You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native
In the year 1907 the colonial entrepreneur and expert on tin-mining in British Malaya, CG Warnford-Lock, wrote thus in his book Mining in Malaya for Gold and Tin: From a labour point of view, there are practically three races: the Malays, the Chinese and the Tamils. By nature, the Malay is an idler,...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1484562023-03-05T17:23:34Z You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native Farish Ahmad Noor S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races Epistemic Colonised Native In the year 1907 the colonial entrepreneur and expert on tin-mining in British Malaya, CG Warnford-Lock, wrote thus in his book Mining in Malaya for Gold and Tin: From a labour point of view, there are practically three races: the Malays, the Chinese and the Tamils. By nature, the Malay is an idler, the Chinaman is a thief and the Indian is a drunkard. Yet each, in his special class of work, is both cheap and efficient, when properly supervised. (emphasis mine)1That the complexity of Malayan society, with its ethnically diverse population and its linguistic, cultural and religious differences, could be simply reduced to ‘practically three races’ that in turn bore three simple essential characteristics – idleness, criminality and drunkenness – is telling of how the order of knowledge and power that had dominated and defined the colony had also reduced its native inhabitants to stock caricatures that were permanently fixed and defined. Knowing the colonised native Other meant being in a position of epistemic leverage over that Other, and thus being able to define and frame the Other in whatever terms that suited the ideological needs of racialised colonial-capitalism at the time. Published version 2021-04-27T01:15:01Z 2021-04-27T01:15:01Z 2016 Journal Article Farish Ahmad Noor (2016). You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native. South East Asia Research, 24(2), 185-203. https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967828X16649043 0967-828X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148456 10.1177/0967828X16649043 2 24 185 203 en South East Asia Research © 2016 IP Publishing Ltd. This paper was published in South East Asia Research and is made available as an electronic reprint (preprint) with permission of IP Publishing Ltd. The published version is available at: [http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0967828X16649043]. One print or electronic copy may be made for personal use only. Systematic or multiple reproduction, distribution to multiple locations via electronic or other means, duplication of any material in this paper for a fee or for commercial purposes, or modification of the content of the paper is prohibited and is subject to penalties under law. 19 p. application/pdf |
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Social sciences::Sociology::Communities, classes and races Epistemic Colonised Native Farish Ahmad Noor You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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In the year 1907 the colonial entrepreneur and expert on tin-mining in British Malaya, CG Warnford-Lock, wrote thus in his book Mining in Malaya for Gold and Tin: From a labour point of view, there are practically three races: the Malays, the Chinese and the Tamils. By nature, the Malay is an idler, the Chinaman is a thief and the Indian is a drunkard. Yet each, in his special class of work, is both cheap and efficient, when properly supervised. (emphasis mine)1That the complexity of Malayan society, with its ethnically diverse population and its linguistic, cultural and religious differences, could be simply reduced to ‘practically three races’ that in turn bore three simple essential characteristics – idleness, criminality and drunkenness – is telling of how the order of knowledge and power that had dominated and defined the colony had also reduced its native inhabitants to stock caricatures that were permanently fixed and defined. Knowing the colonised native Other meant being in a position of epistemic leverage over that Other, and thus being able to define and frame the Other in whatever terms that suited the ideological needs of racialised colonial-capitalism at the time. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Farish Ahmad Noor |
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Farish Ahmad Noor |
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Farish Ahmad Noor |
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You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
title_full |
You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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You are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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you are under arrest : epistemic arrest and the endless reproduction of the image of the colonised native |
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2021 |
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