beyond the borders of the country. is
the
person
of
Ismai 1 Hussein
No less important
himself whose
position
as
a
Professor of Malay Literature in the University of Malaya gives GAPENA a considerable measure of legitimacy. contacts
with
those
in
the
high
echelons
His own personal
of society,
in the
academic world in and outside the country, in the press and other media
helped
towards
extension, that of GAPENA.
consolidating
his
position
and
by
Further, his uninterrupted leadership
of GAPENA, des i rab 1e or otherwise, a 1 so gives credence both to his leadership and the organization, especially in the light of GAPENA's continued active involvement and dominating role in the literary development of the country.17 It literary
was
during
world
the
showed
time too,
of the
GAPENA's influence
ascendancy that the of
other
elements.
Responding to ca 11 s by writers for more government part i ci pat ion in the 1 iter a ry deve 1opment of the country, Tun Abdu 1 Razak, the then Prime Minister of Malaysia, set up the Hadiah Karya Sastera, popularly known as Hadiah Sastera (Literary Award) in 1971 under the chairmanship of Tan Sri Mohd. Ghaza 1 i Sha fie who was then a Minister with speci a 1 functions attached to the Prime Minister's
62
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Department and also Head of National Unity and General Unit.
Certainly,
literature
was
government
evident
participation
earlier,
in the promotion of
especially
commemorated ten years of independence.
Planning
when
the
country
However, Hadiah Sastera
was greeted by the literary world as a more concerted effort on the
part of the government towards
Under this
scheme,
a panel
literary production, plays
(in
1973,
and
short
of judges
reviewed
in
literature.
a whole year's
including short stories, novels, poems and
literary
essays
those worthy of the award. poems
involvement
were
included),
and
selected
These prize-winning works, especially
stories,
were then
campi led and published by
Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, the secretariat for Hadiah Sastera. Although Hadiah Sastera was terminated in 1976, -- it was revived in 1984 under the new name of Hadiah Sastera Malaysia -its presence during those years served to stimulate the literary activity of the period. validation
of
tremendous
incentive,
literary
Regarded as merit
and,
and
in
official
ability,
some
cases,
recognition
it
soon
a
coveted
and
became
a
prize.
Moreover, presentation of the award became a national event, and with
the
Prime
Minister
and
high-ranking
politicians
and
dignitaries present, it was given wide media coverage, including a direct telecast of the occasion.
The prestige and the exposure
it offered the winners were tremendous.
In this sense, Hadiah
Sastera had a dominating impact on the literary climate of the day. Hadiah Sastera 's brief appearance on the literary scene was not without literature catch-cry
influence on the direction and development of the of of
the
day.
development,
In
line Hadi ah
with
the
Sastera
government's became
own
inevitably
involved in the overall concern with development, and terms such as pembangunan (development) and sastera (literature) soon became
Modern Malay Literary Culture bracketed together.
Indeed, in its first official report, which
was made readily available in print, the panel clear
that,
63
aside
from
literary
merit,
of judges made
its
criterion
for
assessing literary works was the extent of their preoccupation with development of society (Dewan Sastera, May 1972, p. 10). In the light of this explicit statement, and the prestige of winning Hadiah Sastera, buttressed by the overall socio-political atmosphere
which
predisposed
writers
towards
this
partiality,
sastera pembangunan
(literature of development)
the literary scene.
Literary works which won Hadiah Sastera were
emulated, and a trend soon became evident.
began to flood
So tremendous was the
response in this direction that the following year the panel of judges
cautioned
interpretation, misinterpretation
against this excess,
and more important, the
or
it
of
indeed, the
what
term
saw
"development".
as It
writers' noted
that
writers were apt to think that "development" meant portraying the plight
of the
called
for
unfortunate
exposing
the
farmers
while
grievances
of
defence the
of the
fishermen
poor (Dewan
Sastera, Apri 1 1973, pp. 6-7). The "obsession", as the report termed it, with the plight of the poor must be viewed within the larger context of a literary scenario which he 1d the masses to be centra 1 to the concerns of literature, as laid down by GAPENA. Hadi ah
Sastera
Thus, while the concerns of
and GAPENA might not
neces sa ril y be
they did serve to reinforce each other. solicitous about the masses, complement
this
concern.
i dent i ca 1 ,
This was a period openly
and the Hadi ah Sastera seemed to
Although
subsequent
years
did
not
witness the same avalanche of "literature of development", the preoccupation
did
not
lose
ground
altogether.
