Polytechnicians and Technocrats: Sources, Limits, and Possibilities of Student Activism in 1970s Singapore

IF 0.4 Q3 AREA STUDIES Southeast Asian Studies Pub Date : 2018-04-01 DOI:10.20495/SEAS.7.1_39
Loh Kah Seng
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Making a case for studying student activism outside of elite university students, this paper investigates the sources of polytechnic student activism in a tightly controlled society: 1970s Singapore. It seeks to find less obvious histories: the limits of state control, the relative openness of the city-state, and the identity and lived experiences of the polytechnicians. Through the writings and cartoons of the Singapore Polytechnic Students’ Union, augmented by oral histories, the paper traces the contours of student activism as defined by everyday events as well as momentous experiences formed at the intersection between campus, national, and transnational—particularly pan-Asian—developments. At the national level, the polytechnicians’ identity responded to the state’s instrumentalist view of students, which was to define the polytechnic student in a more expansive way, attacking student apathy toward social and political issues. Some student matters, such as protests against bus hikes, escalated into national issues, bringing the polytechnicians into encounters with state officials and politi-cians. Political surveillance caused fear and anxiety but also fostered a sense of injustice. Conversely, international contact, such as reading critical literature and participating in pan-Asian seminars, helped the polytechnicians place Singapore in an Asian context and plot themselves on a mental political spectrum. Reading was an experience: universal ideas in books enabled the students to contextualize local issues, just as everyday experiences in Singapore helped them locate the abstract. The international contact thus enabled the polytechnicians to give meaning to concepts such as “students,” “education,” and “Asia.”
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理工学院与技术官僚:1970年代新加坡学生激进主义的来源、限制与可能性
为了研究精英大学学生之外的学生激进主义,本文调查了一个严格控制的社会中理工学院学生激进主义的来源:1970年代的新加坡。它试图寻找不那么明显的历史:国家控制的限制,城邦的相对开放,以及理工学院的身份和生活经历。通过新加坡理工学院学生会的著作和漫画,辅以口述历史,本文追溯了学生激进主义的轮廓,这些激进主义是由日常事件以及在校园、国家和跨国(特别是泛亚洲)发展的交叉点形成的重大经验所定义的。在国家层面上,理工学院的身份认同回应了国家对学生的工具主义观点,即以更广泛的方式定义理工学院学生,攻击学生对社会和政治问题的冷漠。一些学生问题,如抗议公交涨价,升级为全国性问题,使这些理工学院的学生与州政府官员和政界人士发生了冲突。政治监视引起了恐惧和焦虑,但也助长了一种不公正感。相反,国际接触,如阅读批评文学和参加泛亚洲研讨会,帮助理工学院的人把新加坡放在亚洲的背景下,并在精神政治光谱上规划自己。阅读是一种体验:书中的普遍思想使学生能够将当地问题置于背景中,就像新加坡的日常经历帮助他们找到抽象的东西一样。因此,国际间的接触使技师们能够赋予诸如“学生”、“教育”和“亚洲”等概念以意义。
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来源期刊
Southeast Asian Studies
Southeast Asian Studies AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
0.90
自引率
25.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The new journal aims to promote excellent, agenda-setting scholarship and provide a forum for dialogue and collaboration both within and beyond the region. Southeast Asian Studies engages in wide-ranging and in-depth discussions that are attuned to the issues, debates, and imperatives within the region, while affirming the importance of learning and sharing ideas on a cross-country, global, and historical scale. An integral part of the journal’s mandate is to foster scholarship that is capable of bridging the continuing divide in area studies between the social sciences and humanities, on the one hand, and the natural sciences, on the other hand. To this end, the journal welcomes accessibly written articles that build on insights and cutting-edge research from the natural sciences. The journal also publishes research reports, which are shorter but fully peer-reviewed articles that present original findings or new concepts that result from specific research projects or outcomes of research collaboration.
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