Mat Salleh

This article is about A colloquial Malay expression for a Caucasian. For other uses, see Mat Salleh Rebellion.

The term "Mat Salleh" is often used by Malay speakers as a colloquial expression to refer to a white Caucasian.[note 1] How this expression came about is difficult to completely determine. This is because there exists several versions of its origins passed down by word, with little (or none) official documentation to ascertain this.[note 2] The different versions are:

Notes

  1. See Wikipedia's list of: ethnic slurs and nicknames given to the British colonials
  2. Various blogs with useful discussion threads, discussion forums, popular literature and newspaper reports have been looked into to find (1) a common consensus on the most agreed upon possible origins of the term, and (2) other available possible origins.

References

  1. Tan, S.H. (16 July 2000). "Interesting origins of the words Mat Salleh, ronggeng and satay" (Reprinted from New Straits Times,from the section "Focus", and the column "Ramblings" published on 16 Jul 2000). New Straits Times. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  2. Arope, Ani (29 Dec 1992). "Possible origin of Mat Salleh term". New Straits Times. p. 13. Retrieved 18 November 2012.
  3. MacVay, Jordon (27 Apr 2007). "Speaking Apa?" (See responses by readers:discussion thread started by "Ida" on 27 Apr 2007). MacVaysia.
  4. Chin, Grace V. S. (Mar 2009). "Reading the postcolonial allegory in Beth Yahp's The crocodile fury: Censored subjects, ambivalent spaces, and transformative bodies". Nebula. 6 (1): 93–115.

External links

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