It
served
as
a distinct strain which helped to shape the literature of the day.
64
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
Equally important in giving a distinct character to the literary scene of the period was another element related to a phenomenon generally known as the gerakan dakwah (dakwah movement) (Lyon 1979; Siddique 1980; Nagata 1980, 1984). This movement, which is also referred to as Kebangkitam Islam (Islamic resurgence), started in the early 1970s within the Malay community, and attracted a large following, especially among the Malay student population. The term dakwah is derived from the Arabic da'wa which means "to call" or "invite", that is, to Islam. In the dakwah movement in Malaysia, the term came to be associated, among other things, with close adherence to the teachings of the Quran, and more importantly, with stressing Islam as ad-deen or a complete way of life. This was in sharp contrast to earlier tendencies towards perceiving Islam as a concern with religious belief, as distinct from other aspects of life. The emergence of the dakwah movement thus brought into prominence the crucial role of Islam within the context of modern Malay society, especially as a source of answers and solutions to questions of economic welfare and societal well being. The perception of this approach to Islam as both pragmatic and relevant was largely responsible for its mass appeal, and adherents to the movement soon became involved in activities such as religious classes, training courses, seminars and the like. They also adopted new dress conventions by way of distinguishing themselves. The dakwah movement also manifested itself in the literary world. There became evident the same awareness of the need to "return" to Islam, to re-evaluate and reassess modern Malay literature and to furnish it with the dignity of Islam. This task was felt to be especially timely in view of the proliferation of works deemed unsuitable and even inconsistent with Islam. Concomitant with this, the literary scene was soon
Modern Malay Literary Culture
65
enlivened with views, opinions and suggestions about how to tack 1e the question of Is 1am and literature. These debates led to ca l1 s to writers to produce what was generally referred to as sastera berunsur Islam or literature incorporating elements of Islam. To be sure, the position of Islam as an element of Malay literature was evident earlier, especially in the pre-war years. Its emergence in the 1970s, however, was enunciated in terms which were much more assertive. In 1975, for example, the Islamic Religious Affairs Section of the Prime Minister's Department {Sahagian Hal Ehwal Agama Islam, Jabatan Perdana Menteri) started a competition for short stories which incorporated Islamic values, while GAPIM (Gabungan Penulis Islam Malaysia -- Federation of Malaysian Islamic Writers) was founded on 30 May 1976. Efforts to promote sastera berunsur Islam were similarly undertaken by various magazines such as Dian, Qi b1at, Al-Islah and Dakwah, the latter making it a policy to publish only works recognized to be Islamic-oriented. This growing interest in Islam also influenced the on-going debate on Islam and literature. In the July 1977 issue of Dewan Bahasa, for example, there appeared an article by Shahnon Ahmad entitled "Sastera Islam",l8 Following this article, Dewan Sastera's August 1977 issue compiled several critics' opinions on the subject in its special feature, "Forum Sastera Islam" (Forum on Islamic Literature). The following year, GAPENA's Hari Sastera carried the theme, Islam Sebagai Sumber Sastera (Islam as a Source of Literature). Indeed, the literary scene at the end of the decade and the beginning of the 1980s was inundated with essays and writings on the subject, all of which served to chart a definite progression in the debate. The notion of sastera berunsur Islam of the early years crystallized in the concept of Sastera Is 1am, a process concretized in the book Kesusasteraan dan Etika Islam [Islamic ethics and literature] by Shahnon Ahmad
66
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
{1981) who was regarded as the pioneer of Sastera Islam.
This
book was a compilation of essays by the author, most of which had already
appeared
"Sastera
Islam"
they
in
Sastera
magazines
earlier referred to.
constituted
Sastera Islam.
literary
a
concrete
such
as
Published
attempt
to
the in
formulate
article
book form, a theory of
According to Shahnon, Sastera Islam is: di ci pta
kerana
A11 ah
untuk
manus i a.
