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ID093964
Title ProperBeing Chinese under official multiculturalism in Singapore
LanguageENG
AuthorHuat, Chua Beng
Publication2010.
Summary / Abstract (Note)At the time of independence, there were three visible racial groups among its newly constituted citizenry: an overwhelming majority of ethnic Chinese; regionally indigenous Malays and a small percentage of South Asians. The Cold War conditions precluded the island-state from being a Chinese majority state; constitutionally the new state was declared a multiracial nation. The three groups were reconstituted as Huaren, Malays and Indians. Multiracialism as official policy has become a means of governance of the People's Action Party single-party dominant government. Racial harmony as the public good provides the political and administrative space for the policing of racial boundaries, suppressing open discussion of racial issues. Meanwhile, Huaren culture has been progressively reduced to emphasis on filial piety as Confucianism writ small and an emergent Singaporean identity distances the local born Huaren from the 'foreign workers' that arrive daily from the People's Republic of China.
`In' analytical NoteAsian Ethinicity Vol. 10, No. 3; Oct 2009: p.239 - 250
Journal SourceAsian Ethinicity Vol. 10, No. 3; Oct 2009: p.239 - 250
Key WordsSingapore ;  Multiracialism ;  Huaren ;  Filial Piety ;  Mandarin Language


 
 
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