00667nam0-22002531i-450-990002802740403321000280274FED01000280274(Aleph)000280274FED0100028027420000920d1961----km-y0itay50------baENGManagement in Marketing.by Lazo H. CorbinNew YorkMcGraw-Hill1961.Lazo,Hector114194Corbin,A.ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK9900028027404033214-0-158ITA 348ECAECAManagement in Marketing422091UNINAING0103176nam 22005771 450 991041835120332119890828000000.09780472128280047212828010.3998/mpub.11903414(CKB)4100000011469702(MiU)10.3998/mpub.11903414(OCoLC)1223263016(MdBmJHUP)muse93726(ScCtBLL)ebf02967-0121-405f-9bc0-4971ee1c451c(ODN)ODN0009239678(EXLCZ)99410000001146970219890828d1974 uy 0engurmn#||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierStudies in Malaysian oral and musical traditions Music in Kelantan, Malaysia, and some of its cultural implications /William P. Malm. Professional Malay story-telling : some questions of style and presentation / Amin SweeneyAnn Arbor, Michigan :University of Michigan Press,1974.1 online resource (99 pages, [2] leaves of plates) illustrations; digital, PDF file(s)Michigan Papers on South and Southeast Asia ;no. 89780883864913 0883864916 9780472902286 0472902288 Bibliography: pages 31-33.The first of two studies included is "Music in Kelantan, Malaysia and Some of Its Cultural Implications," by William P. Malm. Kelantan is the northernmost province on the east coast of Malaysia. It is considered to be the most orthodox area in a nation whose state religion is Islam. At the same time it must be noted that it borders to the north with the Buddhist country of Thailand and to the west is the Malaysian province of Perak whose jungles and mountains contain many "pagan" tribal traditions. Beyond Perak is Kedah with its larger Indian and Chinese populations and to the south is Trengganu where some Indonesian traits are still to be found. It is in this context that Malm's study of music is made.The second study is "Professional Malay Story-Telling: Some Questions of Style and Presentation" by Amin Sweeney. In view of the hitherto almost exclusive concern with the content of such tales as those of Sang Kanchil or Pak Pandir, Sweeney throws some light on the form, style, and presentation of oral Malay literature, with special reference to that class of story-telling popularly known as penglipur lara, or what Winstedt termed "folk romances."Michigan papers on South and Southeast Asia ;no. 8.MusicMalaysiaKelantanStorytellingMalaysiaMusicStorytelling781.7/595/1HIS000000HIS048000bisacshMalm William P.636822Sweeney Amin965229Malm William P636822Sweeney AminMichigan Publishing (University of Michigan),MiUMiUBOOK9910418351203321Studies in Malaysian oral and musical traditions2189874UNINA