183 COMMENTARY Malaysia-Singapore

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

183 COMMENTARY Malaysia-Singapore COMMENTARY Two Kinds of Malaysia-Singapore: Ethnic Transformations Wang Gungwu East Asian Institute National University of Singapore The nine articles in this issue of the journal represent one of the first efforts to study ethnic transformations in Malaysia and Singapore in tandem. Five are about Singapore and three on Malaysia, with one general essay warning against the potential Chinese threat to the region. The eight country essays are mainly ethnographic in approach, each providing more than adequate theoretical background for the questions they have chosen to ask but none seeking to compare the transformations in the two countries directly. In his introduction, the editor has shown keen awareness of the sensitivities of the subject. He has been content to place the articles side by side, comment briefly on the key issues raised by each of them, and refer to such points of theoretical interest that may arise. He has concentrated on ensuring that the authors explain features of the ethnic process rather than enlarge on the consequences of state policies in nation-building. Editorial caution here is understandable. Ethnographic data is necessary before one can tackle such a large and complex subject. What is valuable about this collection is the amount of fresh information that has been gathered in several of these essays that contributes to the record and eventually enables us to begin to understand the changes taking place. One would have wished for some comparative essays, but must be content that the material is rich enough so that reading them together in one volume offers the reader many insights. In this brief commentary, I shall note two developments in scholarly writings which may have ramifications for the understanding of ethnic transformations. The first tends to confirm the popular view that both ethnic and national identities may be negotiated and renegotiated depending on the circumstances faced by various groups and communities. The second revives the opposite and now less fashionable view which uses the essentialist interpretations of specific cultures and religions in order to explain identity formations. Negotiable Identities It is remarkable how quickly various peoples in Malaysia and Singapore have accepted both the nation-state framework and the multicultural realities which that framework has had to face in each country. In the anti-colonial movements before the 183 184 • 1950s, most leaders took for granted that the nation-state of the West was the supreme political expression of modern civilization. Some even considered it as the secret of its power and wealth, the reason why the Western powers conquered all before them. Thus, the freedom and independence everyone wanted was symbolized most clearly by the act of reproducing new nations based on the original European model. Each sovereign state of defined borders would ideally consist of a single nation with one language, one religion, one culture, wholly united against all other states. Thus when Malaya-Malaysia, and then Singapore, became independent, it was recognized that neither was a ready-made nation-state. The task of nation-building was urgent, but one that called not for force but for sensitivity and multiple levels of negotiation. But the ultimate goal was to achieve the kind of unity of purpose that all nation-states were supposed to have. In the 1950s, all the new states of Southeast Asia were "plural societies" and had significant minority groups living within the borders they inherited from the British, Dutch, French and American powers. Thailand alone had not been colonized, but it had long cpmmitted itself to a similar nation-building programme by the beginning of the 20th century. Its rulers adapted the European model successfully, and the minority peoples who owed allegiance to the monarchy, notably immigrants of Chinese descent, were on their way to being assimilated to the new Thai nation. All its neighbours were encouraged by that success to follow similar policies as one of the first steps in nation-building the moment they had the chance to do so. With differences in emphasis and variations in speed and method, each of the new states after the end of World War II adopted assimilationist policies. Sooner or later, it was thought, the goal of one nation united in a single culture and loyalty would be reached. Malaysia and Singapore had a more difficult start than most of the others. The fact that their national borders were in a continual state of flux and uncertainty for over two decades after 1945 delayed the work of nation-building. The issue of the ratio of indigenous to immigrant peoples in British Malaya had led to the separation of Singapore from the Federation of Malaya soon after the war. The regional Communist challenge, however, induced the imaginative attempt to fuse all former British-administered areas together in the larger federation of Malaysia. But the ethnic mix of the territories was too volatile at the time for the new state to pursue the kinds of assimilationist policies other states had been following since the late 1940s. Thus the separation of Singapore from Malaysia in the late 1940s set in motion, under British tutelage, what eventually became two ways of looking at the task of nation formation, one arising from a Malay majority and the other from a Chinese majority. The circumstances leading to the merger of the two territories in 1963 and then a second separation in 1965 are only partially known today; the full story will have to wait until more firsthand documents are available. What is obvious is that we have two modified versions of the European nation-state model and, after more than 30 years, the possibility of two kinds of ethnic transformations. The five essays on Singapore focus on some less well-known groups to fill out what is already a considerable literature on the majority Chinese and the several minorities in the city-state. This is partly because Singapore is smaller and its peoples easier to describe. In contrast, the three essays on Malaysia lighten up only a corner of that multifaceted country. The many subgroups of the bumiputra spread over East .