Dua
ungkapan "kerana Allah" dan "untuk manusia" cukup erat kerana bi 1a bersastera kerana A11 ah dengan sendi ri nya kita
yakin
tanpa
berbelah
bagi
bahwa
setiap
yang
diperintah oleh Allah (melalui al-Quran dan al-Sunnah) adalah
untuk
manusia. sebagai
kesejahteraan
dan
kebahagian
hidup
Kerana itu sastera Islam dapat kita simpulkan sastera
kerana
Allah
berhikmah
untuk manusia
sejagat {Shahnon Ahmad 1981, p. 3). Literature mankind.
produced
in
the
name
of
Allah
and
for
The two expressions, "in the name of Allah"
and "for mankind", are closely interrelated, for when we produce literature in the name of Allah, we believe automatically without any doubt, that everything which Allah
commands
Traditions)
is
human beings.
of for
us the
(through
the
well-being
Quran
and
and
happiness
As such, we can cone 1 ude that
the of
Is 1 ami c
literature is literature in the name of Allah and for the good of all mankind.
[My translation.]
On this basis, Shahnon stresses that Sastera Is 1 am is an i badah (Shahnon Ahmad 1981~, p. 3), a form of worship, and it is thus incumbent upon writers to dedicate their art to truth as set down by Allah, and to guide their understanding
of
this
readers towards an awareness and
truth,
a
higher
mora 1 ity
and
the
Modern Ma 1ay Literary Culture achievement of Allah's grace.
67
The book was to occasion further
discussion on the subject of Sastera Islam, the most significant of which was the po 1emi c between Shahnon Ahmad and Kass i m Ahmad (Dewan Sastera, 1982, 1983 and 1984).
Whi 1 e the 1 atter accepts
some of the author's precepts, he nevertheless rejects Shahnon 's definition of Sastera Islam as too narrow,
and claims that in
many cases it amounts to vague generalities. Whilst literature on Sastera Islam was extensive, discussion on its application and expression in concrete literary terms was scarce.
However,
discerned.
a few key ideas about the subject could be
Concomitant
with
its
preoccupation
with
guiding
readers towards the path of God, Sastera Islam lays down that moral and
clarity is a crucial consideration. devices
employed
highlighting moral.
should
Narrative strategies
therefore
be
geared
towards
In short, within the tradition of Sastera
Islam morals are regarded as superior to aesthetics. The role of the dakwah movement or Islam in general in the literature
of
the
1970s
and
1980s
cannot
be
minimized.
In
conjunction with other formative forces which prevailed on the 1 iter a ry scene, it he 1ped to give the 1 iterature of the period its characteristic features. dakwah,
of
striving
It
towards
the
imbued it with the spirit of "return"
to
Islam
so
as
to
achieve God's grace in this world and the hereafter.
The 1970s: In
the
Litera~
literature
Conventions of
the
1970s,
there
emerged
in
general
a
further significant shift in focus from that of previous years. The preoccupation with Malay leaders and their pretensions which
68
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
dominated the literature of the 1960s, was no longer evident as a major theme. However, the perception of the upper class and figures of authority suggested in earlier literature persisted, although in less obvious terms.
Novels such as Perjudian [The
gamble] (1973), Izin dalam Paksa [Consent under duress] (1973), Lambak [Lambak] (1974), Krisis (Crisis) (1976), Noni [Noni] (1976), Belum Masanya [Before its time] (1977), Tiba Masanya [The time has come] (1977), Kemelut [Crisis] (1977) and Seluang Menodak Baung [A carp impaling a fish] (1978) are among some of the literary works which perpetuated the perception of the Western-educated officers, the DOs, the Wakil Rakyat(s) and government officials as essentially corrupt and hypocritical. The literary preoccupation of the 1970s, especially in the first half of the decade, revolved around the fishermen, farmers and the landless poor who faced the task of opening up new land to start a new life. A sympathy for their struggles, dedication arid commitmenti found expression in literary works. In his survey of the novels of the 1970s, Safian Hussain suggests that besides love stories literary works of the period may be roughly divided into two preoccupations, namely, life of the urban dwellers and the villagers. He further adds that on the one hand writers tend to dwell on the ills of urban society by highlighting the hypocrisy and moral decadence which plague it. On the other, their focus on village concerns tend to centre on peasants' sufferings and difficulties, along with their determination to meet the challenges of life (Safian Hussain 1981, p. 42). Alongside the preoccupation with the struggles of the rural poor, the period was also to show an interest in the literary conventions associated with the "absurd".
The early 1970s saw
liter a ry attempts by Malaysian writers along the lines set down by their Indonesian counterparts such as Iwan Simatupang, Putu Wi j aya and Ari fin C. Noer whose works were to a certain extent
Modern Malay Literary Culture familiar on the Malaysian literary scene.
69
Within the Malaysian
context, the "absurd" was defined in terms of certain stylistic characteristics rather than as adoption or even an adaptation of the approaches and ideas normally associated with the European dramatic movement of the same name.
