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Page 1: Spa   a malay middle class culture [printable]
Page 2: Spa   a malay middle class culture [printable]

Span. (spä)

As A Malay Middle-Class Culture

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Origins of the Spa as we know it

• Pre-historic hot & cold springs

• Aegean Bathing Rituals

• Aquae Spadanea of the Roman Empire

• Turkish Baths

• Asian Localization/ Exoticisation of Spas

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Spa as part ofmiddle-class consumption

• Servility

• Privilege of the Leisure Class

• Exclusivity (Access & Attainment)

• Spa as socialization space of middle-class

• Need for specialized knowledge

• Concern for health & wellness

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Greek Bath at Pompei

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Greek Bath at Pompei

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Greek Bath at Pompei

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Greek Bath at Pompei

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Roman Baths

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Roman Baths

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Roman Baths

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Roman Baths

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Turkish Baths

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Turkish Baths

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Turkish Baths

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Turkish Baths

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Early Spa Culture in Singapore

• Aspara Spa & Renewal Day Spa (1994)

• Singapore Spa Association (1999)

• Reclassification of ‘Spa’ as different from massage parlours (2001)

• SPAcademy by Raffles International (2001)

• Singapore as Spa Tourism Hub (2002)

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Spa culture among Malays

• Wayan Retreat & Spa (2003)

• first Balinese Spa in Singapore

• first Malay-owned spa

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Trend of ‘Malay’ Spas

• Back to Basics Muslimah Hair Spa

• Lymphatic Wellness

• Chantique Spa

• Kaki-Kaki

• Turned many ‘tokoh’ (eg. at Joo Chiat) into make-shift spa places

Page 23: Spa   a malay middle class culture [printable]

Trend of ‘Malay’ Spas

• Back to Basics Muslimah Hair Spa

• Lymphatic Wellness

• Chantique Spa

• Kaki-Kaki

• Turned many ‘tokoh’ (eg. at Joo Chiat) into make-shift spa places

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Patrons of Culture...

• Scrubs: Lulur, Boreh, Kemiri

• Baths: Mandi Bunga, Mandi Susu, Jamu Herbal bath

• Massages: Kampung, Javanese, Balinese

• use of Malay herbal concoctions

• Gaggang, Kempis Perut, Seri Pengantin, Urut Bayi

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...and Globalization

• Scrubs: Lavender, Eucalyptus

• Baths: Vichy, Jacuzzi, Spa Pools

• Massages: Swedish, Shiatsu, Thai, Deep Tissue

• use of oils, creams and tea

• Ear Candling, Slim wraps, Pedicure & Manicure

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“Ada yang housewife, husband pergi kerja isteri pergi spa... Ada satu group cikgu-cikgu pencen... Tapi yang biasa selalu yang bekerjalah... Penat, stress, sengal-sengal, jadi spa relaxing for them. Untuk perjalanan darah, hilangkan stress... Students jaranglah buat spa.”

- Kak Wati, masseuse from Chantique Spa.

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The New Malay AND Muslim Spa

• differentiates non-Malay treatment and ‘non-Muslim’ spa

• ‘Spa’ differentiated as distinctly different from the traditional pre-existing ‘urut’

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The Pre-existing Malay Urut• home-based

• facials are home-made D.I.Y; idea of petua

• massages are functional; health purposes, not leisure

• pre & post natal

• ‘bekam’

• ‘salah urat’, aches, etc.

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Who is the Tukang Urut?“The tukang urut was knowledgeable in the practice of traditional Malay medicine and was a popular source of medicinal assistance in the kampung (village). The tukang urut would dispense traditional Malay medicines, treating common ailments using plant or animal-based ingredients.

Tukang uruts were knowledgeable about various conditions of the human body and relied heavily on their knowledge of the human anatomy during massages.”

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Evolution of the ‘Tukang Urut’• Spas offering home-based traditional urut

services

• tukang urut services incorporated into spas (Spa Elements, Damai Spa, Chantique Spa, etc)

• Tukang Urut offering more recent treatments

• i.e Ear Candling, Swedish Massage, Using of lavender, eucalyptus oils

• Tukang Urut setting up physical shops

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“Going for a massage” —Shift in meanings

• from necessity and recuperation to one of luxury and pampering indulgence

• from a village level, accessible service to one that is exclusive and for the privileged

• reverence to a traditional tukang urut as healer VS masseuse today as part of the servility

• The Spa remains as a sign of prestige and status; a lifestyle of its own

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Experiential Learning Anyone?

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Acknowledgements

Chantique Spa & Bridal Spa ElementsAegean Spa

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ReferencesBoëthius, Axel & Ward-Perkins, J. B. (1970). Etruscan and Roman architecture. Harmondsworth:

Penguin.

Bourdieu, Pierre (2000). ‘Conspicuous Consumption’ in Martyn J. Lee, The Consumer Society Reader. Masachusettes: Blackwell Publishing.

Gary Bodeker & Marc Cohen (eds.) (2008). Understanding the Global Spa Industry: spa management. Oxford: Butterworth-Heinemann.

Global Information Hub on Integrated Medicine (2010). Traditional Malay Medicine [Online]. Available: http://www.globinmed.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=50:traditional-malay-medicine&catid=45:malaysian-perspective&Itemid=137. Accessed on 13 October 2010.

Nurbaiti Hamdan (2009). Document Traditional Spa Practices [Online]. Available: http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=/2009/2/10/central/3067934&sec=central. Accessed on 16 Octorber 2010.

Nurhidayati Yahya (2010). Butterflyrubrics: Weekends in Spore — Spa Jelita [Online]. Available: http://butterflyrubrics.wordpress.com/2010/02/21/weekends-in-spore-spa-jelita/. Accessed on 12 October 2010.

Paige, John C. & Laura Woulliere Harrison (1987). Out of the Vapors: A Social and Architectural History of Bathhouse Row, Hot Springs National Park. U.S. Department of the Interior.

The Malay Medicine (2009). Tukang Urut [Online]. Available: http://malaymedicine.blogspot.com/2009/08/tukang-urut.html. Accessed on 16 October 2010.

Veblen, Thorstein (2000). ‘Conspicuous Consumption’ in Martyn J. Lee, The Consumer Society Reader. Masachusettes: Blackwell Publishers Inc.

Yilmazkaya, Orhan & Deniz, Ogurlu (2005). Turkish Baths: A Light Onto a Tradition and Culture. Çitlembik

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Thank YouQ & A

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Thank You