Recommended publications
  • Chinese Politics in Malaya *
    Chinese Politics in Malaya * By WANG GUNGWU DURING the past 20 years, the politics of the Chinese in Malaya has been a subject of international interest. The Malayan Communist Party has been predominantly Chinese; it was Chinese politics in Singapore (briefly part of Malaysia) which produced the phenomenon of Lee Kuan Yew; and the Kuala Lumpur riots of May 1969 are widely thought to have been efforts to stem a Chinese challenge to Malay supremacy.1 The Chinese in West Malaysia, especially when taken together with those in Singapore, have earned the attention of governments, journalists and scholars alike. They form the largest concentration of Chinese outside of Mainland China, Taiwan and Hong Kong; their economic life is among the most sophisticated in Asia; their social and cultural life probably the most complex that Chinese anywhere have ever known; and, above all, their political life has been more open and exposed than that of any other kind of Chinese.2 This last, their political life, has been difficult to evaluate for a number of reasons. The main reason is that two contradictory views about them have long prevailed: that the Chinese are non-political and that the Chinese are political in a secretive and inscrutable way. These views are based on a concept of politics in the democratic tradition and are either anachronistic or misleading. Chinese, Malay and colonial political systems have been, in varying degrees, authoritarian, and Chinese political life must be seen in that context except in the period 1957-69. For this later period of demo- * Before 1957, Malaya often referred to both the Federation of Malaya and the Colony of Singapore.
    [Show full text]
  • Homeland Diaspora’S Homeland
    DIASPORA’S HOMELA ND MO DER N CHI NA IN THE A G E OF GLO BAL MIG RATION Shelly Chan DIASPORA’S HOMELAND DIASPORA’S HOMELAND Modern China in the Age of Global Migration shelly chan duke university press Durham and London 2018 © 2018 Duke University Press All rights reserved Printed in the United States of Amer i ca on acid- free paper ∞ Typeset in Minion Pro by Westchester Publishing Services Library of Congress Cataloging- in- Publication Data Names: Chan, Shelly, author. Title: Diaspora’s homeland : modern China in the age of global migration / Shelly Chan. Description: Durham : Duke University Press, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: lccn 2017036969 (print) | lccn 2018000173 (ebook) isbn 9780822372035 (ebook) isbn 9780822370420 (hardcover : alk. paper) isbn 9780822370543 (pbk. : alk. paper) Subjects: lcsh: Chinese diaspora. | China— Emigration and immigration— History—19th century. | China— Emigration and immigration— History—20th century. | China— Emigration and immigration— Political aspects. | China— Emigration and immigration— Economic aspects. Classification: lcc ds732 (ebook) | lcc ds732 .c43 2018 (print) | ddc 909/.0495108— dc23 lc rec ord available at https:// lccn . loc . gov / 2017036969 Cover art: Beili Liu, Yun Yan 1 (detail), incense drawing on rice paper, 2008. Courtesy Chinese Culture Foundation, San Francisco. Yunyan, meaning “cloud and smoke” in Chinese, describes the temporal nature of all encounters in life. The drawing is created by brushing a stick of burning incense against the rice paper, one mark at a time. Support for this research was provided by the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Office of the Vice Chancellor for Research and Graduate Education, with funding from the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation.
