Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose

Malaysia has the largest Chinese population apart from Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao. Literature in the Chinese language has taken root and developed in this area since 1919. As Malaysia is situated at the cross-roads of Eastern and Western civilizations, the mixture of cultures and la...

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Main Authors: Shy, F.P., Kheng, Y.K., Soon, L.T.
Format: Article
Published: 2011
Subjects:
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author Shy, F.P.
Kheng, Y.K.
Soon, L.T.
author_facet Shy, F.P.
Kheng, Y.K.
Soon, L.T.
author_sort Shy, F.P.
collection UM
description Malaysia has the largest Chinese population apart from Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao. Literature in the Chinese language has taken root and developed in this area since 1919. As Malaysia is situated at the cross-roads of Eastern and Western civilizations, the mixture of cultures and languages produced a Malaysian Chinese literature, quite different from the literature of China. Its most prominent distinction lies in the use of-language. The authors resort to vocabulary from local dialects and languages and specific foreign loanwords, achieving a strong local color of ``Southern seas''. The paper takes The Reader of Malaysian Chinese Prose as linguistic material to discuss ``malaysianized'' vocabulary, the influence of local culture on literary language and the deep cultural background of Malaysian Chinese literature.
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spelling um.eprints-146222015-11-07T02:21:55Z http://eprints.um.edu.my/14622/ Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose Shy, F.P. Kheng, Y.K. Soon, L.T. P Philology. Linguistics Malaysia has the largest Chinese population apart from Mainland China, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macao. Literature in the Chinese language has taken root and developed in this area since 1919. As Malaysia is situated at the cross-roads of Eastern and Western civilizations, the mixture of cultures and languages produced a Malaysian Chinese literature, quite different from the literature of China. Its most prominent distinction lies in the use of-language. The authors resort to vocabulary from local dialects and languages and specific foreign loanwords, achieving a strong local color of ``Southern seas''. The paper takes The Reader of Malaysian Chinese Prose as linguistic material to discuss ``malaysianized'' vocabulary, the influence of local culture on literary language and the deep cultural background of Malaysian Chinese literature. 2011 Article PeerReviewed Shy, F.P. and Kheng, Y.K. and Soon, L.T. (2011) Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose. Foreign Literature Studies, 33 (6). pp. 133-139.
spellingShingle P Philology. Linguistics
Shy, F.P.
Kheng, Y.K.
Soon, L.T.
Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title_full Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title_fullStr Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title_full_unstemmed Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title_short Dialect and region: The complex linguistic system of Malaysian Chinese prose
title_sort dialect and region the complex linguistic system of malaysian chinese prose
topic P Philology. Linguistics
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AT khengyk dialectandregionthecomplexlinguisticsystemofmalaysianchineseprose
AT soonlt dialectandregionthecomplexlinguisticsystemofmalaysianchineseprose