The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry

For the traditional Malay society, it is taboo to talk openly about sexuality. This is due to the perception that literary works that incorporate elements of sexuality will be criticised as weak and inferior work coming from an author with bad morals and character. Furthermore, the traditional Malay...

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Main Author: Hamdan, Rahimah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association of Computer Science and Information Technology Press (IACSIT) 2015
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/1/The%20king%20who%20loves%20sex%20the%20function%20of%20literature%20in%20traditional%20Malay%20poetry.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/
http://www.ijssh.org/
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spelling my.upm.eprints.466442018-02-22T08:32:04Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/ The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry Hamdan, Rahimah For the traditional Malay society, it is taboo to talk openly about sexuality. This is due to the perception that literary works that incorporate elements of sexuality will be criticised as weak and inferior work coming from an author with bad morals and character. Furthermore, the traditional Malay authors wrote at the request of the king. Hence, all that was written had to exalt the status of the king as the sovereign ruler. The works should be rich in 'character', so as to consolidate the integration of intellectual, epistemological and cultural values for the moral benefit of the community. However, in examining the literary genre of Hikayat such as Syair Seratus Siti, it has been found that these works include so many elements of sexuality that they indirectly reflect a gender system that was supported by the society. Using Braginsky’s (2001) perspective about the function of literature, this study will weave together two literary functions for entertainment and instruction at the same time. This means that elements of 'sexuality' (entertainment) must be synthesized with teaching functions for the benefit of the audience. The results show that Syair Seratus Siti successfully exploited those functions to the extent that they submerged the elements of sexuality that were reflected by the author from the start. International Association of Computer Science and Information Technology Press (IACSIT) 2015-03 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/1/The%20king%20who%20loves%20sex%20the%20function%20of%20literature%20in%20traditional%20Malay%20poetry.pdf Hamdan, Rahimah (2015) The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry. International Journal of Social Science and Humanity, 5 (3). pp. 291-298. ISSN 2010-3646 http://www.ijssh.org/ 10.7763/IJSSH.2015.V5.469
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description For the traditional Malay society, it is taboo to talk openly about sexuality. This is due to the perception that literary works that incorporate elements of sexuality will be criticised as weak and inferior work coming from an author with bad morals and character. Furthermore, the traditional Malay authors wrote at the request of the king. Hence, all that was written had to exalt the status of the king as the sovereign ruler. The works should be rich in 'character', so as to consolidate the integration of intellectual, epistemological and cultural values for the moral benefit of the community. However, in examining the literary genre of Hikayat such as Syair Seratus Siti, it has been found that these works include so many elements of sexuality that they indirectly reflect a gender system that was supported by the society. Using Braginsky’s (2001) perspective about the function of literature, this study will weave together two literary functions for entertainment and instruction at the same time. This means that elements of 'sexuality' (entertainment) must be synthesized with teaching functions for the benefit of the audience. The results show that Syair Seratus Siti successfully exploited those functions to the extent that they submerged the elements of sexuality that were reflected by the author from the start.
format Article
author Hamdan, Rahimah
spellingShingle Hamdan, Rahimah
The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
author_facet Hamdan, Rahimah
author_sort Hamdan, Rahimah
title The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
title_short The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
title_full The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
title_fullStr The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
title_full_unstemmed The king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional Malay poetry
title_sort king who loves sex: the function of literature in traditional malay poetry
publisher International Association of Computer Science and Information Technology Press (IACSIT)
publishDate 2015
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/1/The%20king%20who%20loves%20sex%20the%20function%20of%20literature%20in%20traditional%20Malay%20poetry.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/46644/
http://www.ijssh.org/
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score 13.160551