Scenes of Malaysian Life

Scenes of Malaysian Life
Author(s)Lat
Current status/scheduleEnded
Launch date1974
End date2014
Alternate name(s)Lat & Easy
Publisher(s)New Straits Times
Genre(s)Humour

Scenes of Malaysian Life (also known as Lat & Easy from 2002 to 2014) is a comic strip series by Malaysian cartoonist, Mohammad Nor Khalid, better known as Lat and published in the Malaysian English-language daily newspaper, the New Straits Times.[1][2] The comic strip, which ran for 40 years, from 1974 to 2014,[3] illustrated the common way of life of the multicultural Malaysia.[4] Some of his cartoons in the series also compiled in his comic books.

Background

In 1973, Lat, who was then a crime reporter at the New Straits Times,[5] submitted his comic strip for the Hong Kong-based Asia Magazine with the traditional life culture as the main subject where he drews a cartoon and provide the dialogues about a traditional Malay Muslim ritual, the circumcision.[6][7][8] It drews attention from the-then New Straits Times editor-in-chief, Lee Siew Yee, who later offered him a permanent column cartoonist role in the newspaper.[9][10] Lat then taking that position specially created for him by the newspaper's then editor, Abdul Samad Ismail.[11][12] This gave birth to the Scenes of Malaysian Life series where his first job is to highlighted the daily lives of Malaysian multiracial culture and current affairs.[9][13][14] He described it as a "something very innovative at the time".[9]

The first cartoon that Lat drew in the series is the "Perak Wedding", which was published in March 1974.[2][15] After returned to Malaysia from his 4-month study at the St Martin's School of Art in London,[16] Lat changed the format of Scenes of Malaysian Life into an editorial cartoon series. In 1984, partly from a desire to step away from the public limelight, Lat resigned from the New Straits Times to become a freelancer,[17][18][19] but continued to draw Scenes of Malaysian Life for the newspaper.[20] In 1995, Scenes of Malaysian Life absent briefly from the New Straits Times as Lat decided to take a sabbatical for a year. The series resumed publication the following year[21] until it finally ended in 2014.[3]

Reception

The comic strip was well-received[22][23] and propelled Lat's work to a greater heights.[24] In the 2000s, the series ran three times per week in the New Straits Times.[25] Some of his works in Scenes of Malaysian Life also have been compiled into comic books which proven to be successful and well-received.

Ilham Gallery describe the series as "a truly Malaysian narrative and perfectly pictured the life of a nation".[26]

References

Bibliography

Interviews/self-introspectives
  • Mohd Tajuddin Mohd Rasdi (17 March 2019). "Lat, his cartoons and appreciating our multiculturalism". The Borneo Post. Retrieved 26 May 2019.
  • Tan Mei Kuan (29 December 2020). "Interview with Lat: Kampung Boy and Beyond" (Interview). Ipoh Echo. Retrieved 25 May 2021.
News sources
Books
  • Muliyadi Mahamood (2003a). "Lat Dalam Konteksnya" [Lat in Context]. Pameran Retrospektif Lat [Retrospective Exhibition 1964–2003]. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: National Art Gallery. pp. 48–82. ISBN 983-9572-71-7.
  • Pameran Retrospektif Lat [Retrospective Exhibition 1964–2003]. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: National Art Gallery. 2003. ISBN 983-9572-71-7.
  • Muliyadi Mahamood (2004). The History of Malay Editorial Cartoons (1930s–1993). Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia: Utusan Publications and Distributions. ISBN 967-61-1523-1.
  • Tim Pilcher; Brad Brooks (2005). The Essential Guide to World Comics. New York, United States: Collins & Brown. p. 125. ISBN 9781843403005.
  • Lat (1994). "Lat on Lat". Lat: 30 Years Later. Petaling Jaya, Selangor: Kampung Boy. p. 1–38. ISBN 983-996-174-8.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: ref duplicates default (link)
Academic sources
Journalistic sources
  • Willmott, Jennifer Rodrigo (March 1989). "Malaysia's Favourite Son". Reader's Digest. Vol. 134, no. 803. New York, United States: The Reader's Digest Association. ISSN 0034-0375. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 12 March 2010.
  • Jayasankaran, S (22 July 1999). "Going Global". Far Eastern Economic Review. 162 (29). Hong Kong: 35–36. ISSN 0014-7591. ProQuest 208233691.
  • Crossings: Datuk Lat (Television production). Singapore: Discovery Networks Asia. 21 September 2003.
  • Bissme, S (30 April 2009). "Kampung Boy Unveiled". Sun2Surf. Selangor, Malaysia. Archived from the original on 29 October 2017. Retrieved 18 April 2010.
Online sites
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