    [Show full text]
  • Where Is Home? the Current State of Chinese Migration Studies
    Review Essay Where Is Home? The Current State of Chinese Migration Studies Madeline Y. Hsu, University of Texas, Austin Hsu, Madeline Y. 2019. “Where Is Home? The Current State of Chinese Migration Studies.” Cross- Currents: East Asian History and Culture Review (e-journal) 32: 140–145. https://cross- currents.berkeley.edu/e-journal/issue-32/hsu. Wang Gungwu. Home Is Not Here. National University of Singapore Press, 2018. 216 pp. Gregor Benton and Hong Liu. Dear China: Emigrant Letters and Remittances, 1820– 1980. Oakland: University of California Press, 2018. 288 pp. Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho. Citizens in Motion: Emigration, Immigration, and Re-migration across China’s Borders. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2019. 184 pp. The field of Chinese migration studies is thriving, as demonstrated by three recent publications by highly accomplished senior scholars, including pioneering historian Wang Gungwu, sociologist Elaine Lynn-Ee Ho, and historians Gregor Benton and Hong Liu. Together, this trio of books significantly develops the fields of migration and Chinese overseas studies, and each articulates key aspects of these interlocking fields in a distinctive way. Ho’s short monograph draws on ethnographic studies of contemporary Chinese immigrants in Canada, Singapore, and returnees to China to frame conceptual terms that enable scholars to acknowledge, categorize, and analyze complex layers of migrant experiences. These migrants participate in multiple diasporas and encounter varied practices of ethnic inclusion, exclusion, and institutional and ideological conceptions of citizenship. Benton and Liu provide a sweeping survey of qiaopi (remittance letters) as tensile, nongovernmental systems through which Chinese migration networks and societies circulated the finances that motivated so much of their mobility.
    [Show full text]
  • Citation for Emeritus Prof Wang Gungwu
    CITATION FOR EMERITUS PROF WANG GUNGWU Doctor of Laws, honoris causa Wang Gung Wu A teacher, scholar, an internationally renowned historian whose views on overseas Chinese and Southeast Asian culture and issues are much respected by scholars the world over as well as the popular media. His life and his immense volume of works have transcended boundaries and countries. Wang Gung Wu was born in Surabaya, Indonesia on 9th October 1930, the only child of Wang Fo Wen and Ting Yien. His father had earlier moved from Taizhou in the Jiangsu province, China to work as a teacher, teaching the overseas Chinese in Kuala Lumpur, Malacca and Singapore before going to Surabaya to be a headmaster. Thus Wang Gungwu belongs by birth to the overseas Chinese community whose history and presence in Southeast Asia was to become the subject of his life-long scholarship and research. When his father returned to work in Malaya, the family moved and settled into a mixed ethnic locality in Ipoh in 1936. The young Wang received his early formal education from the Anderson School in Ipoh during the British rule in Malaya. Formal schooling for him stopped during the Japanese Occupation. He was then home-schooled by his scholarly parents from 1941 to 1945. When World War II ended, with his interest piqued in another direction, he proceeded in 1946 to his parents‟ homeland, China to study foreign languages at the National Central University in Nanjing. He was there for one-and-a-half years before his studies got disrupted by Civil War. He returned to Malaya at the end of 1948 and resumed his studies at the University of Malaya in Singapore, from 1949 to 1954.
