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Not just fryers of bananas and sweet potatoes: Literate and literary women in the nineteenth-century Malay world

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 December 2009

Abstract

I argue that women's literacy was more common than is usually supposed and that women engaged extensively with written literature, both as readers and writers. I also discuss the role of traditional Islamic education in transmitting literacy among girls. The article is based on the examination of a group of narrative poems written by women at the court of Penyengat.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The National University of Singapore 2010

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References

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38 Ibid., p. 325.

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41 That is, if ‘surat Kurais Raja Alam’ is Hikayat Koris Mengindera, as seems likely. See Di dalam berkekalan persahabatan, p. 40.

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43 Klinkert also noted that his copy of Syair Selindung Delima was ‘copied by a woman at Penyengat’, but did not provide a name. See Iskandar, Catalogue, p. 733.

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56 In Hikayat Bayan Budiman, ed. Winstedt (Kuala Lumpur: OUP, 1966), p. 146.

57 British Library B.5 (IO 2608) Hikayat Putra Jaya Pati, f. 26. I am indebted to Vladimir Braginsky for this reference, and for correcting Winstedt's claim that this text is a version of Hikayat Indraputra. See Winstedt, Richard Olof, History of classical Malay literature (Kuala Lumpur: MBRAS Reprint, 1996), pp. 52 and 57Google Scholar.

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67 Iskandar, Catalogue, pp. 417, 53, 418

68 The owner of the manuscript has the non-gender-specific name Encik Sulung, ‘cucu kepada Encik Ribut orang Tanjung Pinang’. Leiden University Library Klinkert 32, Hikayat Syah Firman, final page. See van der Putten, His word is the truth, p. 226.

69 Ming, Ding Choo, Raja Aisyah Sulaiman: Pengarang ulung wanita Melayu (Bangi: Penerbit Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia, 1999), pp. 175–86Google Scholar.

70 Possibly ‘hamba yang karib’ is a misreading of the more usual ‘hamba yang gharib’. Refer to Ding, Raja Aisyah Sulaiman, p. 179.

71 Personal communication from Annabel Teh Gallop, 24 Mar. 2004. For Tengku Ampuan Mariam's book on dance, see Ismail, Siti Zainon and Piah, Harun Mat, Lambang Sari: Tari Gamelan Terengganu (Bangi: UKM, 1986)Google Scholar.

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99 Tucker, Women in nineteenth-century Egypt, p. 124.

100 Puisi-puisi Raja Ali Haji, p. 433. This verse is marginalia on the earliest surviving manuscript, dated to 1914, and so may relate to a slightly later era. However, the manuscript did belong to a Penyengat woman, Raja Halimah Abdullah. Refer to Abu Hassan Sham, pp. 145–6, 363. A lebai running a school for female students is also the subject of an extremely ribald syair by Haji, Raja Ali, in Kitab pengetahuan bahasa, ed. Shaghir Abdullah, Hj. Wan Mohd. (Kuala Lumpur: Khazanah Fathaniyah, 1997), pp. 305–8Google Scholar.

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103 Watson Andaya, The flaming womb, p. 54.

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105 Ibid., pp. 46, 52.

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108 Ibid., p. 79.

109 Ibid., p. 52.