Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s

This thesis offers another perspective on how suicides were regarded differently amongst the Chinese during colonial Singapore and how it interfered with the management of biological life that British colonial authority had to practice as the crown colony thrived. By using newspaper archives to anal...

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Main Author: Gan, Zhen Yin
Other Authors: Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155950
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1559502023-03-11T20:12:06Z Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s Gan, Zhen Yin Jessica Bridgette Hinchy School of Humanities JHinchy@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::History This thesis offers another perspective on how suicides were regarded differently amongst the Chinese during colonial Singapore and how it interfered with the management of biological life that British colonial authority had to practice as the crown colony thrived. By using newspaper archives to analyse how the suicides were reported in the colonial press, this thesis will argue that between the 1860s to 1930s, the strategies employed to manage suicides by colonial authority were effective for European colonial subjects but not for Chinese colonial subjects. The cause for this lies in the different ‘truths’ in relation to suicide that these colonial subjects were informed by. For European colonial subjects, suicide was regarded as a tragedy and/or consequence for the pathologically ill while the Chinese colonial subject viewed it as an alternative or last resort to transform themselves into subjects of value that was advocated by Confucian thought. Therefore, colonial authority attempts to reform Chinese colonial subject into rational and non-suicidal subjects within colonial Singapore were often ineffective even with the criminalisation of suicides and the establishment of medicalise spaces to reform the Chinese. This thesis will also reveal how suicide was racialised by the colonial press in colonial Singapore. Bachelor of Arts in History 2022-03-26T13:00:44Z 2022-03-26T13:00:44Z 2022 Final Year Project (FYP) Gan, Z. Y. (2022). Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155950 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155950 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::History
spellingShingle Humanities::History
Gan, Zhen Yin
Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
description This thesis offers another perspective on how suicides were regarded differently amongst the Chinese during colonial Singapore and how it interfered with the management of biological life that British colonial authority had to practice as the crown colony thrived. By using newspaper archives to analyse how the suicides were reported in the colonial press, this thesis will argue that between the 1860s to 1930s, the strategies employed to manage suicides by colonial authority were effective for European colonial subjects but not for Chinese colonial subjects. The cause for this lies in the different ‘truths’ in relation to suicide that these colonial subjects were informed by. For European colonial subjects, suicide was regarded as a tragedy and/or consequence for the pathologically ill while the Chinese colonial subject viewed it as an alternative or last resort to transform themselves into subjects of value that was advocated by Confucian thought. Therefore, colonial authority attempts to reform Chinese colonial subject into rational and non-suicidal subjects within colonial Singapore were often ineffective even with the criminalisation of suicides and the establishment of medicalise spaces to reform the Chinese. This thesis will also reveal how suicide was racialised by the colonial press in colonial Singapore.
author2 Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
author_facet Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Gan, Zhen Yin
format Final Year Project
author Gan, Zhen Yin
author_sort Gan, Zhen Yin
title Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
title_short Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
title_full Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
title_fullStr Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
title_full_unstemmed Dying to be seen : suicide and the Chinese in colonial Singapore, 1860s - 1930s
title_sort dying to be seen : suicide and the chinese in colonial singapore, 1860s - 1930s
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/155950
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