The Short Films of Mien Ly
and an Articulation of Feminist Queer Theory in Malaysia
Alicia Izharuddin
Introduction
-
As the enactment of resistance, provocative portrayals of sexuality and
female desire have become signature themes of women filmmakers in
postcolonial 'Third World' nations like Malaysia.[1]
Representations of women's bodies and sexuality in Malaysian filmmaking
cultures, both mainstream and independent, become a site where the
boundary between 'tradition' and modernity is contested. More
specifically, images of female bodies and sexuality have become the
canvas for an articulation of cultural struggle and anxieties about the
pace of modernisation and Islamic resurgence.[2]
In the short films of the queer feminist Malaysian filmmaker Mien Ly,
women's sexualities and desires transgress cultural boundaries that are
marked by a deep colonial imprint. And for this reason, it can be argued
that such transgressions are decolonial in intent and 'seditious' in
effect. As a queer feminist filmmaking practice, Mien Ly's short films
offer a vision or snapshots of possibilities for a decolonising queer
feminist theory and praxis in Malaysia.
-
In this paper I elaborate on the following assertions: a decolonising
queer feminist approach involves a specific, if often marginal, location
of enunciation and an orientation (following Sara Ahmed's definition of
the term[3]) towards a
projected future of queer and feminist ideality; radical cinema offers
feminist and queer scholars a focus for reflecting on such a future
characterised by women's sexual self-determination and the
decolonisation of one's subjectivity; an analysis of postcolonial Third
World women's cinema in particular is a dialogue with the creative
testimony of marginal women filmmakers whose creative production
problematises feminist academic pedagogy; a future and imminent ideality
of women's sexual self-determination and decolonisation of
subjectivities may be shared between scholars and filmmakers but the
dialogue between the two is not necessarily equal and therefore needs to
be critically constructed. This paper is an exercise in such a
dialogue.
-
In writing this paper I am informed by the decolonising critique of
'First World' feminist theory of Chandra Talpade Mohanty who challenges
the epistemic assumptions of a feminism that constructs and reinforces
the 'Third World' as its Other.[4]
Through the authorial signature of First World feminism, Third World
women are rendered monolithic in contrast to the historically specific
vantage point of First World women. In concert with her critique,
Mohanty urges postcolonial feminist knowledge production by Third World
women through the restoration of their local and historical
specificities and experiences. Mohanty's critique of western feminist
theory and its epistemic Other, the Third World woman, is employed here
to mobilise a different kind of decolonising critique, one that targets
the colonial construction of gender and sexual subjectivities in
contemporary Malaysia. The aim is to illuminate forms of queer and
feminist resistance to colonial disciplinary regimes that restrict queer
desire and restore the specificities of queer Malaysian Chinese women.
Queer and feminist resistance in this instance is bound to the cultural
and political possibilities within independent cinematic practice.
-
This paper is situated in the corpus of literature on visual media
within the context of global and postcolonial gay imaginaries. Engaged
with critiques of 'global queering' and 'sexual westernisation' in the
Asia Pacific, this paper is also aligned with criticisms of androcentric
commentaries on transnational queer cultures. In the attempt to
dismantle the hegemony of western knowledge production, a decolonising
approach to queer theory has to avoid the pitfall of essentialism; that
is, avoid framing local non-normative practices as presumably authentic
and locked in the past. While the proposal for a hybrid model of
queering is attractive, the localising of queer theory in Malaysia must
move beyond east-west binarism and decentre 'the west' within the field.
In agreement with other authors on the need for material grounding in
the practice of theorising queer cultures in Asia, in this article I
suggest that queer theory in Malaysia must be understood chiefly through
intersectional paradigms.[5]
-
Coined by Kimberlé Crenshaw, intersectionality began as a critical
response to the silence of white feminists on African-American women's
oppression and the anti-racist movement's subordination of the needs of
women in the name of racial unity. Crenshaw argued that anti-sexist
politics and anti-racist approaches very rarely correspond with each
other and as a result negatively implicate the understanding of black
women as subjects for feminist intervention.[6]
As an analytical tool, intersectionality aims to further feminist
agendas by not only examining gender as a source of female oppression
but by illuminating other dimensions of power such as class, race,
sexuality and disability, and in particular, the neglected social
locations in which two (or more) of these dimensions intersect. The idea
of Malaysian-ness may be understood intersectionally as a set of
shifting and overlapping categories and as a site of (uneven)
multiplicity. Social identities in Malaysia are already mediated and
overdetermined by ethnic/racial categories, linguistic and regional
differences. Although attempts have been made to transcend these
differences between Malaysians, through personal affirmation that one is
'Malaysian first' and '1 Malaysia' sloganeering, such attempts have yet
to accomplish the impossible: the embrace of a single, deracialised
national identity. Multiplicities as a concept presents itself as a
challenge to established identities and function as a source of
political and intellectual possibility for an explicitly localised queer
theory specific to Malaysia.
