Ethnic Resurgence,Minority Communities,and State Policies in a Network Society: The Dynamics of Malay Identity Formation in Postcolonial Singapore |
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Authors: | Syed Muhd Khairudin Aljunied |
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Affiliation: | Assistant Professor, Department of Malay Studies National University of Singapore |
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Abstract: | While much has been written about identity formation and the politics of ethnicity among minority communities in various parts of modern-day Southeast Asia, the same cannot be said regarding the Malay community of Singapore. This article seeks to address this scholarly neglect by bringing into sharp focus the dynamics, processes, and circumstances that shaped Malay identity in postcolonial Singapore during the 1980s. By interweaving historical data with theoretical insights derived from the works of Andrew Willford, Manuel Castells, and Richard Jenkins, among others, this article provides an analytical reading of the global, regional, and local developments that brought about an ethnic resurgence within one of the largest minority groups in this island city-state. Such developments prompted the Singapore government to devise new laws and employ multi-faceted strategies to regain its legitimacy in the eyes of a certain segment of the population, and to enhance its ruling capacity. The problematics embedded within the state's interpretation of Malay identity and the effects of citizen resistance against state policies are considered in detail in the final sections of this article. |
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Keywords: | State policies identity ethnic resurgence minorities network society |
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