Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative
The influence of Eurocentric historiography in the social science has inevitably conditioned the representations of local histories of the post-colonial societies. This conditioning is manifested significantly at academic, policy and popular platforms. Thus, the George Town Festival (GTF) in Pulau P...
| Main Authors: | , |
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| Format: | Book Section |
| Language: | English |
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School of Social Sciences
2015
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| Online Access: | http://eprints.usm.my/37632/ http://eprints.usm.my/37632/1/sspis_2015_ms524_-_534.pdf |
| _version_ | 1848878245970182144 |
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| author | Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau Merican, Prof. Dr. Ahmad Murad |
| author_facet | Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau Merican, Prof. Dr. Ahmad Murad |
| author_sort | Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau |
| building | USM Institutional Repository |
| collection | Online Access |
| description | The influence of Eurocentric historiography in the social science has inevitably conditioned the representations of local histories of the post-colonial societies. This conditioning is manifested significantly at academic, policy and popular platforms. Thus, the George Town Festival (GTF) in Pulau Pinnang which started in the year 2010 in Penang-Malaysia fits perfectly into the discourse of misrepresentation of history. GTF traditionally brought together different Ethnic Nationalities including Peranakans, Hokkiens and Indian Muslims. Their Historical and heritage landscape in pulau pinnang has continued to be celebrated, alas!!! This has been without recourse to the history of earliest founding community who had built Tanjong and its proximities, before 1786. It must be remembered and be reminded that the history of Pulau Pinang did not start from 1786. Our main contention lies in interrogating the forgotten Malay narrative in the GTF, and its overall consequence on Malaysian Historiography in the social sciences. Under what epistemological assumption did the knowledge production about non-western societies’ did takes place? What are the alternative responses to the Eurocentric perspective? What role could a local history play as a counter-hegemonic response to the Eurocentric historiography in the social sciences? What is the forgotten Malay narrative in the GTF? |
| first_indexed | 2025-11-15T17:28:17Z |
| format | Book Section |
| id | usm-37632 |
| institution | Universiti Sains Malaysia |
| institution_category | Local University |
| language | English |
| last_indexed | 2025-11-15T17:28:17Z |
| publishDate | 2015 |
| publisher | School of Social Sciences |
| recordtype | eprints |
| repository_type | Digital Repository |
| spelling | usm-376322017-11-24T01:43:05Z http://eprints.usm.my/37632/ Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau Merican, Prof. Dr. Ahmad Murad H Social Sciences The influence of Eurocentric historiography in the social science has inevitably conditioned the representations of local histories of the post-colonial societies. This conditioning is manifested significantly at academic, policy and popular platforms. Thus, the George Town Festival (GTF) in Pulau Pinnang which started in the year 2010 in Penang-Malaysia fits perfectly into the discourse of misrepresentation of history. GTF traditionally brought together different Ethnic Nationalities including Peranakans, Hokkiens and Indian Muslims. Their Historical and heritage landscape in pulau pinnang has continued to be celebrated, alas!!! This has been without recourse to the history of earliest founding community who had built Tanjong and its proximities, before 1786. It must be remembered and be reminded that the history of Pulau Pinang did not start from 1786. Our main contention lies in interrogating the forgotten Malay narrative in the GTF, and its overall consequence on Malaysian Historiography in the social sciences. Under what epistemological assumption did the knowledge production about non-western societies’ did takes place? What are the alternative responses to the Eurocentric perspective? What role could a local history play as a counter-hegemonic response to the Eurocentric historiography in the social sciences? What is the forgotten Malay narrative in the GTF? School of Social Sciences 2015 Book Section PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/37632/1/sspis_2015_ms524_-_534.pdf Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau and Merican, Prof. Dr. Ahmad Murad (2015) Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative. In: Conference Proceedings of Social Sciences Postgraduate International Seminar (SSPIS). School of Social Sciences, Pulau Pinang, Malaysia, pp. 524-534. ISBN 978-967-11473-2-0 |
| spellingShingle | H Social Sciences Abdulrauf, Muttaqa Yushau Merican, Prof. Dr. Ahmad Murad Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title | Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title_full | Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title_fullStr | Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title_full_unstemmed | Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title_short | Local History as a Counter-Hegemonic Discourse In The Social Sciences: George Town Festival (GTF) and the Forgotten Malay Narrative |
| title_sort | local history as a counter-hegemonic discourse in the social sciences: george town festival (gtf) and the forgotten malay narrative |
| topic | H Social Sciences |
| url | http://eprints.usm.my/37632/ http://eprints.usm.my/37632/1/sspis_2015_ms524_-_534.pdf |