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JOURNAL OF SOUTH EAST ASIAN STUDIES VOL: 43 NO 2 (7) answer(s).
 
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ID:   117185


1967 anti-Chinese riots in Burma and Sino–Burmese relations / Fan, Hongwei   Journal Article
Fan, Hongwei Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Anti-Chinese riots broke out in Rangoon on 26 June 1967. The riots, which resulted from Chinese students' defiance of the Burmese government's ban on wearing Mao badges in school, led to the deterioration of Sino-Burmese relations, symbolised by the cessation of 'Pauk Phaw' ties and the subsequent shift in China's foreign policy which included open intervention in Burma's civil war. The riots contributed to estranged relations between Beijing and Rangoon throughout the 1970s and 1980s despite the normalisation of bilateral ties in 1970. While the roots of the Rangoon riots lay in Burma's political economy and tensions within the local Chinese community in the context of Cold War international relations, Beijing bore primary responsibility, however, due to its export of the Cultural Revolution.
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2
ID:   117186


Australia, the ‘Marshall experiment’ and the decolonisation of Singapore, 1955–56 / Benvenuti, Andrea   Journal Article
Benvenuti, Andrea Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract As decolonisation gathered pace in Southeast Asia, Singapore became a source of considerable concern to the Robert Menzies government. Britain's hold on its colony appeared increasingly precarious as political turbulence gripped the island. With a predominantly Chinese population, Singapore was considered susceptible to communist China's propaganda and subversion. By relying on previously classified Australian and British diplomatic documents, this article sheds light on the Australian approach to Singapore's political and constitutional development between 1955 and 1956 and, in so doing, it hopes to make a contribution to a better understanding of Australia's policies in a rapidly decolonising Southeast Asia.
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3
ID:   117184


Contesting discourses of blood in the red shirts protests in Ba / Cohen, Erik   Journal Article
Cohen, Erik Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract The spilling of blood in modern political protest is an exceptional event. This article discusses the deployment of blood as a means of struggle by the members of an extra-parliamentary movement, known as the 'red shirts', in March 2010, in the course of their prolonged attempt to topple the government of the Thai prime minister Abhisit Vejjajiva. Two contesting discourses of blood are discussed: the symbolic discourse of blood as a self-sacrificial act deployed by the protesters to curse their enemies, and the medical counter-discourse deployed by the authorities, in an effort to neutralise the protesters' act. Several issues raised by the blood-spilling act are examined: its perceived appropriateness, its ritual roots and its disputed effectiveness as a curse. In conclusion, it is suggested that the blood ritual constitutes a reflective move to counter the prevailing 'regime of images' in Thai society.
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4
ID:   117187


Elite intercommunal bargaining and conflict resolution: the role of the Communities Liaison Committee in Malaya, 1949-51 / Fernando, Joseph M   Journal Article
Fernando, Joseph M Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Between 1949 and 1951, the Communities Liaison Committee (CLC), an unofficial body comprising leaders from the main Malayan ethnic communities, served as a prototype for elite intercommunal conflict resolution during a very challenging period amid an ongoing communist insurgency. Drawing upon previously inaccessible primary sources, this article reassesses the CLC's work towards resolving divisive issues such as Malay economic backwardness, federal citizenship, national identity, education and language in Malaya. This article argues that the CLC played a significantly bigger role than previously recognised and influenced government policy considerably. Equally importantly, it entrenched the concept of consociationalism, which was to shape the Malayan political landscape long thereafter.
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5
ID:   117188


Intermarriage in colonial Malaya and Singapore: a case study of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Roman Catholic and Methodist Asian communities / Rerceretnam, Marc   Journal Article
Rerceretnam, Marc Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Colonial race relations are regularly portrayed in light of the attempts to divide and rule colonialised Asian communities. While this article does not challenge this view, it attempts to uncover a hitherto hidden level of interaction and even intermarriage at the grassroots level in colonial Malaya and Singapore. With the exception of the various Peranakan communities that predated British rule, little to no evidence exists to show that interaction and especially intermarriage existed within early first- and second-generation migrant communities during the British colonial period. The findings show how colonial attempts to encourage a heightened sense of race and its frailties may have fallen short among some sections of the Asian community.
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6
ID:   117189


Koreans in second world war Philippines: rumour and history / Jose, Lydia N Yu   Journal Article
Jose, Lydia N Yu Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Mas malupit ang mga Koreano kaysa mga Hapon' is a rumour about Koreans in Second World War Philippines that has persisted to this day. A comparative, quantitative statement, it is roughly translated as 'The Koreans committed more atrocities than the Japanese in Second World War Philippines'. This is a half-true memory: true, there were Koreans in the Philippines; false, they could not have committed more atrocities than the Japanese because there were very few of them, as archival evidence discussed in this article proves. If only the Koreans and their role in the war were properly discussed in Philippine textbooks, this rumour would not have persisted to this day.
Key Words Philippines  Koreans  Rumour  History  Second World War 
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7
ID:   117190


Waiting for a righteous ruler: the Karen royal imaginary in Thailand and Burma / Gravers, Mikael   Journal Article
Gravers, Mikael Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Karen believe they are like orphans without a king and leader; royalty often appear in their myths, legends and prophecies. Buddhist Karen await the next Buddha, Ariya Metteya - preceded by a righteous Karen leader - who shall cleanse the world. This paper explores the Karen imaginary and notions of royalty as preconditions for a new era governed by Buddhist ethics that will bring peace and prosperity. This imaginary combines religion and politics in a millenarian model of the world as seen from the margins of traditional kingdoms and modern nation-states - what James Scott has termed 'non-state spaces'. The Karen oscillate between defensive and offensive strategies, as shown in several examples. Is this imaginary a premodern phenomenon typical of marginalised minorities or perhaps also part of a modern, global imaginary of a better future? The concept of morally enchanted leadership is discussed in relation to states, nations and globalisation.
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