: These individuals are credited as stars/producers in a related modern media depiction or episode titled “Appeasing the Spirits” (2022) from the series Brother Crush .

For deeper academic insight, the full study is available through platforms like ResearchGate and JSTOR. SU - Appeasing The Spirits - Dakota Lovell & Am...

: Corporations typically responded by treating the incidents as a medical or psychological "epidemic," using sedatives or isolation, though they occasionally hired local bomoh (spirit healers) to perform rituals like slaughtering a goat to "appease the spirits" and resume production. Notable Figures Mentioned : These individuals are credited as stars/producers in

: Ong argues that these possession episodes were not just "superstition" but a response to the profound status ambiguity and dislocation felt by young women moving from rural kampung (villages) into a nascent industrial proletariat. Notable Figures Mentioned : Ong argues that these

: During the 1970s and 80s, numerous Malaysian factories (often American or Japanese-owned) reported outbreaks of what management called "mass hysteria".

: The imagery of spirits—often described as "headless ghosts" or "hairy legs" in factory toilets—is interpreted as a rebellion against the strict surveillance and loss of bodily control imposed by factory foremen.

Su - Appeasing The Spirits - Dakota Lovell & Am... <ESSENTIAL — 2024>

: These individuals are credited as stars/producers in a related modern media depiction or episode titled “Appeasing the Spirits” (2022) from the series Brother Crush .

For deeper academic insight, the full study is available through platforms like ResearchGate and JSTOR.

: Corporations typically responded by treating the incidents as a medical or psychological "epidemic," using sedatives or isolation, though they occasionally hired local bomoh (spirit healers) to perform rituals like slaughtering a goat to "appease the spirits" and resume production. Notable Figures Mentioned

: Ong argues that these possession episodes were not just "superstition" but a response to the profound status ambiguity and dislocation felt by young women moving from rural kampung (villages) into a nascent industrial proletariat.

: During the 1970s and 80s, numerous Malaysian factories (often American or Japanese-owned) reported outbreaks of what management called "mass hysteria".

: The imagery of spirits—often described as "headless ghosts" or "hairy legs" in factory toilets—is interpreted as a rebellion against the strict surveillance and loss of bodily control imposed by factory foremen.