Logo image
'Non' Mediatised Images: Public Culture and (State) Television in Malaysia
Journal article   Peer reviewed

'Non' Mediatised Images: Public Culture and (State) Television in Malaysia

Umi M Khattab
International Communication Gazette, Vol.68(4), pp.347-361
2006
url
https://doi.org/10.1177/1748048506065766View
Published Version

Abstract

Journalism and Professional Writing Communication and Media Studies culture ethnicity Malay Malaysia minorities policies postcolonial public broadcasting state Television
Television has been a state privilege in Malaysia since independence from British rule in 1957 and instrumental in Malaysia's attempt to fashion and display public culture. RTM (Radio Television Malaysia) has functioned as a state mouthpiece, since 1963, most often representing deep differences between ethnic groups, and in the process manufacturing sacred and non-sacred circuits of cultures. Under a one-party, Malay-dominated, national coalition rule since independence, state television tends to reflect Malay culture in hegemonic and monolithic terms, failing to represent diverse differences within and between various ethnic and indigenous groups in Malaysia. The article explores how the state strategizes public and private television in manufacturing a public culture, arguing that the Vision 2020 desire to create a public Malay(sian) culture for polyethnic and multireligious Malaysia seems a myth mediated through polarized spheres. If state television is public service broadcasting (PSB), then it is clear that it is a utopia yet to arrive in postcolonial nations such as Malaysia.

Details

Metrics

723 Record Views
Logo image