Malay short stories in the 19th century

This study focuses on the Malay stories collection which were found at KITLV (Koninklij Instituut Voor de Taal-Lan-en Volkenkunde or well known as the Institute of Royal Linguistic and East Hindia Dutch Anthropology) and the manuscripts at the main library in Leiden, Netherland. The study examines M...

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Main Author: Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American-Eurasian Network for Scientific Information 2014
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/34417/1/Malay%20short%20stories%20in%20the%2019th%20century.pdf
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author Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah
author_facet Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah
author_sort Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah
collection UPM
description This study focuses on the Malay stories collection which were found at KITLV (Koninklij Instituut Voor de Taal-Lan-en Volkenkunde or well known as the Institute of Royal Linguistic and East Hindia Dutch Anthropology) and the manuscripts at the main library in Leiden, Netherland. The study examines Malay stories collection from the perspective of community. The methodology uses the psychological approach by Maslow. Maslow stresses several principles like physiological need, guaranteed safety, love, self appreciation and self perfection. The results of the study showed that traditional Malay stories community whether concious or unconscious incorporated the psychological elements in the stories. Thus, it showed that human has distinctive needs in continuity of life.
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spelling upm.eprints-344172016-09-15T07:20:40Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/34417/ Malay short stories in the 19th century Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah This study focuses on the Malay stories collection which were found at KITLV (Koninklij Instituut Voor de Taal-Lan-en Volkenkunde or well known as the Institute of Royal Linguistic and East Hindia Dutch Anthropology) and the manuscripts at the main library in Leiden, Netherland. The study examines Malay stories collection from the perspective of community. The methodology uses the psychological approach by Maslow. Maslow stresses several principles like physiological need, guaranteed safety, love, self appreciation and self perfection. The results of the study showed that traditional Malay stories community whether concious or unconscious incorporated the psychological elements in the stories. Thus, it showed that human has distinctive needs in continuity of life. American-Eurasian Network for Scientific Information 2014 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/34417/1/Malay%20short%20stories%20in%20the%2019th%20century.pdf Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah (2014) Malay short stories in the 19th century. Advances in Environmental Biology, 8 (spec.16). pp. 275-279. ISSN 1995-0756; ESSN: 1998-1066 http://www.aensiweb.com/old/aeb_Special9_2014.html
spellingShingle Nik Muhamad Affendi, Nik Rafidah
Malay short stories in the 19th century
title Malay short stories in the 19th century
title_full Malay short stories in the 19th century
title_fullStr Malay short stories in the 19th century
title_full_unstemmed Malay short stories in the 19th century
title_short Malay short stories in the 19th century
title_sort malay short stories in the 19th century
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/34417/1/Malay%20short%20stories%20in%20the%2019th%20century.pdf
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