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Malayland

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Dina Zaman has spent her life writing about identity, race and religion. During the pandemic, she found herself thinking about Malaysians who expressed their disempowerment and sense of displacement from their own country. Where did all these feelings come from? How did we get here?

Nearly two decades after the publication of I Am Muslim, Zaman returns with Malayland, to explore what it means to be Malay and Muslim in the 21st century. Part memoir and part observation, this book draws on her lifelong fascination with identity as a third-culture kid, who has seen the growth of postcolonial Malaysia ebb and flow for decades.

Malayland aims to spark debate among readers on the meaning of identity, how class and rural-urban migration play a role in the ethnic chasm, and the many faces Malays and Malaysia use in different contexts.

176 pages, Paperback

First published November 1, 2024

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Dina Zaman

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Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews
Profile Image for Fajar Davis.
132 reviews15 followers
January 7, 2025
The entire book feels like it stays at the very surface of the issue, listing the many different kinds of people interested in defining Malay-ness but never fleshing out any single conclusion to it. The conversations mentioned sound very interesting but we're only given glimpses at the content of them. I don't think this book gave me any new relevant info for me to use as context for my own explanation of identity.
Profile Image for Julien.
66 reviews11 followers
October 2, 2025
Malayland is an interesting book in theory, but in practice, it often feels like a long reading list disguised as an argument. At just 147 pages, it should be a concise, engaging exploration of Malaysia’s cultural and political identity, but instead, it’s packed with over a hundred footnotes, constantly pointing the reader to other books and studies rather than developing its own ideas.

Dina Zaman is clearly well-read, and she makes sure you know it. Throughout the book, there’s a strong sense that she sees herself as not just more informed than the reader, but also a cut above her peers. Rather than building a structured argument, she frequently defers to other sources, making it feel like she’s curating a discussion rather than leading one. While references are valuable, Malayland relies on them so much that it sometimes feels like it’s avoiding deeper engagement with its own subject matter.

That said, there are moments where the book raises genuinely interesting points, if only they were explored further. Readers who enjoy academic deep dives and don’t mind chasing footnotes may find value here, but those looking for a book that offers a strong, standalone perspective may find it frustrating. Malayland has ambition, but it leans too heavily on external sources, making it more of a gateway to other works than a compelling read in itself.
Profile Image for Faris.
30 reviews
December 11, 2024
this book is insightful, thought-provoking, and unflinching in its writing. the author, in a series of interviews with people from various walks of life, manages to produce a compelling narrative that challenges my preconceived notions on “malayness” and the malay people. the discussions forced me to see the world through the lenses of those whom ive disregarded, giving me a new sense of understanding.

growing up abroad myself, this fascination with “malayness” that the author descibes is one that i can resonate deeply with, hence why im stepping out of my comfort-zone with this read. by the last page, i can say that this book has been particularly impactful and i look forward to reading more from her. (and also the works she cited!)
Profile Image for Hestia Istiviani.
1,037 reviews1,963 followers
March 28, 2025
I read the review first before decided to buy & enjoy it. Some of the reviews said that this book is only talking about the surface. But as someone who is only going to Kuala Lumpur as a tourist, what Dina Zaman has written in Malayland is something new to me.

This book has 7 chapters with each chapter talking about “specific” topic. From Dina Zaman’s past (her ancestor & how she described her identity at that time to how she sees Islam in Malaysia.

As Indonesian, I see Malaysia has several things that make me envious. For example, their access to book. But I don’t realize they still make racist system works—that Malay consider as lazy than Chinese and Indians. Through this book, I have just known that racist system is still there.

Eventhough people said it’s not deep, Malayland gave me glimpse of social structure in Malaysia that I can google it later. I admit, I don’t have many infos and knowledge about Malaysian history so it didn’t surprise me when I got confuse on some paragraphs 😂

In conclusion, I enjoy Malayland. It brings me new perspective about Malaysia & yeah… we are not that different, aren’t we? 👀
Profile Image for Karl Kilbo Edlund.
23 reviews1 follower
August 5, 2025
I finished this book within 48 hours of buying it. Zaman writes wonderfully, she's personal, she's engaging and she makes the situations and dilemmas accessible. For me, being fairly new to the world of Malaysian politics, this book provided a fascinating, accessible and entertaining glimpse of the country. Zaman also provides a wealth of references that would be interesting to explore in more detail.
Profile Image for Jack Malik.
Author 20 books21 followers
February 21, 2025
An interesting read that speaks about the current times of Malaysia. Malayland feels like that mamak-session discussions—but in a good way.
43 reviews
September 23, 2025
Zaman ger en inblick i hur det är att leva i Malaysia. För mig som inte är så insatt i landets möjligheter och problem blev det en omskakande introduktion. Då hon vid flera tillfällen refererar politiska organisationer och händelser missade jag endel. Men ändå mycket tänkvärd.
Profile Image for Ali.
122 reviews
Read
July 2, 2025
this didnt do it for me lol
Profile Image for Pree.
50 reviews10 followers
November 18, 2025
enjoyed this quite a bit! dina has an accessible way of writing, drops the prétention on a topic that’s otherwise written in an academic way.

