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“Not a Particularly Happy Expression”: “Malayanization” and the China Threat in Britain's Late-Colonial Southeast Asian Territories

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2019

Jeremy E. Taylor*
Affiliation:
Jeremy E. Taylor (jeremy.taylor@nottingham.ac.uk) is Associate Professor of Modern Asian History at the University of Nottingham.
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Abstract

Drawing on archival sources in Britain, Singapore, Malaysia, and the United States, this article explores late-colonial anxieties about the influence of Chinese nationalism in Malaya (and especially among students in Chinese-medium schools) in the lead up to self-government in 1957. It demonstrates that the colonial fear of communism in Malaya was not always synonymous with the fear of cultural influence from “new China” and that the “rise of China” in the mid-1950s was viewed as a challenge to colonially sanctioned programs for “Malayanization.” More importantly, in exploring some of the ways in which the colonial state mobilized anti-communist cultural workers from Hong Kong to help counter the perceived threat from China, the article argues that more focus should be placed on the role of colonial agency in shaping “Sinophone” cultural expression in Southeast Asia during this period.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Association for Asian Studies, Inc. 2019 

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References

List of References

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Kaur, Kiranjit, and Ramanathan, Sankaran. 2008. “‘Wither’ Media Regulations? Experiences of Malaysia and Singapore.” Journal of International Communication 14(1):727.10.1080/13216597.2008.9674719Google Scholar
Khor Teik, Huat. 2007. “Towards the Larger Objective of Malayan Independence: The Chinese Community and the Independence Movement.” In Malaysian Chinese and Nation-Building: Before Merdeka and Fifty Years After, ed. Keong, Voon Phin, 1:95–128. 2 vols. Kuala Lumpur: Centre for Malaysian Chinese Studies.Google Scholar
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Kodat, Catherine Gunther. 2015. Don't Act, Just Dance: The Metapolitics of Cold War Culture. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.Google Scholar
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Loh, Kah Seng, Liao, Edgar, Lim, Cheng Tju, and Seng, Guo-Quan. 2013. The University Socialist Club and the Contest for Malaya: Tangled Strands of Modernity. Singapore: NUS Press.Google Scholar
Low Choo, Chin. 2014. “The Repatriation of the Chinese as a Counter-insurgency Policy during the Malayan Emergency.” Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 45(3):363–92.Google Scholar
Maguire, Thomas J. 2014. “Interrogation and ‘Psychological Intelligence’: The Construction of Propaganda during the Malayan Emergency, 1948–1958.” In Interrogation in War and Conflict: A Comparative and Interdisciplinary Analysis, eds. Andrew, Christopher and Tobia, Simona, 132–52. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Mark, Chi-kwan. 2004. Hong Kong and the Cold War: Anglo-American Relations, 1949–1957. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
McGregor, Katharine. 2016. “Cold War Scripts: Comparing Remembrance of the Malayan Emergency and the 1965 Violence in Indonesia.” South East Asia Research 24(2):242–60.10.1177/0967828X16649310Google Scholar
Ng, Kenny K. K. 2008. “Inhibition vs. Exhibition: Political Censorship of Chinese and Foreign Cinemas in Postwar Hong Kong.” Journal of Chinese Cinemas 2(1):2335.10.1386/jcc.2.1.23_1Google Scholar
Nonini, Donald M. 2015. “Getting By”: Class and State Formation among Chinese in Malaysia. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Oong Hak, Ching. 1993. “British Policy and Chinese Politics in Malaya, 1942–1955.” PhD diss., University of Hull.Google Scholar
Oyen, Meredith. 2010. “Communism, Containment and the Chinese Overseas.” In The Cold War in Asia: The Battle for Hearts and Minds, eds. Yangwen, Zheng, Liu, Hong, and Szonyi, Michael, 5993. Leiden: Brill.Google Scholar
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Ramanathan, Indira. 1994. China and the Ethnic Chinese in Malaysia and Indonesia, 1949–1992. New Delhi: Radiant.Google Scholar
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