    [Show full text]
  • V:4 V:4 V:4 Class I–131 Mathematical and Physical Sciences I:1
    MEMBERS MEMBERS LIST OF ACTIVE MEMBERS BY CLASS v:4 v:4 v:4 INTERNATIONAL HONORARY Hutchison, Kay Bailey ’15 Munnell, Alicia H. ’98 Skolnikoff, Eugene B. ’71 MEMBERS – 626 Bracewell LLP, Dallas, TX Boston College Massachusetts Institute Ikenberry, G. John ’16 Neier, Aryeh ’07 of Technology Princeton University Open Society Institute, *Slaughter, Matthew J. ’17 Class I–131 Indyk, Martin Sean ’14 New York, NY; Paris School of Dartmouth College Brookings Institution, International Affairs, France Stavridis, James ’16 Mathematical and Washington, DC Neureiter, Norman P. ’07 Tufts University Physical Sciences Istrabadi, Feisal Amin Rasoul ’15 American Association for *Sullivan, Kathryn D. ’17 Indiana University the Advancement of Science, Smithsonian Institution *Ito, Joichi ’17 Washington, DC National Air and Space Museum, I:1–Mathematics, Massachusetts Institute Nunn, Samuel A. ’97 Washington, DC of Technology Nuclear Threat Initiative, Talbott III, Nelson Strobridge ’09 Applied Mathematics, Jordan, Jr., Vernon E. ’90 Washington, DC Brookings Institution, and Statistics–29 Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer & Ornstein, Norman J. ’04 Washington, DC Feld, LLP, Washington, DC American Enterprise Institute, Thomas, Franklin Augustine ’91 Arthur, James Grieg ‘03 Kissinger, Henry Alfred ’59 Washington, DC The Study Group, New York, NY University of Toronto, Canada Kissinger Associates, Inc., Perry, William James ’89 Tucker, Robert W. ’91 Atiyah, Michael Francis ‘69 New York, NY Stanford University Johns Hopkins University University of Edinburgh, Krasner, Stephen ’91 Peterson, Paul Elliott ’96 Volcker, Paul A. ’92 Scotland, United Kingdom Stanford University Harvard University New York, NY Barenblatt, Grigory Isaakovich ‘75 Kunin, Madeleine M. ’94 Peterson, Peter G. ’06 Walt, Stephen M. ’05 Russian Academy of Sciences, University of Vermont Peterson Management LLC, Harvard Kennedy School Russia Laber, Jeri ’03 New York, NY; Peter G.
    [Show full text]
  • Journal of SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES
    0022-4634 Volume 40 | Number 3 | October 2009 Journal of SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.34.90, on 28 Sep 2021 at 03:20:35, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022463409990117 Editorial Board Authors receive a complimentary copy of the issue of the Department of History, National University of Singapore Journal in which their piece appears and a PDF offprint file. chairman Albert Lau Material appearing in the Journal of Southeast Asian Studies Yong Mun Cheong editor does not necessarily represent the views of the editors or of Bruce Lockhart associate editor the publisher, and responsibility for opinions expressed and Peter Borschberg review editor the accuracy of facts published in articles rests solely with the individual authors. Maitrii Aung-Thwin, Timothy P.Barnard, Chua Ai Lin, R. Michael Feener, Huang Jianli, Maurizio Peleggi, Editorial correspondence, requests for permission to reprint Anthony J. S. Reid, Merle C. Ricklefs, Sai Siew Min, articles, and contributions should be directed to: Tan Tai Yong The Editor Editorial assistance provided by Shen Yanling Eileen Journal of Southeast Asian Studies c/o Department of History International Advisory Board National University of Singapore Patricio Abinales, Kyoto University, Abu Talib Ahmad, 11 Arts Link, AS1 #05-27, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Barbara Watson Andaya, Singapore 117570 University of Hawaii at Manoa, Greg Bankoff, University of JSEAS Fax: (65) 67742528 Hull, Cynthia Chou, University of Copenhagen, Helen Creese, University of Queensland,Annabel Teh Gallop, The British JSEAS Tel: (65) 65166670 Library, Christopher Goscha, Université du Québec à Montréal, JSEAS Email: [email protected] Anne R.
    [Show full text]
  • Biographical Notes
    Biographical Notes Wang Gungwu (9 October 19301 – ) – Historian, university administrator Wang Gungwu is a notable historian and he is closely associated with the study of the Chinese diaspora. The only child of Chinese classic scholar Wang Fo Wen and Ding Yan,2 Wang was born in Surabaya, Indonesia in 1930. His father was the headmaster of the Huaqiao High School, the first Chinese high school there.3 When Wang was a year old, the family moved to Ipoh, Malaya as Wang’s father had found employment as an Assistant Inspector of Chinese schools there.4 In Ipoh, Wang studied at Anderson School while his father tutored him in Chinese classics and history at home.5 In 1946, after the end of the Japanese Occupation, the Wang family returned to China. The following year, Wang enrolled in the National Central University in Nanjing.6 His parents returned to Ipoh in March 1948 because his father could not take the harsh winter, and Wang followed suit in 1948 because of the political chaos in China.7 He did not complete his studies. In 1949, Wang re-started his tertiary education at the University of Malaya (Singapore campus), where he earned his Bachelor of Arts (1953) and Master of Arts (1955) degrees.8 Wang was active in student affairs during his university days. He was the editor of the student newspaper,9 president of the Students’ Union10 and the first president of the Socialist Club which he helped establish.11 While in university, Wang also published a collection of his poetry.12 At the university, Wang met Margaret Lim Ping Ting whom he married in 1955 and had three children.13 In his third year at University, Wang chose to major in history.14 He went on to receive a British Council Scholarship15 for his PhD studies at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.16 After he obtained his PhD in 1957, Wang returned to the University of Malaya where he worked as a lecturer in the History department.
