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  1. Nurhanis Sahiddan, Haizan Mohd Taha, Mastura Johar
    MyJurnal
    Anthony Burgess (1917 - 1993) has written a trilogy of novels on the Malay World, namely The
    Malayan Trilogy (1964). It has been suggested that the trilogy, which consists of the novels Time for a
    Tiger (1956), The Enemy in the Blanket (1958) and Beds in the East (1959), depicts the Islamic
    practices through its Muslim Malay characters, displaying their hypocrisy and their wayward Islamic
    practices as stated by Zawiyah Yahya (2003). In contrast, the trilogy has rarely been studied based on
    elements of the paradigm of Malayness in literature, consisting of six elements, namely the Malay
    language, Islam, the Malay rulers, adat/culture, ethnicity, and identity. Therefore, we aim to analyse
    one of the novels in the trilogy, The Enemy in the Blanket, in light of Islam as one of the elements
    under the paradigm of Malayness in literature as stated by Ida as our primary conceptual framework in
    this study. To achieve these objectives, we employ a close textual reading on the novel by analysing
    the Muslim Malay characters in The Enemy in the Blanket. The findings show that the Muslim Malay
    characters in The Enemy in the Blanket could be considered as wayward Muslims in their practices and
    beliefs. Therefore, we would like to reconfirm that the paradigm of Malayness in in fact, an everydaydefined
    social reality, as experienced by the people in the course of their everyday life as opposed to it
    as an authority-defined social reality, as defined by people of the dominant power structure. It is hoped
    that this study will contribute to the on-going discourse on Islam as the paradigm of Malayness as well
    as English literature on the Malay World.
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