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"Flesh and Bone Reunite as One Body": Singapore's Chinese-speaking and their Perspectives on Merger

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Thum, Ping Tjin

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Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies

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Chinese southern diaspora studies_Volume 5

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Centre for the Study of the Chinese Southern Diaspora, The Australian National University

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Open Access

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Singapore's Chinese speakers played the determining role in Singapore's merger with the Federation. Yet the historiography is silent on their perspectives, values, and assumptions. Using contemporary Chinese-language sources, this article argues that in approaching merger, the Chinese were chiefly concerned with livelihoods, education, and citizenship rights; saw themselves as deserving of an equal place in Malaya; conceived of a new, distinctive, multiethnic Malayan identity; and rejected communist ideology. Meanwhile, the leaders of UMNO were intent on preserving their electoral dominance and the special position of Malays in the Federation. Finally, the leaders of the PAP were desperate to retain power and needed the Federation to remove their political opponents. The interaction of these three factors explains the shape, structure, and timing of merger. This article also sheds light on the ambiguity inherent in the transfer of power and the difficulties of national identity formation in a multiethnic state.

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Chinese Southern Diaspora Studies

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Open Access

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