Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- INTRODUCTION: Globalization and the Nation-State
- 1 The Making of the Singapore Nation-State and the Quest for a National Identity
- 2 The Rhetoric of Asian Values and the Embracing of a “New Asian” Identity
- 3 Creating National Citizens for a Global City
- 4 Re-Branding Singapore: Cosmopolitan Cultural and Urban Redevelopment in a Global City-State
- 5 At “Home” in a Globalized City-State?
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
2 - The Rhetoric of Asian Values and the Embracing of a “New Asian” Identity
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- INTRODUCTION: Globalization and the Nation-State
- 1 The Making of the Singapore Nation-State and the Quest for a National Identity
- 2 The Rhetoric of Asian Values and the Embracing of a “New Asian” Identity
- 3 Creating National Citizens for a Global City
- 4 Re-Branding Singapore: Cosmopolitan Cultural and Urban Redevelopment in a Global City-State
- 5 At “Home” in a Globalized City-State?
- CONCLUSION
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
Summary
Yet, is Singapore too elusive to be defined?
(Yong 1992a, p. 26)Asia may not need Singapore, but Singapore needs Asia.
(Chua 1996, p. 88)INTRODUCTION
In Chapter 1, I examined the particular ways in which the construction of national identity began to take shape in post-independent Singapore. This early phase of nation-building was as much about creating a unique national-societal identity as it was about reworking the nation-state norm to suit the local context. From the outset, the Western-educated PAP elite rejected the possibility of reviving the past traditions of Singapore's immigrant population and chose instead to deliberately construct a pragmatic identity based on development and economic success as the symbols of national identification. At the same time, these nation-building efforts were designed to create a bounded sense of national identity, but they disregarded the diasporic connections of Singapore's people and its transnational history. Instead, a progress-oriented transitional narrative became a central feature of the PAP's nation-building strategy. The government's pragmatic approach to identity construction based on development and economic success reinforced the idea that Singapore as a nation is always in transition — on a path towards progress. While this transitional narrative generated a perception that Singapore is always evolving, it has also been accompanied by a state-generated discourse of anxiety over its long-term economic prospects and survival as a nation.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Responding to GlobalizationNation, Culture and Identity in Singapore, pp. 52 - 81Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2007