In short, the influence of
the "absurd" was confined to experimentation with techniques and styles and that the Ma 1ays ian 1 i terature termed "absurd" rejects va 1 ues with
such as existent i a 1 ism and nihilism generally associ a ted absurdist
philosophy.
Although
its
appearance
on
the
1 iterary scene was brief and was confined 1 argely to drama, the "absurd" did help to colour the period with its characteristic emphasis
on
techniques
and
brought
to
the
fore
several
works
which demonstrated the influence of the absurdist convention such as Ali
Majod's collection of short stories, Dalam Diri
itself],
Dinsman's
plays,
Prates
[Protest],
Ana
[Within
[Ana],
Bukan
Bunuh Diri [Not a suicide] and Johan Jaafar's Angin Kering [Dry wind]. The period which saw the emergence and growth of the dakwah movement saw writers' attempts to explore the non-material aspect of
life
with
phenomena.
stories
However,
of
mystical
while
this
with those that deal with social works
recognized
concern
of
individual
as
Sastera
Sastera Islam
experiences
thematic
and
such-like
preoccupation,
along
issues are evident in literary
Islam,
tends
by
to
morality and salvation.
and
centre
large the on
the
literary
issues
of
Narratives highlight various
manifestations of moral degeneration such as gambling, womanizing and drinking as manifest signs of the divergence from the path of Allah.
Often
associated
with
the
"city"
and
the
"elite"
in
modern Malay literature in general, these stereotypes are again employed
to
symbolize
rejection.
In
certain
instances,
their
connotative values vis-a-vis the rural-urban dichotomy and class perceptions are retained.
70
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
The 1970s were characterized by a literary climate which was both active and varied. It encouraged greater participation in literary activity by individuals and organized groups, government and non-government bodies. It fostered an interest in stylistic conventions and techniques and opened up new areas of interest and enquiry. It also revived some of the old preoccupations. On the whole, it was a vibrant period with an undercurrent of new prospects and possibilities. At the same time, it also saw to the perpetuation of some of the characteristics which had persisted since the pre-war period and which had helped to shape Malay literature as a whole.
Conclusion A crucial fact to emerge from a survey of modern t~al ay 1iterature is the close link between literature and the social and political forces which surround it. From pre-war years until today, Malay writers, always sensitive to the shifts in mood in their environment, have absorbed and responded to the influences around them, and have registered in their works the imprint of these forces. Equally important in characterizing modern Malay 1iterature is the tendency among writers to see 1iterature as having a social purpose. Literature plays the role of exposing social ills and problems, articulating certain stances, reflecting what is perceived as the hopes and aspirations of the people or of seeking to guide society towards the path of Allah. This orientation is given some measure of sanction by literary bodies, the government and religious movement and proponents, all of which made use of literature, albeit for different purposes. While the
literary
culture
is
rich
with variations and
Modern Malay Literary Culture
7l
modifications to suit changing times, one nevertheless observes particular perceptions which continually inform literary works. A definition perception
of
of
identifying
social
Malay
their
a
from
expression
these
of
that
prevail
the
the
urban
perceptions,
in
they
writers'
reinforce
respective
rural
the
of
to
view which with
values
image
differentiated to
appears
society,
different
Similarly,
class
world
writers
classes.
is
centres.
clearly In
adopt
by
giving
an
Islamic
perspective as the only valid point of reference in their value systems. An
interesting
point
to
note
is
that
these
perceptions
persist despite glaring contrasts in the writers' circumstances. For example, while in many cases the link between contemporary writers
and
the
rural
world
is
not
altogether
village no l anger serves as the only conceptual today's
writers,
withstanding
as
this
it
did
their
difference,
the
earlier
implicit
or
less
obvious
pervasive
continuity
is
superior
socio-economic
than
in
evident. positions
the
framework for Not
dichotomy
which
Its presence may be
pre-war
Similarly, and
the
counterparts.
rural-urban
dominated pre-war literature does persist.
severed,
period,
but
a
inspite of their
better
qualifications,
writers nevertheless tend to identify with the masses, a class which feature
some
which
literature masses.
of is In
them
do
provides
not a
themselves continuing
the
consistent
the
light
of
belong thread
expression
of
contemporary
to. in
Indeed,
modern
concern writers'
a
Malay
for
the
changed
circumstances, it would appear that the perpetuation in present day works of those perceptions which informed earlier literature is a conscious act of choice.
