Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)

The thesis explores identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Malaya, and more specifically Singapore, in the context of decolonisation from the immediate post-war period until Singapore’s independence in 1965. There will be an analysis of the construction of a) national identities, in te...

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Main Author: Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim
Other Authors: Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76607
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-766072019-12-10T12:12:36Z Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965) Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim Jessica Bridgette Hinchy School of Humanities DRNTU::Humanities::General::History DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore The thesis explores identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Malaya, and more specifically Singapore, in the context of decolonisation from the immediate post-war period until Singapore’s independence in 1965. There will be an analysis of the construction of a) national identities, in terms of the South Asians’ identifications with their country of origin, India and migrated country, Singapore; and b) social identities, in terms of the making of religious, language, ethnic, and caste identities. The study shows that it was in the long process of decolonisation of both South Asia and Southeast Asia, particularly after the Partition of India in 1947, that identities experienced significant shifts. With transformations in migration patterns and changing power balance within South Asian identity categories, the diaspora’s outlook and identity narratives were substantially transformed over the process of decolonisation. The study contributes to an understudied area in the scholarship of South Asian diaspora in Singapore, in terms of the effects of Partition on South Asians there. This would be done through a close examination of Partition discussions in Malaya and Singapore from 1946-47, illustrating the limited effect it had on producing identity shifts. Bachelor of Arts in History 2019-03-29T03:49:47Z 2019-03-29T03:49:47Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76607 en Nanyang Technological University 71 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::General::History
DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::General::History
DRNTU::Humanities::History::Asia::Singapore
Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim
Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
description The thesis explores identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Malaya, and more specifically Singapore, in the context of decolonisation from the immediate post-war period until Singapore’s independence in 1965. There will be an analysis of the construction of a) national identities, in terms of the South Asians’ identifications with their country of origin, India and migrated country, Singapore; and b) social identities, in terms of the making of religious, language, ethnic, and caste identities. The study shows that it was in the long process of decolonisation of both South Asia and Southeast Asia, particularly after the Partition of India in 1947, that identities experienced significant shifts. With transformations in migration patterns and changing power balance within South Asian identity categories, the diaspora’s outlook and identity narratives were substantially transformed over the process of decolonisation. The study contributes to an understudied area in the scholarship of South Asian diaspora in Singapore, in terms of the effects of Partition on South Asians there. This would be done through a close examination of Partition discussions in Malaya and Singapore from 1946-47, illustrating the limited effect it had on producing identity shifts.
author2 Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
author_facet Jessica Bridgette Hinchy
Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim
format Final Year Project
author Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim
author_sort Al-Mehraaj Mohamed Rahim
title Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
title_short Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
title_full Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
title_fullStr Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
title_full_unstemmed Identity construction in the South Asian diaspora in Singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
title_sort identity construction in the south asian diaspora in singapore in the process of decolonisation : from post-war to independence (c. 1945–1965)
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76607
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