How do class, ethnicity, gender, and politics interact? In what ways do they constitute everyday life among ethnic minorities? In ‘Getting By, ‘ Donald M. Nonini draws on three decades of research in the region of Penang state in northern West Malaysia, mainly in the city of Bukit Mertajam, to provide an ethnographic and historical account of the cultural politics of class conflict and state formation among Malaysians of Chinese descent. Countering triumphalist accounts of the capitalist Chinese diaspora in Southeast Asia, Nonini shows that the Chinese of Penang (as elsewhere) are riven by deep class divisions and that class issues and identities are omnipresent in everyday life. Nor are the common features of ‘Chinese culture’ in Malaysia manifestations of some unchanging cultural essence. Rather, his long immersion in the city shows, they are the results of an interaction between Chinese-Malaysian practices in daily life and the processes of state formation—in particular, the ways in which Kuala Lumpur has defined different categories of citizens. Nonini’s ethnography is based on semistructured interviews; participant observation of events, informal gatherings, and meetings; a commercial census; intensive reading of Chinese-language and English-language newspapers; the study of local Chinese-language sources; contemporary government archives; and numerous exchanges with residents.
İçerik tablosu
Introduction: A Historical Ethnography of Class and State Formation Chapter 1. Counterinsurgency, Silences, Forgetting, 1946–69 Part I. Development (1969–85) Preface: Colonial Residues and ‘Development’Chapter 2. ‘Boom Town in the Making, ‘ 1978–80Chapter 3. ‘Getting By’: The Arts of Deception and the ‘Typical Chinese’Chapter 4. Banalities of the Urban: Hegemony or State Predation?Chapter 5. Class Dismissed!Chapter 6. Men in Motion: The Dialectics of ‘Disputatiousness’ and ‘Rice-Eating Money’Chapter 7. Chinese Society as ‘A Sheet of Loose Sand’: Elite Arguments and Class Discipline in a Postcolonial Era Part II. Globalization (1985–97) Preface: Going Global Chapter 8. Subsumption and Encompassment: Class, State Formation, and Production of Urban Space, 1980–97Chapter 9. Covert Global: Exit, Alternative Sovereignties, and Being Stuck Chapter 10. ‘Walking On Two Roads’ and ‘Jumping Airplanes’Epilogue: 1997–2007Appendix: A Profile of Economic ‘Domination’?
Notes
References
Index
Yazar hakkında
Donald M. Nonini is Professor of Anthropology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is the author of British Colonial Rule and the Resistance of the Malay Peasantry, 1900–1957, coauthor of Local Democracy Under Siege: Activism, Public Interests, and Private Politics, and editor most recently of A Companion to Urban Anthropology.