These are perceptions which are
inherited, modified where necessary and perpetuated, to become part of modern Malay literary culture.
72
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir
The British did not support Chinese and Tamil
vernacular education as they
regarded these two ethnic groups as non-indigenous to the country, this policy of non-support was
later changed,
However,
Chinese vernacular education
thus far was handled by the Chinese themselves, with little support from or supervision by the colonial administrators, However, after the 1911 Revolution
In China, Chinese vernacular schools, which were largely staffed
by teachers trained in China and managed by the Board of Education in China, were
looked
upon
activities, States
In
as
dangerous
1920,
entitled
the
the
breeding grounds
government
Registration
passed of
ostensibly
applicable to all
schools,
government
to
on
keep
an
eye
the
say
in
their
running,
With
for law
Schools
undesirable
pol itlcal
in the Federated Malay
Enactment
which,
though
was designed to enable the colonial Chinese
government aid to these schoo Is made some
a
vernacular
schools,
Later,
it poss I b I e for the BrItish to have
regard
to
Tamil
vernacular
education,
government policy was one of non-support, and Tami I schools were lett to the Hindu missions and plantation managers and proprietors, However, In the face of growing Tami I immigrants, schools In 1906, See Loh (1975), 2
the colonial
government
introduced Tamil
Ma I ay parents were reI uctant to send their daughters to schoo I tor various reasons, not the girls to write
least of which was the tear that
love
letters,
As such,
I iteracy would encourage
the first tully-funded state school
tor g IrIs was not opened unt i I sever a I years after the t I rst boys See Ali
Ahmad
(1975), p, 33,
1
schoo I,
tor Malay parents' attitude towards education
tor girls, 3
Malay vernacular education provided no marketable skills, a tact aggravated by an educatIon system whIch terminated Ma I ay education at the e I ementary level, It was not unti I after World War II that Malay secondary education was
introduced,
That
being
the
case,
the
educated youth was to become a Malay school poorly,
Caught In this vicious circle,
pre-war
rubber
boom,
tor
instance,
best
opportunity
for
a
Malay
teacher, a position which paid
It was
both Malay
little wonder that during the school
teachers
and
pupils
found It more rewarding to tap rubber than to stay in schools, 4
By
1914,
however,
all
these
states
came
under
the
British
protectorate
system, 5
Appointments at MAS Included posts in the Education offices, the Secretaries or the districts, and ental led routine clerical work, Further up the scale where appointments Included those of Settlement Officers, Forest Rangers and the
like, the nature of the work differed little,
On the whole, conditions
at MAS were not satisfactory tor its officers, The salary was small and promotion was contingent upon the avai labi I ity of a vacancy, which in turn depended
on
the
responsibility. unchanged,
wi I llngness After seven
various
of
the
years,
Improvements
Malayan
Civi I
during which
were
introduced,
Service
to
delegate
time the scheme remained such
as
the
policy
of
Modern Malay Literary Culture
73
sending Malay officers abroad to read law at the Inns of Court, and the creation of the Special Class which signalled entry into the Malay Civi I Service,
albeit at
A I though
there were
its very
lowest
improvements,
rank and subordinate to the Europeans. the
nature of MAS appointments remained
essentially non-administrative. 6
Indeed, the continuing discussion on the replacing of English with Malay as an elite medium testifies to the legacy of the dichotomy in post-independence Malaya/Malays Ia. 1982, pp. 8-9; Abdul Wahab Maadah pub I ished
as
recently
as
(See Asraf 1960, p. 153; lsmai I Hussein 1983). Adibah Amin's newspaper article,
18 December
1982,
sums
up
the
issue
with
its
telling title, "Making Malay an Elite Medium" (Adibah Amin 1982). 7
Abdullah bin Abdul Kadlr (1797-1856), or better known as Munshi Abdullah, generally
regarded
autobiographical
as
the Father of
writings,
Hlkayat
Modern Malay
Abdullah
!The
Literature. story
of
His
is
famous
Abdullah]
and
I The story of Abdullah 1 s voyage I, whIch were rooted
K i sah Pe layaran Abdullah
in the everyday world of human beings marked a distinct departure from the earlier
association
of
I iterature
and
the
world
of
mythology.
