Title
Year
Author
Aspects of identity and change among Tamil Muslims in Singapore
Aspects of identity and change among Tamil Muslims in Singapore
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Mani, A. |
Title |
Aspects of identity and change among Tamil Muslims in Singapore |
Source Title | Journal Institute of Muslim Minority Affairs |
Publication Date | 1992 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02666959208716253 |
Call Number | DS36 JIMA |
Subject |
Tamils -- Singapore -- Ethnic identity India -- Emigration and immigration Tamils -- Singapore -- Religious life -- Islam Tamils -- Singapore -- Malay influences |
Page | 337-357 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 13 |
Issue | 2 |
Becoming a Confucian in contemporary Singapore: the case of Nanyang Confucian association
Becoming a Confucian in contemporary Singapore: the case of Nanyang Confucian association
2021
Ong, Chang Woei
Koh, Khee Heong
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Ong, Chang Woei Koh, Khee Heong |
Title |
Becoming a Confucian in contemporary Singapore: the case of Nanyang Confucian association |
Source Title | Religions |
Publication Date | 2021 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel12100854 |
Subject |
Confucianism -- Singapore Nanyang Confucian Association Chinese -- Singapore |
Page | 12100854 |
Language | English |
URI | |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 12 |
Issue | 10 |
Abstract |
Using the Nanyang Confucian Association (NCA) as a case study, this paper explores the multi-faceted processes through which a segment of Singapore’s Chinese community constructs its self-identity based on an understanding of Confucianism that dismisses its religious attributes while underscoring the ethnic and cultural dimensions. Tracing the history of the association since its formation in 1914, the paper hopes to contribute to recent overseas Chinese studies on the rethinking of the notion of the Chinese diaspora within the context of the formation, circulation, and contest of a global Chinese identity by asking the following questions: Does identifying with the Confucian tradition necessarily require one to acknowledge their connection with China? Would a self-proclaimed Confucian be perceived as someone who looks to China for ethnic and cultural affiliation and thus appears less local? The authors argue that, while still acknowledging the spatial- temporal centrality of China as the origin of Confucianism and Chinese civilization, leaders of the NCA clearly intended to simultaneously position the NCA at the center of global Confucian activism. What emerges from the processes initiated by the NCA in constructing its identity is a complex overlay of history, geography, and culture that gives rise to a vision of multiple centers. |
Between the sea and the shore: mediating the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore
Between the sea and the shore: mediating the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore
2019
Lim, Alvin Eng Hui
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Lim, Alvin Eng Hui |
Title |
Between the sea and the shore: mediating the Nine Emperor Gods Festival in Singapore |
Source Title | Journal of Contemporary Religion |
Publication Date | 2019 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2019.1585125 |
Subject |
Nine Emperor Gods (Cult) -- Singapore Processions, Religious -- Singapore Chinese -- Singapore -- Religion Chinese -- Singapore -- Rites and ceremonies |
Page | 117-134 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 34 |
Issue | 1 |
Description |
The Chinese diaspora brought tablets and effigies of their Taoist gods with them when they migrated to Southeast Asia. Temples in the region hold annual festivals to evoke this passage from the sea to the shore, assisted by makeshift sets, props, and generators with floodlights. |
Buddha-izing a global city-tate: transnational religious mobilities, spiritual marketplace, and Thai migrant monks in Singapore
Buddha-izing a global city-tate: transnational religious mobilities, spiritual marketplace, and Thai migrant monks in Singapore
2010
Pattana Kitiarsa
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Pattana Kitiarsa |
Title |
Buddha-izing a global city-tate: transnational religious mobilities, spiritual marketplace, and Thai migrant monks in Singapore |
Source Title | Mobilities |
Publication Date | 2010 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17450101003665184 |
Call Number | DS599.6 Mob 2010 |
Subject |
Buddhist monks -- Singapore Buddhist monks -- Thailand Globalization -- Religious aspects -- Buddhism |
Page | 257-275 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 5 |
Issue | 2 |
Buddhism in Singapore: a state of the field review
Buddhism in Singapore: a state of the field review
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Chia, Jack Meng Tat |
Title |
Buddhism in Singapore: a state of the field review |
Source Title | Asian Culture |
Publication Date | 2009 |
DOI |
http://asc.mcu.ac.th/database/wp-content/uploads/2018/09/jack-buddhism-in-singapore-2009.pdf |
Call Number | DS1 AC |
Subject |
Buddhism -- Research -- Singapore Buddhism -- Singapore -- Historiography |
Page | 81-93 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 33 |
Buddhism, Confucianism and the secular state in Singapore
Buddhism, Confucianism and the secular state in Singapore
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Ling, Trevor |
Title |
Buddhism, Confucianism and the secular state in Singapore |
Publication Date | 1987 |
Publisher | Singapore : Dept. of Sociology, National University of Singapore |
Call Number | BL2080.2 Lin |
Subject |
Religion and state -- Singapore Chinese -- Singapore -- Religion Singapore -- Religion |
Page | 37 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Charismatic Christianity’s impact on growth and revival in Singapore: the case of the Methodist Church from 1889–2012
Charismatic Christianity’s impact on growth and revival in Singapore: the case of the Methodist Church from 1889–2012
2021
Lane, Justin E.
