For most of the time in post-independence Singapore, Peranakan identity has been largely subsumed under the state official categorisation of Chinese. Its younger generations are also assigned Mandarin as their mother tongue and English as a first language with the result that many Peranakans today may not even know or identify themselves as Peranakans anymore. Decline of the more visible and audible aspects of Peranakan material culture like speaking Baba Malay and the wearing of traditional clothes like the Sarong Kebaya presents a picture of gradual disappearance of the culture. Instead, this paper argues that it is the rise of the English language and everyday social-political realities which demanded the Peranakans to change the way th...
Since the late 60s, the Malay elites who rose up and expanded rapidly, has taken over the national a...
The issue of a disjuncture between being Singaporean and being Malay is explored in Alfian Sa’at’s p...
This essay explores issues of identity and agency within the writings of Singapore and Malaysian's w...
For most of the time in post-independence Singapore, Peranakan identity has been largely subsumed un...
Most scholarship look at the period from the 1890s to the 1930s for answers to the origins of the C...
This article traces the way in which political processes influence the creation and presentation of ...
Conference Theme: World Englishes: Contexts, Challenges and OpportunitiesSession 2EDescendants of 18...
This paper examines the state of identity maintenance and identity shift among the Tirok Chinese P...
The Straits Chinese Magazine (SCM), published in Singapore between 1897 and 1907, was a watershed in...
Peranakan Chinese is considered a unique ethnich group in Indonesia due to assimilation of Malay cul...
The union between Chinese male settlers and non-Muslim indigenous women of the Malay Archipelago led...
This article examines the literal and figurative domestication of Straits Chinese, or Peranakan, his...
Since the 'beginning' of modern Indonesian literature in the early twentieth century, Indonesian wri...
This paper explores the identity negotiations of the Baweanese in Singapore, one of the many sub-eth...
In addition to looking into the socio-political milieu of the production and interpretation of Indon...
Since the late 60s, the Malay elites who rose up and expanded rapidly, has taken over the national a...
The issue of a disjuncture between being Singaporean and being Malay is explored in Alfian Sa’at’s p...
This essay explores issues of identity and agency within the writings of Singapore and Malaysian's w...
For most of the time in post-independence Singapore, Peranakan identity has been largely subsumed un...
Most scholarship look at the period from the 1890s to the 1930s for answers to the origins of the C...
This article traces the way in which political processes influence the creation and presentation of ...
Conference Theme: World Englishes: Contexts, Challenges and OpportunitiesSession 2EDescendants of 18...
This paper examines the state of identity maintenance and identity shift among the Tirok Chinese P...
The Straits Chinese Magazine (SCM), published in Singapore between 1897 and 1907, was a watershed in...
Peranakan Chinese is considered a unique ethnich group in Indonesia due to assimilation of Malay cul...
The union between Chinese male settlers and non-Muslim indigenous women of the Malay Archipelago led...
This article examines the literal and figurative domestication of Straits Chinese, or Peranakan, his...
Since the 'beginning' of modern Indonesian literature in the early twentieth century, Indonesian wri...
This paper explores the identity negotiations of the Baweanese in Singapore, one of the many sub-eth...
In addition to looking into the socio-political milieu of the production and interpretation of Indon...
Since the late 60s, the Malay elites who rose up and expanded rapidly, has taken over the national a...
The issue of a disjuncture between being Singaporean and being Malay is explored in Alfian Sa’at’s p...
This essay explores issues of identity and agency within the writings of Singapore and Malaysian's w...