AbstractsSociology

Identity evolution in a diaspora community: the gradual disappearance of untouchability in Singapore, 1825-1965

by John Solomon




Institution: University of New South Wales
Department: Humanities
Year: 2014
Keywords: South Asia; Diaspora; Singapore; Caste; Post-colonialism; Ethnic identity; Dravidian Nationalism; Indian Nationalism
Record ID: 1046887
Full text PDF: http://handle.unsw.edu.au/1959.4/54093


Abstract

Untouchable migrants made up a significant proportion of Indian labour migration into Singapore in the 19th and 20th centuries. During this period, they were subject to forms of caste prejudice that powerfully reinforced their identities as untouchables overseas. Today however, untouchability has disappeared from the public sphere, replaced by other notions of identity, leaving unanswered questions as to how and when this occurred. This study takes this “disappearance” as a starting point to examine a history of untouchable migration and identity negotiation in Singapore amongst Indians who arrived in Singapore between its modern founding as a British colony in the early 1800s through to its independence in 1965. I argue that that practices of untouchability evolved in close relation to growth of translocal solidarities amongst migrants, their responses to life overseas in a plural colony, and the spread of transnational ideologies and movements. Untouchable identity was negotiated in relation to the development of competing Indian and Tamil identity discourses in Singapore during the colonial period, the Japanese Occupation of Malaya and the post-war period of decolonisation. In this study I argue that caste identities amongst Tamil migrants were eventually replaced by a linguistically defined ethnic Tamil identity in the 1950s and 1960s that was shaped by the emergence of the Dravidian movement in Singapore in the 1930s. This process intensified within the post-colonial logic of the emerging independent Singaporean state’s policies governing inter-racial relations.