What is history? How is it made? And why does it matter?
Reimagining Singapore’s History brings together leading historians
to discuss these questions within the context of the decades-long project to
rediscover pre-colonial Singapore. 2019 was a milestone in Singapore’s
history as it marked the 200th anniversary of Stamford Raffles’ landing in
1819.
However, in a powerful turn of events, government-sponsored
celebrations used the occasion to highlight Singapore’s longer pre-colonial
story, in the process officially pushing back the modern country’s origins to
the 14th-century trading post of Temasek.
Contrary to popular belief, Singapore was not a forgotten
land between Temasek and Raffles; it remained a rich crossroads of trade,
culture, religion, and merchant empires (both Asian and European).
The discovery of this pre-1819 period has led to Singapore’s
‘new history’, also known as its ‘700-year narrative’. While this narrative has
long been common knowledge among academics, it was only in the past decade that
it began to make its way into the public consciousness.
Why and how did these changes come about? Where did they come from? Why did it
take so long to bridge academic and public knowledge? And what is pre-colonial
Singapore’s relevance for us in the 21st century? Surveying topics from archaeology
to post-colonial theory, this essay collection explores the above questions and
introduces the sources, discoveries, and ideas that led to the literal
re-writing of Singapore’s official historical narratives over the past decades.
Contributors include renowned National University of Singapore professors and
public historians:
• Professor Wang Gungwu – recognized as ‘one of Asia’s most important public -
intellectuals’
• Professor Peter Borschberg – pioneer of using non-English European archives
to study pre-colonial Singapore
• Professor Kwa Chong Guan – leading proponent of the long-cycles, 700-year
approach to Singapore’s history
• Professor Syed Farid Alatas – sociologist and among Singapore’s top
postcolonial theorists
• Chris Hale – documentary filmmaker and non-fiction writer, author of A Brief
History of Singapore and Malaysia
• Tim Hannigan – travel writer and author of numerous books on Southeast Asia,
including Raffles and the British Invasion of Java
About the Author
Matthew Oey is an Associate Editor at Tuttle
Publishing, part of Periplus Publishing Group. Previously, he was a Research
Assistant at Columbia’s Graduate School of International and Public Affairs,
where he worked with Professor Stuart Gottlieb and U.S. National Security
Advisor Robert O’Brien.
Matthew was the lead organizer of the ‘Reimagining Southeast
Asian History’ conference at the Asian Civilisations Museum, held on August 23,
2023. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in History summa cum laude from Columbia
University and is a Juris Doctor candidate at Harvard Law School.