Cheah Boon Kheng
Malaysia: The Making of a Nation
Singapore / ISEAS / 2002
Farish A. Noor
The Other Malaysia: Writings on Malaysia’s Subaltern History
Kuala Lumpur / Silverfishbooks / 2002
Cheah Boon Kheng offers an explanation of how the nation evolved in practice through a strict focus on electoral politics, prime ministers, and national policy. Cheah analyzes Malaysia through the prism of “give and take,” examining ongoing tensions between Malay ethno-nationalism and a broader Malaysian nationalism. His main argument is that each of the country’s four prime ministers “started off… as an exclusivist Malay nationalist but ended up as an inclusivist Malaysian nationalist.” That this has happened four times in the nation’s history suggests that the nation-state has developed its own logic. Ketuanan Melayu (Malay political dominance), the reader concludes, is here to stay, but is constrained by this logic. Cheah’s book asserts one reality of a multicultural, tolerant Malaysia.
Cheah Boon Kheng’s Malaysia is a careful containment of difference, both within and between ethnic communities. Farish Noor sees not unitary identities, but multiplicities which he seeks to recover from the past and legitimize in the present.
Donna J. Amoroso
Donna Amoroso edits the Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia.
Read the full unabridged version of this article HERE
Kyoto Review of Southeast Asia. Issue 3: Nations and Other Stories. March 2003