The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule

This dissertation is an interdisciplinary, humanist-centered examination of the cultural biography of the Raffles Museum, the predecessor of three present-day Singapore museums. Established in 1823 by the proconsul of British Southeast Asia, Thomas Stamford Raffles, the Raffles Museum was a major c...

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Main Author: Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew
Other Authors: Goh Geok Yian
Format: Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2019
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87336
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48133
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-873362020-03-07T12:59:23Z The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew Goh Geok Yian School of Humanities GYGOH@ntu.edu.sg DRNTU::Humanities::History This dissertation is an interdisciplinary, humanist-centered examination of the cultural biography of the Raffles Museum, the predecessor of three present-day Singapore museums. Established in 1823 by the proconsul of British Southeast Asia, Thomas Stamford Raffles, the Raffles Museum was a major center for Western natural history and anthropological research, as well as the collecting of and within Southeast Asia from the latter 1800s until the early 1900s. Its site, building, collections, and biography thus document simultaneously, the West in Asia, British colonial politics and strategies in Southeast Asia, as well as Singapore’s colonial experience. This thesis argues against an existing historical positioning of the museum as first, a benign repository; and second, as having been established by Raffles out of a colonial humanitarian dream and vision that was "inconsistent with the [imperial] realities of its time." It asserts that such a historical position makes no substantive calibration of crucial aspects of the museum’s institutional persona: as a Western institution that emerged out of the West, with Western methodologies and praxes, and that was deeply entangled in Western eighteenth/nineteenth-century colonization of the non-West. Most importantly, it ignores the larger questions of British imperial trade, its geopolitics, as well as Raffles’s ambitions vis-à-vis this trade. As a result, the Raffles Museum’s establishment and function as a British colonial technology of rule has not been completely and properly calibrated and its role in Singapore’s colonial experience has been misrepresented. By making close examinations of Raffles’s objectives and the "ongoing historical, political, moral relationships…" that were within the museum, this dissertation demonstrates that contra to such a position, Raffles’s establishment of the museum and British colonial utilization of the museum were exactly consistent with the imperial realities of the time. What follows is a corrective to such a reading of the Raffles Museum’s history, and by extension, Raffles’s political strategies and legacy, as well as Singapore’s colonial experience. § Doctor of Philosophy 2019-05-09T01:47:42Z 2019-12-06T16:39:46Z 2019-05-09T01:47:42Z 2019-12-06T16:39:46Z 2019 Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy Ang, E. C. S. (2019). The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87336 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48133 10.32657/10220/48133 en 470 p. application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Humanities::History
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities::History
Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew
The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
description This dissertation is an interdisciplinary, humanist-centered examination of the cultural biography of the Raffles Museum, the predecessor of three present-day Singapore museums. Established in 1823 by the proconsul of British Southeast Asia, Thomas Stamford Raffles, the Raffles Museum was a major center for Western natural history and anthropological research, as well as the collecting of and within Southeast Asia from the latter 1800s until the early 1900s. Its site, building, collections, and biography thus document simultaneously, the West in Asia, British colonial politics and strategies in Southeast Asia, as well as Singapore’s colonial experience. This thesis argues against an existing historical positioning of the museum as first, a benign repository; and second, as having been established by Raffles out of a colonial humanitarian dream and vision that was "inconsistent with the [imperial] realities of its time." It asserts that such a historical position makes no substantive calibration of crucial aspects of the museum’s institutional persona: as a Western institution that emerged out of the West, with Western methodologies and praxes, and that was deeply entangled in Western eighteenth/nineteenth-century colonization of the non-West. Most importantly, it ignores the larger questions of British imperial trade, its geopolitics, as well as Raffles’s ambitions vis-à-vis this trade. As a result, the Raffles Museum’s establishment and function as a British colonial technology of rule has not been completely and properly calibrated and its role in Singapore’s colonial experience has been misrepresented. By making close examinations of Raffles’s objectives and the "ongoing historical, political, moral relationships…" that were within the museum, this dissertation demonstrates that contra to such a position, Raffles’s establishment of the museum and British colonial utilization of the museum were exactly consistent with the imperial realities of the time. What follows is a corrective to such a reading of the Raffles Museum’s history, and by extension, Raffles’s political strategies and legacy, as well as Singapore’s colonial experience. §
author2 Goh Geok Yian
author_facet Goh Geok Yian
Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew
format Thesis-Doctor of Philosophy
author Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew
author_sort Ang, Eiselt Chin Siew
title The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
title_short The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
title_full The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
title_fullStr The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
title_full_unstemmed The Raffles Museum, Singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of British colonial rule
title_sort raffles museum, singapore, 1823-1960 : performativities of british colonial rule
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87336
http://hdl.handle.net/10220/48133
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