Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective
Studies of Singapore’s brand of technocratic authoritarianism have generally focused on the political sphere. This article examines the social aspect of authoritarian hegemony by focusing on Singapore’s traditional Malay medicine (TMM) sector, which comprises a range of practitioners from shops offe...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1461562021-01-28T05:57:58Z Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective Faizah Zakaria Humairah Zainal School of Humanities Humanities::General Traditional Malay Medicine Gramsci Studies of Singapore’s brand of technocratic authoritarianism have generally focused on the political sphere. This article examines the social aspect of authoritarian hegemony by focusing on Singapore’s traditional Malay medicine (TMM) sector, which comprises a range of practitioners from shops offering herbal remedies to individuals specialising in Malay massage to spiritual healers. The transition in TMM’s position from the centre of the Malay community’s healing system to the periphery of the formal healthcare system parallels the process of authoritarian modernisation in Singapore. Applying a Gramscian analysis to this transition highlights the interplay between consensus and coercion in driving such social change. Using data gathered from in-depth, semi-structured interviews with current TMM practitioners and a survey of its users, this article further shows that far from being a set of static practices, TMM is dynamic and adaptable. Practitioners, who market their products along quasi biomedical lines, and consumers, who deconstruct their notion of the ‘healthy body’ by utilising traditional medicine to complement the biomedical, demonstrate this adaptability. 2021-01-28T05:57:58Z 2021-01-28T05:57:58Z 2017 Journal Article Faizah Zakaria, & Humairah Zainal (2017). Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective. Indonesia and the Malay World, 45(131), 127-144. doi:10.1080/13639811.2017.1275156 1363-9811 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146156 10.1080/13639811.2017.1275156 2-s2.0-85009812085 131 45 127 144 en Indonesia and the Malay World © 2017 Editors, Indonesia and the Malay World. All rights reserved. |
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Humanities::General Traditional Malay Medicine Gramsci Faizah Zakaria Humairah Zainal Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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Studies of Singapore’s brand of technocratic authoritarianism have generally focused on the political sphere. This article examines the social aspect of authoritarian hegemony by focusing on Singapore’s traditional Malay medicine (TMM) sector, which comprises a range of practitioners from shops offering herbal remedies to individuals specialising in Malay massage to spiritual healers. The transition in TMM’s position from the centre of the Malay community’s healing system to the periphery of the formal healthcare system parallels the process of authoritarian modernisation in Singapore. Applying a Gramscian analysis to this transition highlights the interplay between consensus and coercion in driving such social change. Using data gathered from in-depth, semi-structured interviews with current TMM practitioners and a survey of its users, this article further shows that far from being a set of static practices, TMM is dynamic and adaptable. Practitioners, who market their products along quasi biomedical lines, and consumers, who deconstruct their notion of the ‘healthy body’ by utilising traditional medicine to complement the biomedical, demonstrate this adaptability. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Faizah Zakaria Humairah Zainal |
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Article |
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Faizah Zakaria Humairah Zainal |
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Faizah Zakaria |
title |
Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
title_full |
Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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Traditional Malay medicine in Singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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traditional malay medicine in singapore : a gramscian perspective |
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2021 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146156 |
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