Past Events

20 September 2024 – The Life of Syed Hussein Alatas and Writing about Malaysia

[TALK] The Life of Syed Hussein Alatas and Writing about Malaysia by Masturah Alatas

Details
Speaker: Masturah Alatas
Date: Friday, 20 September 2024
Time: 8:00 pm – 9:30 pm
Venue: Conference Hall, Penang Institute
Moderator: Gareth Richards

Co-organiser: Gerakbudaya Bookstore

Entrance to this event is FREE.

Registration link: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/talk-the-life-of-syed-hussein-alatas-and-writing-about-malaysia-tickets-971994360297?utm-campaign=social&utm-content=attendeeshare&utm-medium=discovery&utm-term=listing&utm-source=cp&aff=ebdsshcopyurl

Abstract
In 1968 the Malaysian sociologist, Syed Hussein Alatas (1928–2007), made a prophetic recommendation at a youth conference in Penang. He suggested that a Malaysian research committee on communal relations be established, because without the proper research into the social problems affecting Malaysians, they would be doomed in time to come. The 13 May 1969 racial riots happened barely a year later. At the time, Alatas was also a co-founder and chairman of Gerakan, a multiethnic political party in the opposition that went on to defeat the ruling Alliance party in the state of Penang in the general election of 10 May 1969. Alatas had also begun research into what was to become his most internationally known work, The Myth of the Lazy Native (Frank Cass 1977, Gerakbudaya 2022). This talk focuses not only on how Alatas’s own captive mind theory and ideals of excellence formed the bedrock of his body of scholarship but also how they can be a lens through which to read the state of Malaysian research and letters today. Finally, what are the untold stories about Alatas’s life that can lead to more new writing about Malaysia?

About The Speaker
Masturah Alatas is the author of the first biography of Syed Hussein Alatas, The Life in the Writing (Gerakbudaya 2024). She is also the author of the fable, The Girl Who Made It Snow in Singapore (Ethos Books 2008), and is one of several writers around the world (along with Naomi Klein, Amitav Ghosh and Susan Abulhawa) in the anthology Will the Flower Slip through the Asphalt: Writers Respond to Capitalist Climate Change (LeftWord Books 2017). Masturah teaches English at the University of Macerata, Italy, where she has been living since 1992. She has also written about Emilio Salgari, the nineteenth-century Italian adventure novelist who invented the Malay hero, Sandokan. In 2021 Masturah won Singapore Unbound’s first flash fiction prize.

About The Moderator
Gareth Richards, a former academic and seasoned arts advocate, is a researcher, writer, editor, bookseller, and activist. In 2008, he founded Impress Creative & Editorial, offering top-notch editorial services and creator representation. As a co-founder of Gerakbudaya Bookshop, Gareth values bookshops as both a source of discovery and surprise. In 2018, he co-founded Hikayat, an arts space for books and beyond. His interests include critical social sciences, people’s history, literary fiction, and the arts, with favorite authors like Pramoedya Ananta Toer and Toni Morrison. Gareth has co-authored/editors such as Asia–Europe Interregionalism: Critical Perspectives (1999) and Discourses, Agency and Identity in Malaysia (2022) and written texts for photography books Portraits of Penang: Little India (2011) and Panicrama (2016). He has also served on the juries for the Penang Book Prize and the Epigram Books Fiction Prize.