Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgement
- Introduction
- 1 Towards A Post-Racialist Malaysia
- 2 Colonialism's Legacy Is A Defensive Psyche
- 3 All You Hybrids, Emerge From Your Closet
- 4 Labour Stripped Down To Bare Essentials
- 5 How Will Nationalism Evolve?
- 6 Selangor – The Battleground For Malaysia's Future
- 7 A Lesson For Countries Where Fear Of Political Change Runs Deep
- 8 What Brain, What Drain?
- 9 Can Pakatan Rakyat Continue To Inspire?
- 10 Tun Dr Lim, A Local And National Leader
- 11 Urban Parochialism, Rural Cosmopolitanism
- 12 How Will Najib Play His Cards?
- 13 Turning Isolating Distance Into Social Space
- 14 BN's Systemic Weaknesses Are Not Going Away
- 15 Dr M: Politician To The Core
- 16 Bookstores And Our Weak Sense Of Self-Esteem
- 17 Malaysia's Future After March 8, 2008
- 18 BN Feels The Sarawak Heat
- 19 Now's Not The Time For Najib To Call A GE
- 20 More Federalism, Less Centralism
- 21 Bersih 2.0 Is Najib's Biggest Challenge
- 22 Bersih 2.0: Malaysia's King Steps Forth
- 23 Weighing The Political Cost Of July 9
- 24 Must We Stay Victims Of Past Strategies?
- 25 UMNO Turning Right Leads BN Downhill
- 26 ISA Repeal: Najib Should Push Ahead
- 27 Will Najib's Election Goodies Be Enough?
- 28 Did Malaysia Mature When We Were Not Looking?
- 29 Securing Public Space In The Post-Imperial Age
- 30 In Malaysia, Reforms Take A Staggered Path
- 31 A Long Life Lived In Politics
- 32 Anwar Acquittal Boosts Malaysia's Opposition
- 33 New Think Tanks For New Times
- 34 Malaysian Envelopment
- 35 Saving Federalism In Malaysia
- 36 Kuala Lumpur – Still Best At Being Middling
- 37 ASEAN – A Post-Colonial Sisterhood
- 38 General Over A Hesitant Army
- 39 “Heal Malaysia” – A Slogan For The Elections
- 40 Putting May 13 To Rest
- 41 Past Cures As Present Addictions
- 42 Rules Of The Road Are Best Practices For Good Governance
- 43 Dignity Is The Basic Human Right
- 44 The Nation Must Embrace A New Stage In Its Development
- 45 Marks Of A Sincere Malaysian Leader
- 46 Impressions Of Istanbul, Or How History Never Ends
- 47 School Is Dead, Long Live Education
- 48 Income Gap, Outcome Bad
- 49 The Deuce Position And Najib's Incumbency Advantage
- 50 The Resurgence Of Social Activism In Malaysia
- 51 From Now On, It's A Malay vs Malay Contest
- 52 If Only The World Would Remain Flat…
- 53 Education For What And For Whom?
- 54 Political Picnicking In KL
- 55 Malaysian Togetherness Survives Despite Its Leaders
- 56 Malaysians Done Making Do
2 - Colonialism's Legacy Is A Defensive Psyche
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgement
- Introduction
- 1 Towards A Post-Racialist Malaysia
- 2 Colonialism's Legacy Is A Defensive Psyche
- 3 All You Hybrids, Emerge From Your Closet
- 4 Labour Stripped Down To Bare Essentials
- 5 How Will Nationalism Evolve?
- 6 Selangor – The Battleground For Malaysia's Future
- 7 A Lesson For Countries Where Fear Of Political Change Runs Deep
- 8 What Brain, What Drain?
- 9 Can Pakatan Rakyat Continue To Inspire?
- 10 Tun Dr Lim, A Local And National Leader
- 11 Urban Parochialism, Rural Cosmopolitanism
- 12 How Will Najib Play His Cards?
