The Negotiation between the Predominated Sacredness and Secular Popular Culture in Brunei Darussalam

Yong Liu (Design and Creative Industries, Universiti Brunei Darussalam)

Southeast Asia: A Multidisciplinary Journal

ISSN: 1819-5091

Article publication date: 15 December 2020

Issue publication date: 15 December 2020

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Abstract

In retrospectives on Brunei’s first feature film Gema Dari Menara (1968), commentators have tended to focus on either its historical representation of Brunei’s booming post-curfew years in the late 1960s as ‘a time capsule of Brunei’s lost pop history’, or the film’s propagandistic nature for Da’wah (religious propagation). In this paper, however, I will concentrate my observations on the aesthetic values of the film itself, including the narrative structure, plot design, camerawork, characterisation and character relationships, as well as the resulting artistic effects manifested by these production elements as a whole.

Putting all the propagandistic elements aside, I would like to argue that Gema Dari Menara, as a family melodrama, is carefully constructed and propelled by the above-mentioned filmmaking techniques. The drama not only tells the story of an intense familial conflict revolving around the theme of faith rooted in the Bruneian tradition, it also implies the necessity of an internal negotiation between the predominant Islamic ideology and the increasingly secularised Bruneian civil society at the time. While the implied negotiation may have been unintended or subconscious in the original making of the film, it is well-balanced and reflective of the political and social reality of Brunei as a British Protectorate in the late 1960s, foreshadowing the current coexistent status quo of the dominance and sacredness of MIB and the secular popular culture in Brunei.

Citation

Liu, Y. (2020), "The Negotiation between the Predominated Sacredness and Secular Popular Culture in Brunei Darussalam", Southeast Asia: A Multidisciplinary Journal, Vol. 20 No. 2, pp. 16-29. https://doi.org/10.1108/SEAMJ-02-2020-B1003

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

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License

This is an Open-Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited


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