-
In writing this paper I have two main aims. First, to articulate an
aesthetic 'vision' of Malaysian queer feminist politics using two short
films by the independent filmmaker Mien Ly. The two short films in
question, My Confession Diary (2005) and 2 Boys, 2 Girls and a Beat Up Car
(2009), depict the intersecting themes of female sexuality and desire,
civil agency and cultural transgression. Second, with the aesthetic
'vision' of a Malaysian queer feminist filmmaker articulated, some
thoughts are outlined for aspects of decolonising queer theory in
Malaysia through a post-colonial feminist lens. I argue that queer
theory in Malaysia cannot be sustained without feminism due to the
feminist contribution to local queer cultures and politics. Towards
these two aims, I address the following: points of convergence and
divergence for feminism and queer theory: the context of Mien Ly's
professional career as an independent filmmaker; an analysis of the two
aforementioned films; and an outline for a contextualised feminist
articulation of queer theory in Malaysia.
The intersections between feminism and queer theory
-
An often overlooked intersection exists between feminism and queer
politics in Malaysia. Moreover, a sustained discussion on the ways that
Malaysian feminism and queer theorising inform each other is lacking.
The literature on queer politics and feminism as constitutive of
Malaysia's liberal civil society discusses queer identities and
feminists as if they are separate entities who nonetheless share common
platforms in the pursuit of human rights, freedom of expression and
civil liberties. Major feminist organisations in Malaysia are recognised
as heteronormative in political outlook, suggesting their distance from
queer agendas.[7] However, Malaysian
feminism is represented by individuals from a variety of backgrounds,
not least from LGBTQ communities. Taking into consideration the
significant presence and voices of queer feminist women active in
rights-based politics, one may feel compelled to ask: to what extent can
feminism inform and define queer theorising in Malaysia? What and where
are the points of convergences and departures between feminism and
queer politics in Malaysia?
-
Such questions re-ignite previous debates about the departure of queer
theory from feminism and gender studies brought about by the apparent
heterosexism of feminism and the male dominance and misogyny of queer
theory/activism.[8] More
fundamentally, the division was prompted by the separation of sex and
gender in feminist inquiry, leaving sex and sexuality the preserve of
queer theory.[9] Other divergences
that separate feminism and queer theory further are to be found in
certain assumptions stressed in the two fields. Queer as an intellectual
orientation 'suggests a positioning as oppositional to both the
heterosexual and homosexual mainstream, and thereby signifies a protest
against the binary.'[10] Feminism,
or rather, feminisms, do not always challenge the heterosexual and
homosexual mainstream. Instead, certain theoretically influential
feminisms have the problematic tendency of reproducing 'irrefutable'
sexual differences between women and men and maintaining the
heterosexual gender binary.[11]
-
The separation of feminism and queer politics/theory means that those
who form subjectivities at the intersection of femininity, feminism,
female homosexuality and queerness may risk being marginalised on both
sides of the separation or worse, rendered absent, effaced and silenced
from representation. For this reason, intersectionality as a feminist
concept is crucial to the construction of subjectivities that are more
than just queer because as a paradigm for theory and praxis it calls
attention to 'how single-axis thinking undermines legal thinking,
disciplinary knowledge production, and struggles for social justice.'[12]
When put into theory and practice, multi-dimensional intersectional
thinking reveals the overlapping forms of discrimination and oppression
experienced by singular individuals.
-
Despite the divergences, feminism and queer theory are related to each
other and often overlap. In their encounters, both share critical
relationships to a set of hegemonic formations. Early intersectional
feminist theorising was produced by lesbian feminists of colour like
Audre Lorde and Gloria Anzaldua who established the notion of
'inter-dependent and (non-dominant) mutual differences' between women
along the lines of race, class and (lesbian) sexuality.[13]
That the contribution of these notable feminists of colour to queer
theorising goes mostly unremarked or erased altogether reveals the [Ms
A1][BC2]unmarked whiteness and racism within the field of queer theory.
Both feminism and queer theory have also been criticised for
homogenising power struggles across the world with the imperialistic
intent of envisioning the hegemonic sisterhood and global gay
respectively.[14]
-
More recently, schisms within feminist discourse on the inclusion of
trans-women's issues, in particular against the gender identification by
trans-women as women within the pejoratively named 'trans-exclusionary
radical feminism' (TERF), have deepened the divide between feminism and
queer theory. By contrast, the trans-women—or Mak Nyah—and transmen
communities in Malaysia are closely aligned with local feminist
activism. There are possible reasons for this alliance. First, there is a
lack of a sophisticated and locally developed theory on gender in
Malaysia and a disengagement with (radical) feminist debates on
trans-inclusion. Second, only until recently, transgender voices and
influence in Malaysian feminist discourse were marginalised.[15]
With greater political influence the transgender community in Malaysia
will be able to steer the direction of debates on gender in Malaysia and
illuminate what being a Mak Nyah and transman means in local feminist
discourse.