i liked the slicing and dicing of malay identity into ethnonationalists, islamists, professionals, veiled women etc. — went beyond the usual reduction of malay/islamist or progressive/conservative. you see class featured heavily, and questions surrounding why it is not more prominent in our political discourse (hint: who would stand to lose from that).

i think there is a power (even if you are putting yourself under fire) for an in group member to approach the topic with a critical lens. but with care and nuance. that’s it — nuance — is what dina carried throughout the book. never prescribing.

anyway - recommend 👍🏽
Profile Image for Edwin Goh Wei Qian.
42 reviews2 followers
March 31, 2025
I finished Dina's "Malayland" in one sitting.

Upon reflection, I found many parallels between Malaysian Chinese and Malay identity struggles.

The book reveals how sub-identity communities share anxieties about cultural erosion and authenticity, creating a gap for politics and skepticism to divide us.

Despite the author's evident weariness with the topic, reading this book still offers me hope through her exploration of a "third culture" identity that transcends traditional boundaries.

Perhaps to paraphrase her words, we have an uneasy relationship with our country, and it's one that deserves both our criticism and commitment to building bridges
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Susan Loone.
28 reviews1 follower
April 20, 2025
SYABAS Dina Zaman for another thought provoking book, Malayland published by Faction Press and Ethos Book (Singapore 2025).

I like how you spell 'Malayland' in one word to show that the community is one with the land they live on, breathe and breed.

Thanks to Covid 2019 pandemic, Dina's latest exploration is not just a memoir, it's a poignant journey into the heart of her ethnic Malay community.

In her book, Dina helps us understand the anxieties of her community as they grappled with all kinds of threats in world altered by a virus that claimed over seven million lives.

Since young I grew up in a Malay setting - civil servants housing community in Pahang, went to school with 95 percent Malay kids whose parents are in the army, my parents themselves are kakitangan kerajaan. This means we have many Malay friends, we eat their foods and attend each other's celebrations with ease and joy, we were there during floodtimes in Kuantan, and whenever we needed help from others

It is through these interactions that we learn that the Malays like every other group on this planet, are complex individuals, a tapestry woven with diverse perspectives and experiences.

You can't generalise them, you can't just have one or two examples of a Malay and think you know the whole community.

Like every other group, there are moderates, extremists and apathetic individuals among us. Try not to view or paint anyone with a bias or prejudiced lens.

I like this quote from page 140: "I am asked by non-Malay friends why the Malays are like this and that. I had a call once at one in the morning, and I told the person to befriend a Malay and then figure us out. You're a Malaysian and you don't have a Malay friend? What an idiot".

Spot on!

Malayland will surely spark meaningful dialogue with the hope of fostering a deeper understanding of each other as fellow human beings.

Identity politics and poitical Islam is at the heart of this understanding, and it is best to get somw guidance and knowledge of the community by reading a book like Dina's Malayland.

She observes that in present-day Malaysia, discussions surrounding race and faith have become fervent, even feverish.


Extremist viewpoints often find refuge under the guise of patriotism, nationalism, or even religiousity

Young or senior, Malaysians have no qualms about asserting their political and inherited identities across social media platforms.

During my childhood days, the comfortable mingling and tolerance among communities that once characterized Malaysia seems now lost in space. Sad.

Great effort, Dina, and thank you. Books such as yours will one day serve as a wealth of knowledge which will surely help us grow in understandinng, tolerance, acceptance and perhaps, who knows, love for each other.

Ends.
Profile Image for Ali.
76 reviews
May 26, 2025
3.5 stars.

As a Singaporean Malay person lacking the background understanding of Malaysia, I found that the book gave me much food for thought about what it meant to be Malay in Singapore. Much like Malaysia, it comes with legal implications (CMIO classification), and separately being Muslim has its own consequences in terms of inheritance and marriage. While less intertwined than Malaysia, given that I could be Malay without being Muslim and vice versa, there is certainly an intermingling in the way these identities are treated socially (e.g. by state media) and politically (e.g. in institutions such as Yayasan Mendaki).

Of course, it also attempted to give me some introduction to the history of "Malay" in Malaysia, but I felt that there was a lack of clarity in what it was trying to say. It wanted to be part-memoir, part-academic text, and in trying to do both simultaneously in what I felt to be too short a word count, it failed. The memoir sections felt restrained and scared to express itself. It parroted her diplobrat childhood over and over again in different parts of the text repetitively. The academic bits were also far too clipped for the complexity it was trying to espouse. I felt like I was being lectured about how complicated it instead of being shown. It offered little sense-making of the threads it drew upon and avoided saying anything at all.

