ID | 108399 |
Title Proper | Sikhs and the city |
Other Title Information | Sikh history and diasporic practice in Singapore |
Language | ENG |
Author | McCann, Gerard |
Publication | 2011. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The historiography of South Asian diaspora in colonial Southeast Asia has overwhelmingly focused on numerically dominant South Indian labourers at the expense of the small, but important, North Indian communities, of which the Sikhs were the most visually conspicuous and politically important. This paper will analyse the creation of various Sikh communities in one critical territory in British Asia-Singapore, and chart the development of the island's increasingly unified Sikh community into the post-colonial period. The paper will scrutinize colonial economic roles and socio-cultural formation, whilst links of Singaporean Sikhs to Punjab and their place within the post-colonial Singaporean state will preoccupy the latter portion of the paper. It will argue that more complicated notions of division relative to the social norms of Punjab must be acknowledged in this region of Sikh diaspora and indeed others. The final sections will assess the remarkable success of local Sikhs in utilizing statist policies of 'domesticating difference' towards altered 'community' ends. Such attachment to the state and the discursive parity of Singapore's Sikhs with official values, moreover, stymied the appeal of transnational Sikh militant movements that gained momentum in the West in the 1980s. The result has been the assertion of 'model minority' status for Singapore's Sikhs and notably successful socialization into Singaporean society. |
`In' analytical Note | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 6; Nov 2011: p. 1465-1498 |
Journal Source | Modern Asian Studies Vol. 45, No. 6; Nov 2011: p. 1465-1498 |
Key Words | Sikhs ; Singapore ; Southeast Asia ; North Indian Communities ; Singaporean Sikhs ; Punjab ; Socialization |