- 13 Turning Isolating Distance Into Social Space
- 14 BN's Systemic Weaknesses Are Not Going Away
- 15 Dr M: Politician To The Core
- 16 Bookstores And Our Weak Sense Of Self-Esteem
- 17 Malaysia's Future After March 8, 2008
- 18 BN Feels The Sarawak Heat
- 19 Now's Not The Time For Najib To Call A GE
- 20 More Federalism, Less Centralism
- 21 Bersih 2.0 Is Najib's Biggest Challenge
- 22 Bersih 2.0: Malaysia's King Steps Forth
- 23 Weighing The Political Cost Of July 9
- 24 Must We Stay Victims Of Past Strategies?
- 25 UMNO Turning Right Leads BN Downhill
- 26 ISA Repeal: Najib Should Push Ahead
- 27 Will Najib's Election Goodies Be Enough?
- 28 Did Malaysia Mature When We Were Not Looking?
- 29 Securing Public Space In The Post-Imperial Age
- 30 In Malaysia, Reforms Take A Staggered Path
- 31 A Long Life Lived In Politics
- 32 Anwar Acquittal Boosts Malaysia's Opposition
- 33 New Think Tanks For New Times
- 34 Malaysian Envelopment
- 35 Saving Federalism In Malaysia
- 36 Kuala Lumpur – Still Best At Being Middling
- 37 ASEAN – A Post-Colonial Sisterhood
- 38 General Over A Hesitant Army
- 39 “Heal Malaysia” – A Slogan For The Elections
- 40 Putting May 13 To Rest
- 41 Past Cures As Present Addictions
- 42 Rules Of The Road Are Best Practices For Good Governance
- 43 Dignity Is The Basic Human Right
- 44 The Nation Must Embrace A New Stage In Its Development
- 45 Marks Of A Sincere Malaysian Leader
- 46 Impressions Of Istanbul, Or How History Never Ends
- 47 School Is Dead, Long Live Education
- 48 Income Gap, Outcome Bad
- 49 The Deuce Position And Najib's Incumbency Advantage
- 50 The Resurgence Of Social Activism In Malaysia
- 51 From Now On, It's A Malay vs Malay Contest
- 52 If Only The World Would Remain Flat…
- 53 Education For What And For Whom?
- 54 Political Picnicking In KL
- 55 Malaysian Togetherness Survives Despite Its Leaders
- 56 Malaysians Done Making Do
Summary
It has become more and more palpable to scholars that the geography of a place, with attendant peculiarities of terrain, climate, water supply, transport, flora and fauna, as well as the nature of adjacent regions, goes a long way towards explaining human history. Southeast Asia – and Penang – is no different.
Continental conditions create polities and mindsets that vary remarkably from those found in maritime and riverine areas. Despite the nation-state straitjacket that territories making up the Federation of Malaysia are today forced into by historical contingencies, the underlying socio-economic structure and primary acculturating forces instigated by our archipelagic geography shine through quite clearly.
Renowned Southeast Asianist Anthony Reid, when studying what he termed the “Age of Commerce” in the region, namely 1450 to 1680, found that cities of that period had a distinctive character:
They were culturally extremely diverse, and comprised of distinct quarters for many different groups;
Their population density allowed for thousands to gather for festivals and other celebrations;
The benign and generous environment produced leisure classes that put substantial resources into performing arts.
Urbanized cultural diversity proclaimed through yearly festivals and rituals was the given state of affairs.
Such urban diversity is sometimes attributed to the “archipelagic-ness” of the region concerned. Most notable are the Mediterranean and the Caribbean. Such a tendency in places like the Baltic Sea or the Yellow Sea is probably mellowed by the long and cold winters.
During the “Age of Colonialism”, which for the English started with the settling of Penang in 1786, trade routes were secured and cultural walls constructed to serve and protect the interest of each colonial power.
The adjacent civilizations of India and China which framed and influenced the region in between them were slowly overshadowed during this period, especially where economics and philosophy were concerned.
As colonialism matured, cultural diversity began to be considered anomalous and not as normal. The modernist habit of perceiving nations, races, religions and other human categorizations as essential entities began to spread in the region, often because of colonial and administrative expediencies. This configured what is certainly the strongest legacy that colonialism left behind among its victims – a strong sense of passiveness and defensiveness (the latter expressed as nationalism).
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- Information
- Done Making Do1Party Rule Ends in Malaysia, pp. 4 - 5Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2013