Nationalism and Decolonisation in Singapore

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1953-63
A01=Thum Ping Tjin
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anti-colonial movements
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Bukit Timah
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Chinese Community
Chinese High
Chinese Middle Schools
Chinese Press
Chinese Schools
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creation of Malaysia
decolonisation
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Federation Government
Labour Front
language policy
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left-wing intellectuals
Lim Chin Siong
Malayan Identity
Malayan Nation
Malayan Nationalism
Nanyang University
nationalism
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Pap Government
Pap Leadership
People's Action Party
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postcolonial studies
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separation
Singapore
Singapore Chinese
Singaporean Nationalism
social stratification
softlaunch
Southeast Asian politics
Special Branch
Tan Lark Sye
Toh Chin Chye
UMNO
unresolved societal schisms Singapore
USA

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032484242
  • Weight: 650g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Dec 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Nationalism and Decolonisation in Singapore analyses Singapore’s decolonisation movement between 1953 and 1963 and provides a framework to understand the deepest and most important unresolved conflicts in Singaporean society.

This book demonstrates how these conflicts stem from four unresolved schisms dating from the decolonisation period: race, class, language, and the meaning of self-determination. The author argues that these schisms drove the events of decolonisation, the creation of Malaysia, and Singapore’s separation and continue to actively shape Singapore today. Using contemporary English- and Chinese-language sources from a wide array of perspectives, as well as numerous declassified official documents, this book provides a new approach to the most formative period of Singapore history. It explains in detail the different ideologies, institutions, and conflicts which shaped Singaporean politics and society during decolonisation. In particular, the book focuses on the leaders of the main groups which most heavily influenced Singapore’s anti-colonial nationalism – the Chinesespeaking, the working class, and left-wing intellectuals. It looks at Singapore in the context of global movements of nationalism, socialism, and decolonisation and provides a framework which can offer insight into similar attempts by postcolonial governments to construct new nation-states from plural societies.

A novel study of Singapore’s independence struggle that incorporates and analyses multiple linguistic, socioeconomic, and political viewpoints, the book will be of interest to researchers of Southeast Asian history and politics and those interested in decolonisation, nationalism, identity, and the politics of race, class, and language.

Thum Ping Tjin is a historian and Visiting Fellow at Hertford College, University of Oxford, UK, and also the founder and Managing Director of New Naratif.

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