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Weakening Ties with the Ancestral Homeland in China: The Case Studies of Contemporary Singapore and Malaysian Chinese

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 August 2005

YOW CHEUN HOE
Affiliation:
East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore
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In the last two decades there has been much scholarly and journalistic attention given to the issue of how Chinese overseas relate themselves to China. This happened against a backdrop of two major developments in Asia. The first has to do with the fact that many ethnic Chinese outside mainland China have been faring well economically and accumulating considerable wealth in Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand, Hong Kong, and Taiwan in the second half of the twentieth century. The second is the rise of China as an economic superpower attracting foreign capital after it reopened itself and launched economic reform in 1978.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2005 Cambridge University Press

Footnotes

This paper is based on the research I did for my doctoral dissertation—‘The Changing Landscape of Qiaoxiang: Guangdong and the Chinese Diaspora, 1850–2000’ (Singapore: East Asian Institute, National University of Singapore, 2002). I am grateful for the advice and comments from my supervisors, Professor Wang Gungwu, Dr Zheng Yongnian, and Dr Liu Hong as well as my colleague Dr Lam Peng Er. My thanks also go to the many Chinese I interviewed in Singapore, Malaysia, and Guangdong, from 1999 to 2001, for providing information and telling their experiences that essentially have made the study more grounded on reality.