Publication | Open Access
Re-engaging Chineseness: Political, Economic and Cultural Imperatives of Nation-building in Singapore
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Citations
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References
2003
Year
EthnicityCultural ImperativesNationalismColonialismEast Asian StudiesEthnic Chinese IdentityEducationCultural StudiesConfucian EthosCultural PolicyLanguage StudiesChinese IdentityChinese PoliticsInternational RelationsEast Asian LanguagesRe-engaging ChinesenessGlobalizationCultureChinese CulturePolitical PluralismCultural AnthropologyNational Identity
This article examines the management of Chinese identity and culture since Singapore attained independence in 1965. Due to the delicate regional environment, ethnic Chinese identity has been closely managed by the ruling elites, which have been dominated by the English-educated Chinese. There is the evolution from a deliberate policy of maintaining a low-key ethnic Chinese profile to the recent effort to re-sinicize – in form – the majority ethnic group. The article examines the policy impulses and implications for such a landmark change in reconceptualizing the Chinese-Singapore identity, which can be attributed to the needs of regime maintenance buttressed by Confucian ethos as well as the security and economic demands of nation-building.
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