    [Show full text]
  • V:4 Fhm, I:1 Fhm, I:2 Foreign Honorary Members–597 Class I–125
    v:4 Foreign Honorary fhm, i:1 fhm, i:2 Powell, Colin Luther ’09 Members–597 Rao, Calyampudi Radakrishna ‘75 Josephson, Brian David ‘74 Colin L. Powell Associates, LLC , C.R. Rao Advanced Institute University of Cambridge, Alexandria, VA of Mathematics, Statistics and United Kingdom Price, Hugh B. ’00 Class I–125 Computer Science, India Lüst, Reimer ‘76 New Rochelle, NY Ruelle, David P. ‘92 Max-Planck-Institut für Putnam, Robert David ’80 Mathematical and Institut des Hautes Études Meteorologie, Germany Harvard University Physical Sciences Scientifiques, France Menon, M. G. K. ‘71 Ravitch, Diane Silvers ’85 Serre, Jean-Pierre ‘60 Indian Space Research New York University Collège de France, France Organization, India Reich, Robert B. ’14 I:1–Mathematics, Shafarevitch, Igor R. ‘74 Nozières, Philippe Pierre ‘92 University of California, Berkeley Applied Mathematics, Russian Academy of Sciences, Institut Laue-Langevin, France Reilly, William K. ’07 Russia Pethick, Christopher John ‘13 TPG Capital, San Francisco, CA and Statistics–28 Shelah, Saharon ‘91 Niels Bohr Institute, Denmark; Reischauer, Robert D. ’11 Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Nordic Institute for Theoretical Arthur, James Grieg ‘03 Urban Institute, Washington, DC Israel Physics, Sweden University of Toronto, Canada Ruggie, John Gerard ’99 Tits, Jacques Leon ‘92 Rubakov, Valery A. ‘15 Atiyah, Michael Francis ‘69 Harvard Kennedy School Collège de France, France Russian Academy of Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Sarbanes, Paul S. ’04 Vergne, Michele ‘98 Russia Scotland, United Kingdom United States Senate, Centre National de la Recherche Simmons, Michelle Yvonne ‘14 Barenblatt, Grigory Isaakovich ‘75 Washington, DC Scientifique, France University of New South Wales, Russian Academy of Sciences, Saris, Patti B.
    [Show full text]
  • SEA Volume 40 Issue 2 Cover and Front Matter
    0022-4634 Volume 40 | Number 2 | June 2009 Journal of SOUTHEAST ASIAN STUDIES Downloaded from https://www.cambridge.org/core. IP address: 170.106.33.19, on 02 Oct 2021 at 21:07:53, subject to the Cambridge Core terms of use, available at https://www.cambridge.org/core/terms. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022463409009990 Editorial Board Authors receive a complimentary copy of the issue of the Department of History, National University of Singapore Journal in which their piece appears and a PDF offprint file. chairman Albert Lau Material appearing in the Journal of Southeast Asian Studies Yong Mun Cheong editor does not necessarily represent the views of the editors or of Mark Emmanuel associate editor the publisher, and responsibility for opinions expressed and Maitrii Aung-Thwin review editor the accuracy of facts published in articles rests solely with the individual authors. Timothy Barnard, Peter Borschberg, Chua Ai Lin, R. Michael Feener, Huang Jianli, Bruce Lockhart, Editorial correspondence, requests for permission to reprint Maurizio Peleggi,Anthony J. S. Reid, Merle C. Ricklefs, articles, and contributions should be directed to: Sai Siew Min, Tan Tai Yong The Editor Editorial assistance provided by Shen Yanling Eileen Journal of Southeast Asian Studies c/o Department of History International Advisory Board National University of Singapore Patricio Abinales, Kyoto University,Abu Talib Ahmad, 11 Arts Link, AS1 #05-27, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang, Barbara Watson Andaya, Singapore 117570 University of Hawaii at Manoa, Greg Bankoff, University of JSEAS Fax: (65) 67742528 Hull, Cynthia Chou, University of Copenhagen, Helen Creese, University of Queensland,Annabel Teh Gallop, The British JSEAS Tel: (65) 65166670 Library, Christopher Goscha, Université du Québec à Montréal, JSEAS Email: [email protected] Anne R.
