The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view

There is a trend among Malaysians in using the Hokkien term ‘Ah Beng’, in describing unsophisticated people. ‘Ah Beng’ means quite simply, a ‘country bumpkin’. However, there has not been any academic studies on the subject in Malaysia, whereas popular media tout it as a cultural icon. There are som...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chan, Suet Kay
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/1/SKCHAN_ACAH2010_0175_paper.docx
http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id my.um.eprints.2130
record_format eprints
spelling my.um.eprints.21302011-09-21T02:52:47Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/ The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view Chan, Suet Kay H Social Sciences (General) There is a trend among Malaysians in using the Hokkien term ‘Ah Beng’, in describing unsophisticated people. ‘Ah Beng’ means quite simply, a ‘country bumpkin’. However, there has not been any academic studies on the subject in Malaysia, whereas popular media tout it as a cultural icon. There are some issues related to the use of this term – for example, do people readily identify themselves as ‘Ah Beng/Ah Lian’ or is it a pejorative term? Furthermore, among Malaysian Chinese there is a divide between the English-speaking and Chinese-speaking groups. Do the English speaking groups deliberately conjure up a term to disassociate themselves from their Chinese-speaking counterparts, for fear of being seen as unmodernised? And why do the Chinese speaking Malaysian Chinese display these characteristics ‘mocked’ by the non-Chinese speaking Chinese – which include traits like the overt display of Western brand names, copying trends from East Asia, persistently sticking to their own mother tongue, and displaying a form of anti-intellectualism? In Singapore however, leading sociologist Chua Beng-Huat has spearheaded much of the academic literature on the ‘Ah Beng’, and charts its rise from ‘stereotype’ to a desirable subculture. This paper surveys the general public opinion in urban Malaysia of the concept of ‘Ah Beng’, using a total of 200 respondents from the urban youth in Kuala Lumpur. 2010-06 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/msword en http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/1/SKCHAN_ACAH2010_0175_paper.docx Chan, Suet Kay (2010) The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view. In: Asian Conference on the Social Sciences 2010, June, 2010, Osaka, Japan. (Unpublished)
institution Universiti Malaya
building UM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaya
content_source UM Research Repository
url_provider http://eprints.um.edu.my/
language English
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Chan, Suet Kay
The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
description There is a trend among Malaysians in using the Hokkien term ‘Ah Beng’, in describing unsophisticated people. ‘Ah Beng’ means quite simply, a ‘country bumpkin’. However, there has not been any academic studies on the subject in Malaysia, whereas popular media tout it as a cultural icon. There are some issues related to the use of this term – for example, do people readily identify themselves as ‘Ah Beng/Ah Lian’ or is it a pejorative term? Furthermore, among Malaysian Chinese there is a divide between the English-speaking and Chinese-speaking groups. Do the English speaking groups deliberately conjure up a term to disassociate themselves from their Chinese-speaking counterparts, for fear of being seen as unmodernised? And why do the Chinese speaking Malaysian Chinese display these characteristics ‘mocked’ by the non-Chinese speaking Chinese – which include traits like the overt display of Western brand names, copying trends from East Asia, persistently sticking to their own mother tongue, and displaying a form of anti-intellectualism? In Singapore however, leading sociologist Chua Beng-Huat has spearheaded much of the academic literature on the ‘Ah Beng’, and charts its rise from ‘stereotype’ to a desirable subculture. This paper surveys the general public opinion in urban Malaysia of the concept of ‘Ah Beng’, using a total of 200 respondents from the urban youth in Kuala Lumpur.
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Chan, Suet Kay
author_facet Chan, Suet Kay
author_sort Chan, Suet Kay
title The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
title_short The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
title_full The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
title_fullStr The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
title_full_unstemmed The Ah Beng subculture: a popular view
title_sort ah beng subculture: a popular view
publishDate 2010
url http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/1/SKCHAN_ACAH2010_0175_paper.docx
http://eprints.um.edu.my/2130/
_version_ 1643686852752834560
score 13.214268