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The Ambiguity Of Identity Ethnicity Maintenance And Change Among The Straits Chinese Community In Malaysia And Singapore John R Clammer

  • SKU: BELL-51947470
The Ambiguity Of Identity Ethnicity Maintenance And Change Among The Straits Chinese Community In Malaysia And Singapore John R Clammer
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The Ambiguity Of Identity Ethnicity Maintenance And Change Among The Straits Chinese Community In Malaysia And Singapore John R Clammer instant download after payment.

Publisher: ISEAS Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15.56 MB
Pages: 24
Author: John R. Clammer
ISBN: 9789814377355, 981437735X
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

The Ambiguity Of Identity Ethnicity Maintenance And Change Among The Straits Chinese Community In Malaysia And Singapore John R Clammer by John R. Clammer 9789814377355, 981437735X instant download after payment.

The Straits Chinese (otherwise known as Babas or Peranakans) represent a unique blend of Chinese and Malay cultural traits and yet are quite distinct from both these two source cultures. Many rose to the positions of political and social prominence under British rule. The nature of this cultural and political accomodation and its dynamics provide an ideal ethnographic base for an exploration of ethnicity in Southeast Asia. This paper examines the nature of their identity and culture, the changes in the nature of the group and internal and external criteria for identification. The thesis is that the emergence of the Baba community is due to a combination of social and political factors, including the nurturing of a group willing to distinguish themselves from other Chinese migrants by learning English and acting as social and political brokers between the government and the population. Their position becomes ambiguous after 1942, with the decline of British influence. The writer's argument is that the outcome of this situation is not to be explained by factors of choice or perception but by structural factors. The paper concludes with an examination of these structural factors (incuding processes of accomodation, assimilation, and resinification) which have their roots in the colonial past of the area in the present management of ethnicity in Malaysia and Singapore.

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