会员   密码 您忘记密码了吗?
1,505,013 本书已上架      购物流程 | 常见问题 | 联系我们 | 关于我们 | 用户协议

有店 App


当前分类

浏览历史

当前位置: 首页 > 马来西亚出版品 > 文运书坊 > 文运 English Books > GHOST LIVES OF THE PENDATANG: INFORMALITY AND COSMOPOLITAN CONTAMINATIONS IN URBAN MALAYSIA
GHOST LIVES OF THE PENDATANG: INFORMALITY AND COSMOPOLITAN CONTAMINATIONS IN URBAN MALAYSIA
上一张
GHOST LIVES OF THE PENDATANG: INFORMALITY AND COSMOPOLITAN CONTAMINATIONS IN URBAN MALAYSIA
下一张
prev next

GHOST LIVES OF THE PENDATANG: INFORMALITY AND COSMOPOLITAN CONTAMINATIONS IN URBAN MALAYSIA

作者: Parthiban Muniandy
出版社: 文运书坊
商品库存: 20
市场价格: RM38.00
本店售价: RM34.20
购买数量:
collect Add to cart
详细介绍 商品属性 商品标记

 商品介绍

Author: Parthiban Muniandy
Publisher: SIRD + Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9789672464211
Pages : 177 pg
 

 

This book is an ethnographic study of migrants, refugees and ‘temporary’ people in Malaysia, incorporating narratives, personal stories, and observations of everyday life in Kuala Lumpur and Georgetown, Penang. Rather than focusing on specific migrant communities or refugee ‘camps’, the book takes subaltern cosmopolitanism as its central lens to look at how different and diverse communities of non-citizen ‘pendatang’ (aliens) co-habit, work and live together in Malaysia. Urban centers in Malaysia offer the space for informality that allow stateless and undocumented people to seek out opportunities, while also finding ways to assimilate or even ‘disappear’ into the fabric of society. The book focuses on the notion of ‘contaminations’, rather than migration or migrants, to underscore one of the most important findings of the ethnographic study – that migrant life in Malaysia is critically integral, embedded and interwoven into the everyday life in the city - shaping and affecting all aspects of daily life from production and supply chains, food service networks, cultural and religious practices, waste and recycling work, to more intimate and private contexts such as romantic relationships, family life and sex-work. Hybridity, inter-mixing and bastardization are part and parcel of everyday urbanism in KL and Penang – these ‘contaminating elements’ challenge and disrupt categories of the ‘national’ and categories such as insider/outsider, national purity, and politically constructed divisions between ethnic and racial groups. The book thus relies upon detailed ethnographic narratives curated over a decade of study, offering students interested in fieldwork research insights into the types of engagements and commitments necessary for helping build the complex, uneasy and destabilizing knowledge that characterizes critical ethnography.