A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia

Nation-building in Malaysia can be problematic due to its politicized racial divides. Malaysia as a nation is 60 this year, but issues of race and ethnicity are still prevalent factors that may thwart racial togetherness in modern Malaysia. Malaysia’s different races live in harmony but not necessar...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Southeastern Philippines Journal of Research and Development
Main Author: Abdillah N.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Southeastern Philippines 2023
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85174576165&doi=10.53899%2fspjrd.v28i2.277&partnerID=40&md5=b67bc76cd15515d572958e38d8149d36
id 2-s2.0-85174576165
spelling 2-s2.0-85174576165
Abdillah N.
A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
2023
Southeastern Philippines Journal of Research and Development
28
2
10.53899/spjrd.v28i2.277
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85174576165&doi=10.53899%2fspjrd.v28i2.277&partnerID=40&md5=b67bc76cd15515d572958e38d8149d36
Nation-building in Malaysia can be problematic due to its politicized racial divides. Malaysia as a nation is 60 this year, but issues of race and ethnicity are still prevalent factors that may thwart racial togetherness in modern Malaysia. Malaysia’s different races live in harmony but not necessarily in unity. This article centers upon the racial issues of Malaysia creatively and critically. It looks at the sociopolitical, cultural, and mythical nuances in the form of creative arts, where the genre of fictocriticism serves as a creative contextualization narrating the complexity of the idea of nation and racial identity. In other words, this study used a creative arts methodology approach where fictocriticism is put into practice to show the iterative processes of practice-led research and research-led practice following the ‘Iterative Cyclic Web’ model (Smith & Roger, 2009). Fictocriticism produces a dual narrative: one which employs a fictional voice and the other, a critical voice. The critical voice in the fictocriticism allows for commentaries on the issues of the positioning of ‘self ’ and ‘other.’ In addition, an exegesis, in the forms of results and discussion, was provided after the fictocritical parts to explicate further and contextualize issues related to nation-building in Malaysia. It is hoped that this article may contribute to narrating the nation, its hopes and aspirations, in the context of creative arts. © 2023, University of Southeastern Philippines. All rights reserved.
University of Southeastern Philippines
1176293
English
Article
All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
author Abdillah N.
spellingShingle Abdillah N.
A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
author_facet Abdillah N.
author_sort Abdillah N.
title A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
title_short A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
title_full A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
title_fullStr A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
title_full_unstemmed A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
title_sort A fictocritical narration of the complexity of nation-building in Malaysia
publishDate 2023
container_title Southeastern Philippines Journal of Research and Development
container_volume 28
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.53899/spjrd.v28i2.277
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85174576165&doi=10.53899%2fspjrd.v28i2.277&partnerID=40&md5=b67bc76cd15515d572958e38d8149d36
description Nation-building in Malaysia can be problematic due to its politicized racial divides. Malaysia as a nation is 60 this year, but issues of race and ethnicity are still prevalent factors that may thwart racial togetherness in modern Malaysia. Malaysia’s different races live in harmony but not necessarily in unity. This article centers upon the racial issues of Malaysia creatively and critically. It looks at the sociopolitical, cultural, and mythical nuances in the form of creative arts, where the genre of fictocriticism serves as a creative contextualization narrating the complexity of the idea of nation and racial identity. In other words, this study used a creative arts methodology approach where fictocriticism is put into practice to show the iterative processes of practice-led research and research-led practice following the ‘Iterative Cyclic Web’ model (Smith & Roger, 2009). Fictocriticism produces a dual narrative: one which employs a fictional voice and the other, a critical voice. The critical voice in the fictocriticism allows for commentaries on the issues of the positioning of ‘self ’ and ‘other.’ In addition, an exegesis, in the forms of results and discussion, was provided after the fictocritical parts to explicate further and contextualize issues related to nation-building in Malaysia. It is hoped that this article may contribute to narrating the nation, its hopes and aspirations, in the context of creative arts. © 2023, University of Southeastern Philippines. All rights reserved.
publisher University of Southeastern Philippines
issn 1176293
language English
format Article
accesstype All Open Access; Bronze Open Access
record_format scopus
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