This
was
especially enhanced by an approach and style of writing which Skinner refers to as bel ng "characterized by an unusua I emphasis on the true and the rea I for its own sake" (Skinner 1978, p. 470). 1920s, sixty years after Abdullah's death, showed While
any
renewed
activity
acknowledging
literature,
of
the
Abdullah's
role
type as
However, it was not unti I the that the Malay literary world Abdullah's
the
work
forerunner
had
of
suggested.
modern
Malay
"begInnIngs" shou I d be understood here as referring to a
I ater
and more widespread process of change. 8
Better known as Hlkayat Farldah Hanum !The story of Farldah Hanuml, an
adaptatIon
society.
of
The
an
first
Egypt I an Malay
nove I
nove I
and
to
portrayed
portray
Ma I ay
Egypt ian
it was
characters
characters
and
to
and use
"local colour" was Kawan Benar by Ahmad Rashid Talu, pub I ished in 1927. 9
Za 1aba's ( 1974) article, "Kemiskinan Orang Melayu", is often regarded as one of the exce I I ent examp I es of the expression of concern by Ma I ay writers about the Malay situation in general, and Malay povery In particular.
10
See
also
Yahaya
especially
lsmal I
Hlkayat
Salmah?
lis
however,
Is based
it
( 1973)
Farldah
Salmah?J,
for
Hanum, as
an
Kawan
analysis Benar
"proto-novels"
(p.
of
lA
early
true
152>.
Malay
novels,
friend(
and Takah
Yahaya's
analysis,
largely on the use In these novels of motifs reminiscent
of oral narratives. II
General Orders of the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States: Ru I e
16/ I:
No officer may
ca II
a pub I i c meeting to consider
any action of government, or take part in the proceedings of a meeting cal led for such purpose.
74
Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir Ru I e
16/2:
publications
No oft i cer may act as a d i str i but or of or
sign
or
procure
signatures
to
poI it i ca I
any
public
petitions addressed to Governor or to the Legis I at i ve Counc i I regardIng the actions or propos a Is of in Ali Ahmad 1975, p. 77, fn. 11.) 12
See Kerls Mas (1979), with PKMM.
pp.
the Government.
(Cited
59-60, on being interviewed about his involvement
The interview, according to Keris Mas, was to elicit information
about PKMM 1 s involvement with the communists. 13
14
The MCS is now called Perkihidmatan Tadbir dan Diplomatik Malaysia the Malaysian Administrative and Diplomatic Service.) Waki I Rakyat (literally, People's Representatives)
(PTD --
is the term used to refer
to both parliamentarians and state councillors, the latter being elected members of the Majlis Mesyuarat Negeri (State Legislative Council>. Both Par I i ament
and
the Maj I is
Mesyuarat
Neger i
serve as po II cy-mak i ng
bodies.
The term Waki I Rakyat is retained throughout the study. 15
A journalist, writer and nationalist who was openly anti-British, Samad was imprisoned
in the early 1950s together with others regarded as left-leaning.
Indeed, Samad 1s unflagging interest in politics earned him the labels 11 rad i ca I 11 and 11 controvers I a I 11 and a I so resu I ted in his imprisonment under the Internal Security Act from 1976 to 1981. 16
Following disagreement
In respect to the organization of the GAPENA-Yayasan
Sa bah nove I writing competitIon, 1975, resignation as the First Chairman, but I eadersh i p.
During his temporary
wi thdrawa I
I sma i I Hussein tendered was persuaded to resume
his his
from GAPENA, Mohd. Noor Azam,
then the Second Chairman, headed the organization. 17
Despite its populist ideology, GAPENA exerts its Influence through its official status among the political and cultural elite, as epitomized in the figure of Ismail Hussein himself.
18
For more information, see Ungku Maimunah Mohd. Tahir, 111 Sastera Islam' Malaysia's Literary Phenomenon of the 1970s and l980s 11 (forthcoming>.
Modern Malay Literary Culture
75
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Dewan
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----,K~u~ala
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Masih
Belum
New Straits Times,
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Foulcher, K.R. "Puisi Baru: The Emergence of a Non-Traditional Malay Poetry in Pre-War Indonesia 1920-1942". Ph.D. thesis, University of Sydney, 1974. Hashim Awang. Cerpen-Cer~en Melayu Sebelum Perang Dunia Kedua. Kuala Lumpur: Dewan ahasa dan Pustaka, 1975. Ismail Hussein. "Pengarang-Pengarang Melayu di Singapura Selepas Perang Dunia Kedua (1945-1953)". Academic Exercise, University of Malaya (Singapore), 1959.
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