Lifestyle Pairing: Enabled by the mall’s proximity. Couples perform “conspicuous dating” via Instagram-worthy food spots (e.g., Sushi King, Din Tai Fung). A female participant noted: “If he insisted on only food court at the basement, I knew he wasn’t serious. The relationship was measured in Ringgit spent per date.” The Lagoon’s wave pool is cited as a popular location for first physical intimacy, leveraging the anonymity of changing rooms.
Canal Crossings: Navigating Romantic Scripts, Academic Pressure, and Social Stratification at Sunway College, Malaysia Lifestyle Pairing: Enabled by the mall’s proximity
This paper explores the formation, maintenance, and dissolution of romantic relationships among diploma and foundation students at Sunway College, Malaysia. Situated within the unique ecosystem of the Sunway City campus—a space that bridges a major shopping mall, a theme park, and a lake—students navigate a distinct blend of hyper-modern consumerism and traditional Asian values. Using qualitative interviews with 30 former and current students, we identify three primary romantic “scripts”: the Mentality-Driven Bond (academic collaboration), the Lifestyle Pairing (consumer-based leisure), and the Stratum-Crossing Romance (local-international student dynamics). Findings suggest that the physical geography of the campus (e.g., “The Bridge” connecting college to the mall) acts as a non-human actor in shaping relationship timelines. The paper concludes that Sunway relationships are often compressed, high-intensity experiences that serve as rehearsals for adult commitments in Malaysia’s neoliberal economy. The relationship was measured in Ringgit spent per date
Romantic storylines at Sunway College are not mere subplots to academic life; they are central to how students negotiate identity, class, and future aspirations. The physical integration of the mall, theme park, and university erodes the boundary between study and leisure, turning dating into a performative, consumption-driven act. However, the Mentality-Driven Bond offers a counter-narrative, suggesting that shared academic ambition remains a potent, if fragile, foundation for love. Future research should examine how these dynamics change when students articulate to Sunway University’s degree programs. Using qualitative interviews with 30 former and current
Sunway College is not a traditional university campus. Located in Bandar Sunway, Selangor, it is an integrated township where education, retail, and entertainment collide. Students walk directly from lectures at Sunway University/College into the Sunway Pyramid mall or the Sunway Lagoon theme park. This spatial arrangement creates a unique "courtship economy." While previous studies have examined Malaysian university romance (e.g., Mohd Daud, 2018), few have focused on the specific pressures of a private, for-profit education setting where social status is visibly performed through consumption. This paper asks: How do the spatial, temporal, and socioeconomic features of Sunway College shape romantic storylines?
Sunway’s significant international student body (primarily from China, Indonesia, Middle East) creates a third, fragile script. Local students (mostly Malaysian Chinese, Malay, Indian) and international students have limited mixing in formal settings, but romantic crossovers occur in extracurriculars (e.g., Sunway’s Model United Nations or esports club). These relationships face unique pressures: language barriers (Mandarin vs. English vs. Bahasa Malaysia), differing expectations of public affection (PDA), and the temporariness of international student visas. “He went back to Jakarta after one semester. We promised to continue, but the moment he landed, he unread my WhatsApp for three days” (Li Jing, 21).