Mien Ly: A profile
-
In this section I trace the creative career of Mien Ly as a filmmaker
whose work is situated in the shifting nexus of 'New Asia,' the
development of new media technologies in the region, conservative
religio-politics, and the rise of youth activism and civil society
movements in Malaysia in the early 2000s. These trends function as both
enabling and constraining factors requiring strategic approaches by
actors who wish to develop feminist and queer projects in a socially
conservative nation. The impetus for Mien Ly's filmmaking career
meanwhile is buoyed by new and established cultural trends in Malaysia,
namely the emergence of the Do-It-Yourself (DIY) independent filmmaking
movement, the queer possibilities opened up by new information
technologies during the Mahathir era, and the long-running influx of
western media cultures which expanded with these technologies.[16]
-
The independent filmmaking movement in Malaysia can be characterised as
'underground, low-budget, non-profit oriented, guerrilla filmmaking, and
made without consideration of being screened in censor-ridden
mainstream cinemas.[17] Since the
watershed production of Amir Muhammad's Lips to Lips in 2000, the DIY
independent filmmaking movement has developed into a niche yet
culturally significant genre in its challenge to mainstream filmmaking
practice.[18] Mien Ly's involvement
in the Malaysian women's movement coincided with her budding
independent filmmaking career that began with her participation in the
making of short film projects by her friends and colleagues in
university. Her first short film in 2003, The Swing,
made for a university course, about betrayal in the family is
autobiographical and influenced by her consciousness-raising work at the
Women's Aid Organisation (WAO), a Malaysian women's shelter. Other
short films with a feminist edge followed; 2007's Laundry concerning the plight of female domestic workers in Malaysia, Harga Cinta (The Price of Love) in 2008, on gender and food security, and Happy Massage on sex workers and HIV, from 2010.
-
By making short films about female sexuality and marginalised
communities, Mien Ly is responding to a patriarchal context that
punishes and discriminates against minorities and often cracks down on
dissent. Like many other independent filmmakers who are ethnic Chinese
Malaysians, Mien Ly is excluded from participating in the
Malay-dominated mainstream film industry, making her medium of choice an
expression of resistance to the prevailing discrimination in Malaysia's
popular culture.[19] And yet as
female film practitioners, Mien Ly and other women filmmakers are
under-represented within the male-dominated independent filmmaking
community in Malaysia. Critical of the lack of access to filmmaking and
screening opportunities, Mien Ly and her friends established Filmmakers
Anonymous in 2006, a cooperative venture for amateur and first-time
Malaysian filmmakers to make and exhibit their films at screening
events. In 2010, in an attempt to address the dearth of women in
independent filmmaking and nuanced representations of female sexuality
in film, Mien Ly launched HerStory Malaysia, a collective of Malaysian
women filmmakers, at Seksualiti Merdeka, a sexuality rights arts and
culture festival.[20] Since then, she has exhibited her films in international queer and lesbian feminist conferences and film festivals.
-
Although Mien Ly has been successful in generating public interest in
films made by the Filmmakers Anonymous and HerStory Malaysia project,
she has been the target of criticism for making overtly 'personal' films
and activist 'propaganda.'[21]
Voiced by members of the local independent filmmaking community, these
troubling criticisms undermine the politics of so-called 'women's
issues' in the Malaysian creative sphere. They also underline the
heterogeneity of power relations and tensions within the independent
filmmaking community that compelled Mien Ly to pursue separate
collaborations with other women filmmakers. Although the current
literature describes independent filmmaking in Malaysia as a medium for
political criticism, it has yet to fully explore the role of Malaysian
women filmmakers like Mien Ly, and the likes of Norhayati Kaprawi,
Nadira Illana and Nadiah Hamzah who make films on feminist issues for
public contemplation. An analysis of Mien Ly's short films herein
addresses this lacuna with an aim to promote further discussion on
gender and sexuality in the Malaysian independent filmmaking community
as a medium for queer and feminist politics in Malaysia.
A vision of feminist and queer Malaysian politics in two short films by Mien Ly
-
My Confession Diary
is one of Mien Ly's earliest short films and exemplifies her foray into
experimental feminist filmmaking. There is no soundtrack in the video.
Without sound, the video has only textual and visual elements consisting
of close-up montages featuring a solitary young woman in a room. The
montages show the woman perform both surreal and mundane acts, such as
dipping a dead fish, a stone, bolts, and a soft toy into a fish tank and
sitting alone in the darkened room. The expression of the woman in the
film oscillates between indifference and emotional agony. A line of text
appears throughout the film in the lower half of the frame, like
subtitles but typed in real time, that represents the woman's thoughts
in the form of entries in a diary. In one early scene, the woman
masturbates on her bed. The camera is placed at a low angle and out of
focus, obscuring her face during the intimate act. As she masturbates,
her thoughts are addressed to a male lover who is anachronistically
traditional ('100 years ago, I tied up my feet, because you said the
smaller my feet, the more beautiful I am').
-
The confessional diary 'entries' reveal a number of issues relating to
female sexuality. Among them is a woman's struggle to reconcile her
desire to be an active sexual participant with the expectations of her
lover and society imposed on her to be a passive object of male wants
and needs. There is a reference to the 'open coffeeshop,' a Malaysian
euphemism to denote the exposure of one's underwear when sitting in an
'unlady-like' manner. A reminder that a girl should always conceal her
'coffeeshop' suggests that the policing of female sexuality begins from a
young age and, as an adult, a Malaysian woman's bodily autonomy
continues to be policed by oppressive social customs. In a later scene,
there is an oblique reference to imminent violence and harassment
represented by the foreboding 'footsteps' heard at a 'women's festival.'
Her confession of fear of violence and harassment speaks of an anxiety
that undermines female bodily autonomy in public spaces even in those
designated as 'safe spaces' such as a feminist or women's event. This
anxiety is contrasted with a 'feminist' psychology of fearlessness
represented, in the film's text, by a feminist friend at the festival
who hears the 'footsteps' and yet is liberated from the fear of
harassment.