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Lane, Justin E. |
Title |
Charismatic Christianity’s impact on growth and revival in Singapore: the case of the Methodist Church from 1889–2012 |
Source Title | Journal of Religion and Demography |
Publication Date | 2021 |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1163/2589742X-12347113 |
Subject |
Methodist Church in Singapore Church growth -- Methodist Church -- Singapore Christianity -- Singapore |
Page | 101-123 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 8 |
Issue | 1/2 |
Abstract |
This paper aims to explain patterns of Charismatic revival by utilizing a quantitative lens on church growth in Singapore during the mid-1900s. The research digitized and then analyzed data from the archives of the Methodist Church of Singapore between the years 1889 and 2012. The annual conference reports recorded several variables over this 123-year period such as church membership, baptisms, and professions of faith. In recent years, it also records the average Sunday attendance at each of 23 churches throughout Singapore. This paper presents a qualitative and quantitative analysis of the historical data and concludes that, in line with predictions from the cognitive science of religion (CSR), religious revival can serve to energize religious communities that are primarily reliant on rituals with high frequency and low-arousal (see Whitehouse 2004). Typically, high frequency and low-arousal rituals allow for high levels of consensus and social identification among large religious groups. However, as a byproduct of their high frequency and low-arousal, the repeated rituals are predicted to suffer from the effects of tedium, which lowers motivation for the information presented during the rituals and can have negative effects on group cohesion. The ethnographic and historical records investigated within the theory of Divergent Modes of Religiosity (DMR) have suggested that short bursts of reinvigoration can be used to revitalize motivation in doctrinal religions. While the data from Singapore’s Clock Tower Revival events in the 1970s suggest that such an event did occur, the DMR, as traditionally formulated, is unable to capture the dynamics of Singaporean Christian demographics because 1) it does not clearly account for the high number of converts who have entered the religion and 2) it cannot account for the sustained presence of high-arousal rituals in the Pentecostal and Charismatic churches in Singapore since the Clock Tower Revival. Demographic data from Singapore, in particular the Singaporean Methodist church, complicate CSR’s current approach to tedium because it appears that the religious communities in Singapore have not only sustained their motivation, they have grown since the initial revival period in the 1970s, suggesting that new amendments to our approach to tedium in doctrinal religions may be appropriate (Lane, 2021, 2019; Lane, Shults, & McCauley, 2019). As such, this paper discusses how the data from the Methodist church in Singapore are more easily explained through the use of a new approach toward understanding social cohesion in religions that relies on a cognitive (i.e., information processing) approach that links social and personal information schemas with rehearsal, memory, and personal experiences. The theory also aims to formulate its claims with sufficient specificity to be modeled in computer simulations (Lane 2018, 2013) to be further tested against other historical groups, which this paper discusses in regards to future directions for the research. |
Chinese spirit-mediums in Singapore: an ethnographic study
Chinese spirit-mediums in Singapore: an ethnographic study
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Ju, Shi Huey |
Title |
Chinese spirit-mediums in Singapore: an ethnographic study |
Publication Date | 1978 |
Call Number | HM15 *1978 10 |
Subject |
Chinese -- Singapore -- Religion Chinese -- Singapore -- Rites and ceremonies |
Page | 93 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Dissertation/Thesis |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
openAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Description |
Academic exercise -- Dept. of Sociology, University of Singapore |
Chinese temples and the transnational networks: Hokkien community in Singapore
Chinese temples and the transnational networks: Hokkien community in Singapore
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Hue, Guan Thye |
Editor |
Kwa, Chong Guan Ke, Mulin |
Title |
Chinese temples and the transnational networks: Hokkien community in Singapore |
Source Title | A General History of the Chinese in Singapore |
Publication Date | 2019 |
Publisher | Singapore: Singapore Federation of Chinese Clan Associations: World Scientific |
DOI |
https://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=https://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9789813277649_0023 |
Call Number | DS610.25.C5 Gen 2019 |
Subject |
Chinese -- Singapore -- History Temples -- Singapore -- History |
Page | 501-516 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Book Chapter |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Abstract |
This chapter is an updated version of a paper first published in Cultural Diversity in China. Vol. 2, No. 1, July 2017, pp.1–36. This chapter provides an overview of the different categories of Chinese temples, their related institutions in Singapore and their transnational networks. |
Christian capital: Singapore, evangelical flows and religious hubs
Christian capital: Singapore, evangelical flows and religious hubs
Collection | Religion |
---|---|
Author/Creator |
Goh, Robbie B. H. |
Title |
Christian capital: Singapore, evangelical flows and religious hubs |
Source Title | Asian Studies Review |
Publication Date | 2016 |
DOI |
http://libproxy1.nus.edu.sg/login?url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10357823.2016.1156052 |
Subject |
Christianity -- Singapore Evangelicalism -- Singapore |
Page | 250-267 |
Language | English |
Content Type | Journal Article |
Object Type |
Text |
Terms of Use |
restrictedAccess |
Repository | NUS Libraries |
Volume | 40 |
Issue | 2 |
Abstract |
Recent scholarship has pointed out the ways in which religions are increasingly commodified, primarily through two mechanisms: the monetisation of religious objects and practices, and the materialisation and extension of religious-symbolic power through new technologies and practices. These two mechanisms of monetisation and materialisation provide very concrete ways of understanding religious commodification, but they do not provide a complete picture of how religious capital is created and sustained in the holistic context of society, city and nation considered in relation to international capital flows. "Christian Capital" includes not only the commodity, consumerist and media empires particularly associated with global-reach "megachurches", but also the less-tangible situational, relational, human-social and influential wealth created between religious agencies and their urban-national contexts. Using the case of Christian agencies in Singapore and their strategic creation of transnational influences, this paper offers a conception of Christian capital that incorporates not only the materialisation of religious influence in terms of finances and commodities, but also its expression in less tangible but significant ways in terms of the creation of an international "brand" of Singapore Christianity. |
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