I enjoyed the interviews though, and I almost wish there were more perspectives shown more in depth. The contents were interesting and I'd love to hear a more academic treatment put on them too. Alas. Thank you for the primer on Malay issues.
Profile Image for Shafiqah Nor.
207 reviews
December 23, 2024
An important, captivating and highly recommended read (especially if you are Malay), I devoured this book in one sitting. Compiling anecdotes and interviews, this book gives voice from ordinary Malays explaining: What it means to be a Malay?

Dina Zaman provided a number of thought-provoking reflections including:
- the plurality of Malay identity;
- questions on perception, belonging and disenfranchisement;
- coexistence and conflation of Malay and Muslim identity, with the branding of faith as a capitalist tool; and
- socioeconomic divide of Malayness for political gains - including ethnonationalism/liberalism in Malaysia

She beautifully captured that "what it means to be Malay is a constant, but it also does evolve."

As a Malay reader who resides in Canada, this rings personally true - as it is impossible to negate the Malay identity within me, but my Malay teachings will always shape, challenge and define the paradigm of the reality in my life (through learning and unlearning processes). This is how we grow as individuals and society. Culture is fluid.

Reading this book felt like 'home'. It was relatable on many levels. The writing was seamless....hilarious in many parts where I caught myself chuckling often, especially in her use of footnotes and her candidness at making sense of confusion and her experiences.

Thank you for pioneering such an important discourse on identity.
Profile Image for Izalette.
154 reviews
June 15, 2025
Feels like the author is still reminiscing about her party days — she constantly brings up the clubs she used to frequent, which starts to feel repetitive and distracts from the larger themes.

One major omission is the role of the monarchy. The sultans play a big part in shaping Malay identity, and it’s surprising that this was barely acknowledged. Similarly, there’s little discussion on how the education system impacts the construction of Malayness.

The book does offer a good discourse and raises some important questions, but it lacks a clear conclusion or sense of where to go next. It’s very open-ended, which can be frustrating — there’s no real resolution or consensus on how to move forward. It would have been great if the author had taken a bold stance or offered suggestions, but she seems too afraid to offend. That hesitation really limits the impact of what could have been a more insightful book.

In the end, I think I was looking for something more rigorous — perhaps an anthropological study — and this wasn’t it.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
5 reviews
November 27, 2024
I would have to add this book to my list of Malay studies must reads just next to Dr Mahathir’s The Malay Dilemma. I think there has been a lot of tectonic shifts in Malay thinking that have been a subject of discussion at various social circles. It was all talk, and Dina translated them to words beautifully in her latest work. Her adventures in Peninsular Malaysia, Tanah Melayu or Malayland as she calls it is recorded in the right way for me to grasp the changes that are happening. The casts of characters were varied and she managed to humanise them for all her readers. If this is going to be her last book on Malays, I think someone needs to carry on this torch. There are still Malays of Singapore, Borneo, and now Malays in Australia that should be a new subject to talk about. Will keep this book somewhere visible on my shelf since I know I will want to read a random chapter again one day.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
33 reviews1 follower
March 10, 2025
The definition of what it means to be Malay, Malaysian, or even Muslim is an ever evolving one and one that is not to be threaded lightly or yet even confined to its four walls. I had no expectations coming in to read Malayland, but one thing that it pointed out to me was how unexposed I am about the opinions and conversations my fellow neighboring country has within the confines of its own nation, and made me more curious about the influences in which this perpetuates the nation as a whole on the world stage or just as an outsider looking in. I appreciate the footnotes that provide further elaboration on the cultural meaning of terms that were expressed, and also the additional resources shared that allow readers to go further in their own space and time on this topic that is continually shifting. Perhaps a following read that would be a good accompaniment to this is Dina Zaman's earlier book I am Malay.
Profile Image for Reza Zin.
37 reviews1 follower
June 26, 2025
It just seemed to be a collection of ramblings and musings about meeting various types of people to discuss the idea of 'being Malay'. But just brief thoughts, without in-depth discussions of the ideas or viewpoints that they had. I don't feel like I have any more insight into 'Malayland' compared with before I read the book.
Profile Image for Norliza.
13 reviews
October 18, 2025
The book felt more like a rant of the issue without making any assertions. It comes off as superficial as if quoting names of interviewees give credibility to the book. The author seems to get headaches often. Numerous reference to Siti Kassim with no link to the issue. SK is not a reference of what a Malay is.
Profile Image for Rachel Loh.
108 reviews2 followers
October 26, 2025
This book is not one that will leave you with concrete answers about what being Malay means but it has expanded my knowledge and world on what Malays in Malaysia are facing in terms of identity. It’s helped me understand my neighbours better.
Profile Image for Rahdika K.
308 reviews2 followers
February 21, 2025
Interesting perspectives. Though sounded more like essays on exploring the author’s identity. Laden with enormous reading list. Review soon.
21 reviews4 followers
August 5, 2025
A meandering unstructured hot mess; she literally writes that she has no thesis in her book
Displaying 1 - 22 of 22 reviews

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