-
The young woman begins to reclaim her identity towards the end of the
short film. She attacks a wall covered in photographs of her lover,
during which time the text across the scene signifies a yearning for
transcendence beyond her physical and psychic immobility. During this
scene, the character ponders on the rigid constructions of Malaysian
femininity that restrict her movements through the wearing of
high-heeled shoes and an inability to wander in a park alone. In the
film's climax, photographs of her lover are set on fire in a plant pot
as the text describes female independence and reclamation of female
sexuality ('I can go anywhere. With or without anyone. No footsteps. No
gender. No fear. It feels so.… sexy, to be free'). Soil is then added to
the ashes of the burnt photographs for a houseplant to grow in,
signifying (re)birth.
Figure 1. A scene from My Confession Diary. Source. Mien Ly
|
-
My Confession Diary bears several hallmarks of feminist
filmmaking. To begin with, feminist filmmakers tend to produce similar
kinds of content in their films, namely about women struggling in the
public domain of formal and informal politics.[22]
Feminist films and incidentally, women's diaries, are 'testimonies to
the struggle women wage to create a language, to formulate a stable
sense of self, and to survive economic dependency on men.'[23] As testimonies, they often feature women speaking to the camera or in the case of My Confession Diary, entries of a woman's diary. My Confession Diary
is a tribute to the lost art of feminist counter-cinema whose purpose
is to break down the patriarchal system of narrative in cinema through
avant-garde conventions.[24] The
lack of narrative serves to deny the pleasure of the male gaze and
reclaim other cinematic pleasures that female spectators are thought to
identify with. Made initially for a local music group, My Confession Diary
as a feminist commentary on desire and female sexuality also suggests
that feminist politics can be refashioned as popular culture. The
malleability of Mien Ly's short film confirms Joanne Lim's observation
on the lack of distinction between popular culture and youth political
participation through new media production in Malaysia.25 This very
malleability exhibits an intertextuality, both ontologically speaking
and as social-political praxis, as the short film complicates the easy
generic boundaries that separate different cultural texts. Without the
definitive, closed-off boundaries that distinguish cultural texts from
each other, in this case as pop music video and feminist avant garde
short film, intertexts such as My Confession Diary become more resistant to commodification and the absorption into the capitalist logic of production and consumption.
-
My Confession Diary lacks a clear narrative and features a
nameless protagonist who engages in a range of clichéd and surreal acts
brought about by failed romance. The use of surrealism and cliché
invites a wellspring of ideas for discussion on form and aesthetics.
However, it is the lack of a soundtrack which foregrounds the woman's
'voice' that I want to focus on in an identification of My Confession Diary
as a short film with critically 'ethnographic' qualities (see below).
Without a sound track, the viewer's attention is drawn only to images
and the text that constitute the protoganist's 'voice.' What the text
reveals is frequently incommensurate with the images in the film,
destabilising the traditional cinematic form that mandates the 'correct'
alignment of picture and sound to produce a coherent film sequence.
Because it lacks a narrative, what the short film offers instead are
snapshots and visions that juxtapose cultural repression with female
sexual determination. When transgressing patriarchal culture in Malaysia
becomes itself a 'sexy' act, Mien Ly transposes the motivation of the
nameless female protagonist into a distinctly queer 'logic of the
libidinal' whereby resistance is about and aligned with desire and
pleasure.
-
My Confession Diary shares a few similarities with the 1989 Surname Viet Given Name Nam, a film by the avant garde feminist filmmaker Trinh T. Minh-Ha. Surname Viet
also features subtitled testimonials by postcolonial Third World women.
Distance is established between the voice and the image of the woman in
My Confession Diary and Surname Viet through the use of subtitles. However, unlike My Confession Diary, the subtitles in Surname Viet
obscure the faces of the women as they speak to the camera about
Vietnamese tradition and patriarchal culture. Trinh deliberately
obscures the source of the women's speaking voice in Surname Viet to problematise the status of the Third World Woman as the 'truth teller' commonly found in western feminist discourse.[26]
-
In My Confession Diary, the nameless woman's 'voice' or entries
of her diary represent a 'written' testimony of what it means to be a
woman caught between an arcane patriarchal culture (the practice of
feet-binding) and modernity (the freedom to roam public spaces alone as a
woman). The film is, according to Mien Ly, one of her most personal and
semi-autobiographical short films. It is her testimonial as a woman and
Malaysian filmmaker in a society that silences and marginalises women.
As a postcolonial Third World feminist whose medium is film, Mien Ly's
filmic voice in My Confession Diary is an 'interventionist
strategy against subjugation/signification' constructed by patriarchal
culture but also western feminist discourse.[27]
Through its lack of sound, its playful and 'imperfect' use of language,
avant garde visual metaphors, and representation of femininity that
destabilises the (masculine) pleasures of narrative story-telling, Mien
Ly's postcolonial tongue/camera is de-objectified in relation to
patriarchal narratives of Malaysian femininity and homogenising
narratives of Third World women. Her films are projections of the
subaltern whose narrative incoherence and visual rhetoric complicate the
construction of Third World women in feminist scholarship.
-
2 Boys, 2 Girls and a Beat Up Car begins in a car driven by Beth,
a human rights lawyer and her passenger, Katherine, who, as the film
unfolds, is revealed as Beth's secret lover. The two women are on their
way to meet their respective male partners, Ah Heng and David, who are
jogging in a forest. While waiting for the two women, Ah Heng and David
talk about the women as intercutting scenes from the past show the
circumstances in which the men met their partners for the first time.
