Kelly Fu’s scientific contributions

What is this page?


This page lists works of an author who doesn't have a ResearchGate profile or hasn't added the works to their profile yet. It is automatically generated from public (personal) data to further our legitimate goal of comprehensive and accurate scientific recordkeeping. If you are this author and want this page removed, please let us know.

Publications (1)


Conjuring the tropical spectres: Heavy metal, cultural politics in Singapore and Malaysia
  • Article
  • Full-text available

March 2006

·

339 Reads

·

20 Citations

Inter-Asia Cultural Studies

·

Kelly Fu

The evolution of moral panics is dependent on the particular social context and the ability of certain issues to trigger concern within society. In this paper, the authors have employed a cross-comparative study of the heavy metal music subcultures in Singapore and Malaysia to understand the differences in the issues that generate such panics based on the socio-political context of each country and its current concerns. Although the youth involved in both cases are marginalised male Malays, the framing of their alleged deviance and criminality permits, in the case of Singapore, only a limited possibility for moral panic creation given the conservative socio-political governance that limits allegations such as ‘Satanism'. In the case of Malaysia, where a ‘large-scale' moral panic involving black metal emerged in 2001, the recent trend towards Islamisation gave fodder for the condemnation of black metal based on the allegations of the anti-Islamic behaviour of Muslim youth involved in the black metal scene. In both cases, such groups were exploited by parties claiming to defend the social fabric of the moral majority, but in the latter case it took on grave implications due to the extent of the state and public response. This paper thus argues that the framing of these moral panics is an important component determining the relative ‘success' of the panic or its ability to capture public and state imaginings.

Download

Citations (1)


... The disciplining of Malay youth and the state's measures to control rock culture and music in live performances and broadcast media are central themes in existing scholarship on Malay rock in the 1980s and 1990s (Tan 1989(Tan , 1991Liew and Fu 2006;Zawawi 2016). Dedicated studies either view Malay rock as a popular culture phenomenon that transitioned towards more reserved and Islamic music in mainstream Malaysian popular culture (Zawawi 2016) or romanticise the period and its music as an isolated case of Malay youth rebellion unique to Malaysia . ...

Reference:

Crossing Borders and Crossing the Line: Nusantara mobilities of Search and the Malay rock phenomenon (1980s and 1990s)
Conjuring the tropical spectres: Heavy metal, cultural politics in Singapore and Malaysia

Inter-Asia Cultural Studies