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Malaysia. ‘Getting by’: A historical ethnography of class and state formation in Malaysia By Donald M. Nonini Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2015. Pp. 360. Illustrations, Notes, Index.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 January 2018

Ik-Tien Ngu*
Affiliation:
University of Malaya
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 2018 

Getting by is a collection of Donald Nonini's scholarly articles on ethnic Chinese Malaysians, based on a three-decade-long ethnographic study of the town of Bukit Mertajam, in the state of Penang. It is a commendable and long-awaited study of class, ethnicity and state formation in Malaysia.

Donald Nonini's work fills several gaps in the literature of Chinese studies in Malaysia and Southeast Asia. The bulk of current scholarship focuses heavily on Chinese entrepreneurship and their cultural capital, with scant attention is paid to the struggle of the working class Malaysian Chinese. Indeed, research on the working class Chinese seems to have fallen out of vogue since the 1990s, after Judith Strauth (Chinese village politics in the Malaysian state, Harvard University Press, 1981) and Francis Loh (Beyond the tin mines: Coolies, squatters, and new villagers in the Kinta Valley, Malaysia, c. 1880–1980, Oxford University Press, 1988) published their works which focused primarily on the Chinese in the ‘new villages’ and district areas. Nonini's work, by contrast, analyses the everyday life of the working class Chinese in Bukit Mertajam, a lively commercial town in the 1970s that was dubbed a ‘wholesale centre’ in the northern Peninsula of Malaysia. He cautions that the stereotypical image of Chinese as successful businessmen, crafted in part by scholars and the indigenous ruling elites, has frequently been used as a basis to discriminate against the ethnic Chinese as a whole. The group hurt the most by the policies based on this premise were the Chinese working class, rather than the petty proprietors and capitalists.

Nonini's work is more than just a depiction of economic struggle, opportunities and aspirations of working class Malaysian Chinese. The strength of this book lies in its new theoretical approach, which is discussed in the introductory chapter. The author gives a persuasive critique of several classical scholars of Southeast Asian Chinese communities such as Maurice Freedman, Wang Gungwu, William Skinner and Judith Nagata, whose work he classifies into three approaches, namely the China-oriented approach, the ideological manipulation approach and the subjective pluralist approach. Instead of these approaches, he proposes a new method of historical ethnography to study the construction of Chinese identity and ethnicity in Southeast Asia. Taking the Malaysian Chinese working class as an example, he contends that the feeling of being ‘second class’ was a dialectical construct arising through long-term relational experiences with other members of society especially the New Malay class, petty government officers, the ultra-wealthy Chinese tycoons and local towkays.

Chapters 2 to 7 discuss the author's field trips to Bukit Mertajam in the late 1970s, coinciding with the implementation of the New Economic Policy (NEP) by the federal government of Malaysia. His in-depth interviews with the Chinese from the truck industry enables him to vividly capture the agency, feelings, sentiments, relationships and lifestyles of his subjects.

Chapter 2 broadly sketches the active participation of Chinese labourers and petty proprietors from the truck industry during Bukit Mertajam's economic boom in the 1970s. In chapter 3, the author describes how truck drivers were typically labelled as crude and dishonest by lower-ranking government officials and truck company owners. This stereotype, he later discovers, was a hidden transcript, as the truck drivers revealed when discussing their hardships. The drivers talked about resorting to using tools such as deception in order to survive in the hostile working environment. Chapter 4 highlights the racialised nature of official discourse such as the rhetoric of well-to-do urban Chinese and poor rural Malay folk which has been used as a reason to justify discriminatory policies against the working class Chinese. Moving on to intra-ethnic relations, Chapter 5 illustrates the class conflicts among the Malaysian Chinese themselves. The author outlines the constraints imposed by the Chinese proprietor class and pro-proprietor state on workers’ organisations, and the limits placed on their public expression of identity. Despite being stereotyped as crude, disputatiousness and cheaters by the local business class and petty government officers, the Chinese working class men in Bukit Mertajam had nonetheless crafted their own ideal of a Chinese male figure as discussed in chapter 6. Nonini concludes that the idealised Chinese male is linked to gendered imaginaries, demonstrated in male mobility, physical strength, and socioeconomic success. Chapter 7 criticises the propagandistic slogan of ‘Chinese unity’ championed by Chinese leaders as it serves a discursive device to discipline the Chinese population and failed to facilitate working class access to essential resources.

The following chapters describe new social phenomena during the years of national economic liberalisation, and how globalisation impacted the Chinese men of Bukit Mertajam. The town's inhabitants witnessed the encroachment of government-linked corporations and the building of state monuments in former Chinese settlements. As explained in chapter 8, some Chinese petty capitalists chose to split their businesses into smaller units to evade the acquisition of company shares under the Bumiputera policy. While working class Chinese managed to ‘get by’, decades of government partiality severely deprived them of opportunities for upward mobility. Chapters 9 and 10 note the transnational exit made by young adults from Bukit Mertajam. To escape state predation, Chinese workers went abroad for physically exhausting work to gain material rewards, but most of them eventually returned to Malaysia. Finally, the epilogue contains the author's reflections on the future of the Chinese Malaysians. He observes the revitalisation of the China connection in the twenty-first century and how this has presented a new exit option for the community.

While it presents many insightful perspectives, the book's shortcoming is perhaps also obvious. The author's analysis is confined to fieldwork done in a single town in the Peninsula, leaving doubts as to whether the experiences that he has documented are truly representative of the Chinese working class throughout the country. From a personal perspective, having grown up in a middle-sized commercial town in East Malaysia, several themes described, including the views and feelings of the author’s informants about their hectic work schedule, male superiority, ‘money transactions’ with lower-ranking government officers, and the perception of the national government's ethnic policy seem to resonate. In conclusion, this is a commendable in-depth and sensitive study of the Chinese working class in Malaysia.