David met the strong-willed and magnetic Beth at a party, while Ah Heng
and Katherine, a political journalist, quarrel in their first meeting in
an internet café. The men remark on how strikingly similar the two
women are; both are ballsy and passionate about human rights. The men
and women in 2 Boys, 2 Girls are Mien Ly's signature characters:
they are irreverent, playful and crude, who share 'private' moments of
peeing and farting together.
-
Two key scenes from the past intercuts the men's musings about the two
women; Katherine's detention by the police for exposing high-level
corruption and her initial encounter with Beth, her defence lawyer.
Their powerful attraction to each other in their first meeting,
signalled in a lingering shot of their interlocking gaze and Beth's
reassuring grip on Katherine's arm, is quickly established. When their
car pulls up towards Ah Heng and David in the film's closing scene, the
camera is pulled away in a long shot. The exchange between the women and
the men is not heard but the effect appears to be devastating. As the
car drives away leaving the angry and shell-shocked men quite literally
in the dust, Beth and Katherine formalise their love by holding each
other's hand on the car's gear shift knob.
Figure 2. In 2 Boys, 2 Girls and a Beat Up Car, Beth (right) reassures Katherine (left) that she will be released from detention. Source. Mien Ly
|
-
The viewer is able to conjecture that the women are kindred spirits
('They are damn kam ching,' says Ah Heng) before the women hold hands at
the end..[28] As outspoken and
fearless activists with a political cause, Beth and Katherine represent
ideal Malaysian feminist figures. By contrast, the men, whose careers
and political orientations are undefined, are boorish and homophobic.
Intercutting between the past and present, the film uses temporal
oscillation to narrate a progression, not least towards the affirmation
of the women's queer identities, budding love, and happiness as they
drive off into the forest. In 2 Boys, 2 Girls, the past is
heteronormative, the future is full of queer possibilities. In fact, the
car is a literal and metaphorical vehicle that transports them on a
journey from heteronormativity to some uncertain but nonetheless queer
destination. The women's movement into a new temporality, a distinctly
queer one, coheres with José Esteban Muñoz's formulation that queerness
is an event defined by its imminence; 'always on the horizon'[29]
. Muñoz's definition of queerness is one that is not yet here, a
futurity that is perceived through one's critical and affective
faculties. In fact, the scene in which Katherine and Beth drive away
into the future, away from their ex-boyfriends, verily embodies a vision
of queerness that is visible only in the distance.
-
Aside from the explicit reference to same-sex female romance, 2 Boys, 2 Girls
makes implicit and sly allusions to conservative social and familial
expectations and repressive government policies against gay men.[30]
These are agonising concerns to contend with in Malaysian society
marked by a homophobic colonial imprint. The challenges of being a
lesbian and queer women in Malaysia have also been recorded.[31]
However, the cultural stigma of female homosexuality in Malaysia is
relatively less pernicious than male homosexuality. The law that
prohibits sodomy in Malaysia, an arcane colonial legislation inherited
from British India, is conflated with the criminalisation of male gay
sexual relationships. It has been invoked to infamous effect in the
conviction of sodomy of the former deputy prime minister of Malaysia,
Anwar Ibrahim, in 2000. By contrast, debates concerning same-sex
relations between women have not been couched in political or legalistic
terms as male homosexuality and transgender identity have been.[32] In fact, queer women's issues in Malaysia are deeply marginalised and little understood.
-
As a couple, Beth and Katherine will face difficulties forging their own
course. The tribulations of their uncharted future ahead is felt by
Beth: 'Not going to be easy with the boys, this country, this society,
our families.' Although the two women are oriented towards a queer
future, they are still postcolonial subjects subjected by colonial
legislation that criminalises homosexuality and enforces detention
without trial. Their negotiation with the colonial imprint of
contemporary Malaysian culture thus requires both a look backward and a
look forwards. As progressive political subjects, Beth and Katherine
speak the language of human rights (against Katherine's allegedly
unlawful detention). Their progressively political and queer identity
communicate interlocking ideals about a broadly conceived idea of social
progress promoted by feminists and more recently by queer activists in
Malaysia.[33]
Mapping the ground for a decolonising queer feminist theory in Malaysia
-
My Confession Diary and 2 Boys, 2 Girls explore the themes
of sexual determination and mobility as freedom, themes that motivate
Mien Ly as a filmmaker. Sexuality in Mien Ly's films is shot through a
decolonising postcolonial feminist lens that projects a vision of sexual
self-determination and decentres the heteronormative femininity
expected of Malaysian women. Her short films offer snapshots of feminist
and queer experience in Malaysia, a collage featuring instances of
love, loss, vulnerability and resistance by women who move along the
shifting intersections of Malaysian Chinese, queer, and feminist
subjectivities. The theme of space interrogates the gendered notions of
public and private spheres and is at the centre of debates in Malaysia
about the policing of (homo)sexuality and its banishment to the private
sphere. Being 'out,' openly transgender or genderqueer in Malaysia has
violent repercussions particularly for Muslims whose lives are subjected
to Sharia laws and non-legally binding fatwas.[34]
Because of repressive laws and the policing of sexuality, mobility
through the act of migration to western societies has become an
important undertaking for many Malaysian queers, not least for Mien Ly
who has spent four years in England, Europe and Mexico. Seen through the
lens of class and race, however, mobility/migration for queer
Malaysians abroad is fraught with contradictions. As Jasbir Puar argues,
while 'gay and lesbian tourism [represents] an ironic marker of an
elitist cosmopolitan mobility, a group momentarily decriminalised
through its purchasing power … immigrants are increasingly criminalised
and contained.'[35]
-
While postcolonial feminist thinking requires one to be attentive to
class structures within the economy of desire and knowledge production,
the short films discussed in this paper do not. That the characters in
the short films speak in effortless Malaysian English says a thing or
two about the privileged middle-class background of its filmmaker and
her intended audience. The English language spoken in the films also
enacts scenes from what Rey Chow calls the 'racialised encounter with
language with (post)coloniality' in which postcolonial subjects speak in
a language that is not theirs.[36]
Postcolonial subjects of the imperial periphery like Malaysia are
reminded of their inauthentic status as speakers of 'Manglish,' a creole
with a predominantly English vocabulary but augmented by local
intonation and Malay and Hokkien grammar structure. By contrast, the
only time Malay is spoken is in 2 Boys, 2 Girls when Katherine
expresses her outrage at the police's unlawful detention which suggests
the association of power and repression with Malay identity.
