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5 - At “Home” in a Globalized City-State?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2015

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Summary

For those who were born and bred in Singapore, those who have stayed or migrated, those who come to make a better living — for all these people, Singapore is a convenient and temporary base. The best that Singapore can aspire to is to be a virtual nation, an abstract entity, imagined by a number of people who have had some association with the country, can choose to connect with it whenever they wish, just as in logging on to cyberspace, clicking on to the electronic hypermarket of free-floating identities.

(Kwok and Ali 1998, pp. 119–12.)

INTRODUCTION

In Chapters 3 and 4, I examined the specific positioning of Singapore within the globalized space of flows and the ways the Singapore government has approached the processes of globalization. The 1990s saw a significant change in the way Singapore articulated its relationship to the rest of the world. Its earlier rhetoric of Asian values and the need to preserve and safeguard the Asian cultural traditions of its people against the penetration of “Westernization” gradually gave way to a more concerted effort to transform Singapore into a global city. This gesture towards a “wannabe global city” in Asia has been fostered by marketing Singapore as a regional hub for international finance, services, telecommunications, tourism and, more recently, in the area of arts and culture. In addressing the social and cultural challenges of globalization, the Singapore government continues to maintain rhetorically the need to make Singapore a world class “home” and a cosmopolitan city. Many of its policy visions are about “place-making” and are associated with the government's fear that Singapore risks becoming a “hotel”.

Type
Chapter
Information
Responding to Globalization
Nation, Culture and Identity in Singapore
, pp. 159 - 201
Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak Institute
Print publication year: 2007

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