Raja Bilah and the Mandailings in Perak 1875 1911

Raja Bilah and the Mandailings in Perak  1875 1911
Author: Abdur-Razzaq Lubis,Salma Nasution Khoo
Publsiher: Areca Books
Total Pages: 282
Release: 2003
Genre: Angkola (Indonesian people)
ISBN: 9679948315

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Planting Empire Cultivating Subjects

Planting Empire  Cultivating Subjects
Author: Lynn Hollen Lees
Publsiher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 379
Release: 2017-12-21
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781107038400

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This is an innovative study of how British Colonial rule and society in Malayan towns and plantations transformed immigrants into British subjects.

Journalism and Politics in Indonesia

Journalism and Politics in Indonesia
Author: David T. Hill
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2010-01-21
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781135169145

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This book weaves a history of the Indonesian press, and of Indonesia’s post-independence history, through the life story of Mochtar Lubis: one of Indonesia’s best-known newspaper editors, authors and cultural figures with a national, regional and international prominence he retained from the early 1950s until his death in 2004.

Globalization Perak s Rise Relative Decline and Regeneration

Globalization  Perak s Rise  Relative Decline  and Regeneration
Author: Nazrin Shah
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 593
Release: 2024-03-21
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780198897774

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Written by Sultan Nazrin Shah - the author of the highly acclaimed works Charting the Economy and Striving for Inclusive Development - this book is a pioneering study of the many economic and social changes in the natural resource-rich Malaysian state of Perak over the last two centuries. When globalization first took hold and international trade networks broadened and deepened in the first half of the 19th century, and a new capitalist world order emerged in the second, Perak was a key player. Its tin was in high demand in Western industrializing countries and foreign capital, labour, and technology propelled it forward. By 1900, Perak accounted for almost half of Malaya's tin output and a staggering quarter of world output, with its prosperity making it the Malay peninsula's commercial hub. Likewise, during the global rubber boom that began in the early 20th century as cars were mass produced for the first time, Perak was the largest rubber-producing state in the peninsula. This book brings together a range of key sub-themes - economic geography, the institutional legacy of colonialism, increasing federal government centralization, forces of economic agglomeration, and human migration - which drove Perak's fortunes in sometimes dramatic economic cycles and ultimately led to the collapse of its tin and rubber industries and the migration of many of its young and skilled. The book concludes by looking forward, analysing Perak's characteristics, and extrapolating lessons from formerly wealthy industrial centres originally blessed with natural resources but subsequently left behind by new waves of globalization, such as Cornwall and Sheffield in the United Kingdom, and Pittsburgh and Scranton in the United States. With a new vision Perak can regenerate itself and once again emerge triumphant against a tough global background-Covid-19, war, and deglobalization.

Behind Barbed Wire

Behind Barbed Wire
Author: Tan Teng Phee
Publsiher: Strategic Information and Research Development Centre
Total Pages: 210
Release: 2022-12-06
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9789672464594

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"Behind Barbed Wire looks behind the façade to ask what it was really like to be moved to, and live in, a 'New Village'. Tan, who himself lived in New Villages growing up, combines archival sources and oral history to give us a rounded account . . . We need Tan's book, because up to now the outsider's view has predominated, and outsiders have their own agenda." Karl Hack, in the Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society This unique book revisits the moment in the Malayan Emergency when some 500,000 women, children and men were uprooted from their homes and moved into new settlements, guarded day and night by police and troops. A majority were rural Chinese: market gardeners, shopkeepers, rice farmers, tin miners and rubber tappers who had long made Malaya their home and had lived through the hardships of the Japanese Occupation. Based upon newly accessible archival materials and painstaking multilingual interviews with more than 80 informants in four New Villages, Tan Teng Phee rewrites the history of the Emergency, exposing the voices of those at the heart of this lauded ‘social experiment’. In Francis Loh’s words, these were ordinary villagers ‘caught in the crossfire between the British security forces and the Malayan Communist Party’ whose lives were turned inside-out and re-ordered completely, with daily curfews, body searches and food controls alongside the carrots and sticks of registration, (re)education, sanitation, psychological warfare and swift punishment. Highlighting the disciplinary aims of British policy, as well as the ways in which villagers resisted this discipline through ‘weapons of the weak’, this book forms a unique history from below of the Malayan Emergency, and of a resettlement programme which shaped the social and geographical landscape of Malaysia for generations to come.

Penang and Its Region

Penang and Its Region
Author: Neil Khor,Khoo Salma Nasution,Loh Wei Leng,Yeoh Seng Guan
Publsiher: NUS Press
Total Pages: 300
Release: 2009-01-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9789971694234

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From its beginnings in the late eighteenth century, the vibrant colonial port of Penang attracted a diverse range of peoples, enabled pioneering commercial enterprises, and fomented inter-ethnic collaboration and inter-cultural borrowings. The island came to be known as the 'Pearl of the Orient', and for many travellers it was their first port of call in Southeast Asia. In the early nineteenth century, Singapore displaced Penang in international trade, but the island remained a major focus of regional trade. For this reason, the story of Penang's relations with the Malay Peninsula and other parts of Southeast Asia reveal a great deal about conditions within the region.

Bangsa and Umma

Bangsa and Umma
Author: Hiroyuki Yamamoto
Publsiher: Apollo Books
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2011
Genre: Ethnic groups
ISBN: 1920901523

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Having experienced a large-scale reorganization of social order over the past decade, people of the Malay world have struggled to position themselves. They have been classified - and have classified themselves - with categories as bangsa (nation/ethnic group) and umma (Islamic network). In connection with these key concepts, this study explores a variety of dimensions of these and other 'people-grouping' classifications, which also include Malayu, Jawi, and Paranakan. The book examines how these categories played a significant part in the colonial and post-colonial periods in areas ranging from Malaysia, Indonesia, and the Philippines. It demonstrates the extent to which shifting social conditions interact with the contours of group identity. This is a collaborative work by scholars based in the US, Japan, Malaysia, and Australia. *** "Understanding the genealogy of people-grouping concepts provides valuable insight into the mechanics of power relations and how the agency of cultural identification constructs the continuity and the contentious in the political world". Pacific Affairs, Vol. 85, No. 4, December 2012.

Kinta Valley

Kinta Valley
Author: Salma Nasution Khoo,Abdur-Razzaq Lubis
Publsiher: Areca Books
Total Pages: 432
Release: 2005
Genre: Development economics
ISBN: 9834211309

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