-
Through its constitutional and legal apparatuses, Malaysian society
still lives in the shadow of colonialism. But the envisioning of another
Malaysia, one that defies legal heteronormativity and hegemonic
cultural structure is hardly regarded as an anti-colonial one, because
its object of opposition—the imperialist entity or 'centre'—is absent.
Instead, the British colonial administrators have been replaced by new a
'centre,' a mainly Malay elite that administers a colonial government
and its colonial legislation and cultural constructs. Thus the
decolonising critique is distinguished from anti-colonialism in this
article as a methodological orientation rather than a nationalist
project to undermine colonialism. The postcolonial dream of political
independence from the British and the creation of a new nation was
substituted by rapid development and modernisation in the 1970s and
1980s in order to create a broad middle class. Rather than looking back
towards its colonial past, Malaysia as a postcolonial state is
forward-facing, towards a perpetually unfolding modernity.
-
The trajectory of Malaysia as a modernising postcolonial state was
founded on the development and enrichment of a Malay middle class,
defined broadly as an ethnic group that not only speaks Malay, but
habitually practices Malay customs, and observes Islam. While the
hegemony of Malay culture is maintained through 'invented traditions,'
other Malaysian ethnic groups historically uprooted from different caste
communities in India and various regions of China become a people
without a past.[37] As a means of
maintaining hegemony, the identity of Chinese and Indian Malaysians are
measured against the historical markers of Malay culture.[38]
Groups and individuals who challenge laws that are enforced for the
preservation of 'harmony' and 'security' of the nation are subversive
and unlawfully 'seditious.'
-
The legal and cultural constraints in Malaysia outlined above represent
the local and historical specificities and experiences of the subject
conceived through a decolonising feminist and queer lens. As a queer
Chinese Malaysian woman, Mien Ly speaks and films from multiple sites of
marginality that require an intersectional approach to bring to light
facets of identity that would otherwise be subsumed under
over-deterministic categories of race, ethnicity and religion in
Malaysia. Seen from an intersectional perspective, queer Chinese
Malaysian women have limited representational currency; they are
marginalised in feminist discourse on Malaysian women and invisible in
debates on queer politics in Malaysia. However, through the creative
medium of film, the multiply marginalised 'subaltern' is able to speak
and convey a testimonial on gender and sexuality that challenges the
normative construction of Malaysian femininity.
Concluding remarks
-
Empowered by political claims to knowing and experiencing queer
femininity in Malaysia, the short films by Mien Ly come with a authorial
signature that has an 'ethnographic' quality. They are film texts
produced by a non-white woman whose articulations about femininity and
female desire invert the normative paradigm of the First World feminist
and male ethnographer who speak from a framework of imperialist and
patriarchal authority. In addition to labelling Third World female
filmmakers as 'speaking subalterns,' Gwendolyn Audrey Foster writes that
their cinematic medium is a creative 'testimony,' a site for a
'de-objectified postcolonial tongue/camera.'[39]
-
Although, in this paper I have not challenged the problematic
presuppositions of feminism and queer theory that have traditionally
separated the two, I have made inroads in thinking about how they may
converge to produce a localised articulation of queer theory in
Malaysia. I have also proposed that a feminist approach to queer theory
can illuminate androcentric and sexist biases and the effacement of
political and creative contributions by queer women in Malaysia feminist
activism. A decolonisation of queer theory informed by feminism can
take the lead from the intellectual and political trajectory of Third
World Feminism which addresses two projects. The first project 'is one
of deconstructing and dismantling' of hegemonic discourses; the second
consists of 'building and constructing' the 'formulation of autonomous,
geographically, historically, and culturally grounded feminist (and
queer) concerns and strategies.'[40]
-
Finally, feminist approaches to queer theory in Malaysia can situate
culture and knowledge production by Malaysian queers and feminists
within a context that is beleaguered by legal repercussions and hostile
to minorities and women's rights. The making of independent films as
political critique is a strategy deployed by small-scale media activists
and by Mien Ly in her short films as discussed above. As a feminist
independent filmmaker, her films about queer identities and female
sexuality bring to light issues and identities frequently marginalised
and effaced at the intersection of gender and sexuality in a local
context overdetermined by ethnic, religious and linguistic differences.
Through their snapshots and vision, the state of multiple marginalities
presented in Mien Ly's short films activate the idea of queerness that
is 'open to a continuing critique of its exclusionary operations.'[41]
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Mien Ly and Jun Zubillaga Pow for their generosity and kind advice.
Notes
[1] The term 'Third World' is a much
contested term in feminist research for its potentially homogenising and
Eurocentric biases that may preclude transnational forms of
identifications. Nonetheless, the term 'Third World' is used here to
contrast the structural inequalities between 'First World' and
'postcolonial 'Third World' feminist knowledge production.
[2] See Khoo Gaik Cheng's discussion on the portrayal of Malay female sexuality in Malaysian cinema in Reclaiming Adat: Contemporary Malaysian Film and Literature, Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2006, pp. 125–57.
[3] Sara Ahmed, 'Towards a queer phenomenology,' GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies vol. 12, no. 4 (2006): 543–74, p. 543.
[4] Chandra Talpade Mohanty, 'Under western eyes: Feminist scholarship and colonial discourses,' in Third World Women and the Politics of Feminism, ed. Chandra Talpade Mohanty, Anne Russo and Lourdes Torres, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1991, pp. 51–80. p. 51.
[5] See Fran Martin, Peter Jackson, Mark McLelland and Audrey Yue (eds), AsiaPacifiqueer: Rethinking Genders and Sexualities, Champaign: University of Illinois Press, 2008, pp. 6–7.
[6] Kimberlé Crenshaw,
'Demarginalizing the intersection of race and sex: a Black feminist
critique of antidiscrimination doctrine, feminist theory, and antiracist
politics,' University of Chicago Legal Forum vol. 14 (1989): 139–67, p. 141.
[7] Julian C.H. Lee, 'Sexuality rights activism in Malaysia: The case of Seksualiti Merdeka,' in Social Activism in Southeast Asia, ed. Michele Ford, New York and London: Routledge, 2012, pp. 170–86.
[8] Elizabeth Weed, 'Introduction,' in Feminism Meets Queer Theory,
ed. Weed and Naomi Schor, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997,
pp. vii–xiii, p. viii; Judith Butler, 'Against proper objects,' in Feminism Meets Queer Theory, ed. Weed and Schor, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1997, pp. 1–30, p. 1.
[9] Weed, 'Introduction,' p. viii.
[10] Steven Seidman, Difference Troubles: Queering Social Theory and Sexual Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1997, p. 140.
[11] Butler, 'Against proper objects,' p. 1.
[12] See Sumi Cho, Kimberlé
Williams Crenshaw and Leslie McCall, 'Towards a field of
intersectionality studies: theory, applications, and praxis,' in Signs vol. 38, no. 4 (2013): 785–810; pp. 786–87.
[13] Audre Lorde, 'The master's tools will never dismantle the master's house,' in Feminist Postcolonial Theory: A Reader, ed. Reina Lewis and Sara Mills, New York and London: Routledge, 2003, pp. 25–28. p. 26.
[14] For further discussion on the intersection of queer theory and race, see Ian Barnard's Queer Race: Cultural Invention in the racial politics of Queer Theory, New York: Peter Lang, 2004, p. 6. Also see Bishnupriya Ghosh and Brinda Bose, 'Introduction,' in Interventions: Feminist Dialogues on Third World Women's Literature and Film,
ed. Bishnupriya Ghosh and Brinda Bose, New York and London: Garland
Publishing, 1997, pp.xv–xxxiii, p. xx; and John C. Hawley,
'Introduction,' in Postcolonial Queer: Theoretical Intersections, ed. John C. Hawley, Albany, New York: SUNY Press, 2001, pp.1–18.
[15] In November 2014, a court of appeal ruling in Malaysia overturned the Sharia legislated ban on cross-dressing, see Zurairi AR, 'Watershed for Muslim transgenders as court rules anti-cross dressing Shariah law unconstitutional,' in Malay Mail Online
(7 November 2014), online:
http://www.themalaymailonline.com/malaysia/article/watershed-for-muslim-
transgenders-as-court-rules-anti-crossdressing-shariah(accessed 18
November 2014).
[16] See Olivia Khoo's discussion
on the cultivation of queer discourse buoyed by Malaysia's emerging
information media technologies in the 1990s and early 2000s in 'Sexing
the city: Malaysia's new "cyberlaws" and Cyberjaya's queer success,' in Mobile Cultures: New Media in Queer Asia, ed. Chris Berry, Fran Martin and Audrey Yue, Durham and London: Duke University Press, 2003, pp. 222–44, pp. 222–23.
[17] Khoo Gaik Cheng, 'Just-Do-It-(Yourself): Independent filmmaking in Malaysia,' Inter-Asia Cultural Studies vol. 8, no. 2, (2007): 227–47. p. 228.
[18] Khoo, 'Just-Do-It-(Yourself),' p. 228.
[19] Khoo, 'Just-Do-It-(Yourself),' p. 229.
[20] For more on how HerStory relates to Seksualiti Merdeka, see Lee, 'Sexuality rights activism in Malaysia,' p. 175.
[21] In interview with Mien Ly, London, 8 October 2013.
[22] Julia Lesage, 'The political aesthetics of the feminist documentary film,' in Quarterly Review of Film Studies vol. 3, issue 4 (1978): 507–23. p. 515.
[23] Lesage, 'The political aesthetics of the feminist documentary film,' p. 516.
[24] Laura Mulvey, 'Visual pleasure and narrative cinema,’ Screen vol . 16, no. 2 (Autumn l975): 6–18, quoted in Jane Gaines, 'Women and representation,' Jump Cut no. 29 (1984): 25–27, p. 25.
[25] Joanne B.Y. Lim, 'Video blogging and youth activism in Malaysia,' The International Communication Gazette vol. 75, no. 3 (2013): 300–21, p. 301.
[26] Amy Lawrence, 'Women's voices in Third World Cinema,' in Multiple Voices in Feminist Film Criticism, ed. Diane Carson, Linda Dittmar and Janice R. Welsch, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,1994, pp. 406–20, pp. 414–15.
[27] Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, 'Third World women's cinema: If the subalterns speak, will we listen?,' in Interventions: Feminist Dialogues on Third World Women's Literature and Film, ed. Bishnupriya Ghosh and Brinda Bose, New York: Taylor and Francis, 1997, pp. 213–26, p. 217.
[28] 'They are damn kam ching' roughly translates as 'They get along really well' in creolised Malaysian English.
[29] José Esteban Muñoz, Cruising Utopia: The Then and There of Queer Futurity, New York: New York University Press, 2009, p. 1.
[30] For further details on legal
prohibition against homosexuality and sodomy in Malaysia, see Olivia
Khoo, 'Sexing the city,' pp. 231–32, Lee, 'Sexuality rights activism in
Malaysia,' pp. 170–74, and Shanon Shah, 'The Malay dilemma: negotiating
sexual diversity in a Muslim-majority Commonwealth state,' in Human Rights, Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity in The Commonwealth: Struggles for Decriminalisation and Change,
ed. Corrine Lennox and Matthew Waites, London: Institute of
Commonwealth Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London,
2013, pp. 261–86.
[31] While studies on gay and
transfemale identities predominate the literature on queer or LGBT
culture in Malaysia, a few studies have explored the lived experiences
of butch lesbian and transmale or 'pengkids'. Ismail Baba's 'Gay and lesbian couples in Malaysia' in Journal of Homosexuality
vol. 30, issues 3–4, (2001): 143–63, is one of the earliest of such
studies. See also Yuenmei Wong's article, 'Islam, sexuality, and the
marginal positioning of pengkids and their girlfriends in Malaysia,' Journal of Lesbian Studies vol. 16, issue 4, (2012): 435–48.
[32] The case of Azizah and Rohana,
two women who married with the former 'impersonating' as a man courted
media interest in 1996. While Azizah's ability to pass as a man was met
with incredulity and moral condemnation, she was only charged with
impersonation as there are no laws against lesbianism in Malaysia. See
Maznah Mohamad, Cecilia Ng and Tan Beng Hui's Feminism and the Women's Movement in Malaysia: An Unsung (R)evolution, London: Routledge 2003, pp. 142–44.
[33] Feminist activists in Malaysia
have traditionally aligned themselves with other social justice
movements, adopting causes outside conventional feminist and women's
issues. See Mohamad, Ng and Hui, Feminism and the Women's Movement in Malaysia: An Unsung (R)evolution; and Alicia Izharuddin's 'The use of English in contemporary Malaysian feminist activism,' in Analize: Journal of Gender and Feminist Studies issue 1, no. 15 (2013): 1–15, p. 5.
[34] See Lee, 'Sexuality rights
activism in Malaysia,' pp. 178–79 on the furore elicited by the 'It Gets
Better' project in Malaysia in late 2010 featuring an openly gay young
Malay-Muslim man.
[35] Jasbir Puar, 'A transnational feminist critique of queer tourism,' in Antipode vol. 34, issue 5 (2002): 935–46, p. 942.
[36] Rey Chow, Not Like a Native Speaker: On Languaging as a Postcolonial Experience, New York: Columbia University Press, 2014, p. 10.
[37] Clive Kessler, 'Archaism and modernity: Contemporary Malay political culture,' in Fragmented Vision: Culture and Politics in Contemporary Malaysia, ed. Joel S. Kahn and Francis Loh Kok Wah, Kensington, New South Wales: Allen and Unwin, 1992, pp. 133–57, pp. 143–46.
[38] Kessler argues that attempts
by non-Malays to contest their cultural identity are interpreted as
threats to the established political order and the majority's cultural
identity ('Archaism and modernity,' pp. 137–38.)
[39] Gwendolyn Audrey Foster, 'Third World women's cinema: If the subalterns speak, will we listen?', in Interventions: Feminist Dialogues on Third World Women's Literature and Film, ed. Bishnupriya Ghosh and Brinda Bose, New York: Taylor and Francis, 1997, pp. 213–26, p. 217.
[40] Mohanty, 'Under western eyes: Feminist scholarship and colonial discourses,' p. 51.
[41] David L. Eng, Judith Halbestam and Josésteban Muñoz, 'Introduction,' to What’s Queer about Queer Studies Now?, in Social Text vol. 23, nos. 3–4 (2005): 1–17.
|