    [Show full text]
  • How Political Heritage and Future Progress Shape the China Challenge with Wang Gungwu October 21, 2020
    How Political Heritage and Future Progress Shape the China Challenge with Wang Gungwu October 21, 2020 Ezra Vogel: I wanna welcome all of you to our weekly session of critical issues confronting China. We are so fortunate today to have with us, coming from Singapore, through the technology of Zoom, one of the greatest China historians, Wang Gungwu. He has a long relation with us here in Cambridge. John Fairbank discovered him way back in the 1960s when he was writing Chinese world order. And somebody recommended this very bright, young scholar who had gotten his PhD in London School of Economics, who is writing on the Ming and the relationship of Southeast Asia. So John Fairbank brought us very young scholar into his very early volume on the Chinese world order by Wang Gungwu. Ezra Vogel: Wang Gungwu has a very unusual background. He grew up in Ipoh, Malaysia. in the 1920s, mainland China decided they wanted to have better Chinese education for some of the overseas Chinese and so they sent to Ipoh a fine scholar who was completely steeped in the Chinese tradition. that was Wang Gungwu's father. So he was the principal of the school to educated Chinese Malaysians and Gungwu had the privilege of being tutored by his father at a very young age and having a depth of a classical Chinese education. That was way before any of the us in the West could have such a comparable education. And then when he finished that, after a few years later, he went to Nanjing University.
    [Show full text]
  • The Coombs a House of Memories
    THE COOMBS A House of Memories THE C MBS A House of Memories Editors: Brij V. Lal, Allison Ley Published by ANU Press The Australian National University Canberra ACT 0200, Australia Email: [email protected] This title is also available online at http://press.anu.edu.au National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry The Coombs: a house of memories 2nd edition Bibliography Includes index ISBN 9781921934179 (pbk) ISBN 9781921934186 (online) Coombs Building (Canberra, ACT) - History - Anecdotes. Australian National University - History - Anecdotes. Australian National University - Alumni and alumnae. Universities and Colleges - Australian Capital Territory - Canberra - History. 378.947 All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without the prior permission of the publisher. Cover design by Nic Welbourn and layout by ANU Press Cover image, Matcham Skipper’s wrought iron frieze, photo courtesy of Coombs Photography Printed by Grin Press Previous edition © 2006 Research School of Pacic and Asian Studies, The Australian National University This edition © 2014 ANU Press This book can be purchased from http://press.anu.edu.au for the people of Coombs past, present and future Table of Contents Acknowledgements ix Foreword: The Coombs Building xiii William C. Clarke Preface xvii Brij V Lal Part I The Coombs: A Portrait 1 The Coombs: Journeys and Transformations 1 Brij V. Lal Part II A Room at the Top 2 Salad Days 23 Oskar Spate 3 An OHB Beginner 35 Anthony Low 4 People and the Coombs Effect 43 Wang Gungwu 5 In the Room at the Top 47 R.
    [Show full text]
  • Chinese Writers and Artists Travel to Paris, 1920S–1940S
    UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN DIEGO Dreams and Disillusionment in the City of Light: Chinese Writers and Artists Travel to Paris, 1920s–1940s A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy in Literature by Angie Christine Chau Committee in charge: Professor Yingjin Zhang, Chair Professor Larissa Heinrich Professor Paul Pickowicz Professor Meg Wesling Professor Winnie Woodhull Professor Wai-lim Yip 2012 Signature Page The Dissertation of Angie Christine Chau is approved, and it is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically: Chair University of California, San Diego 2012 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page ...................................................................................................................iii Table of Contents............................................................................................................... iv List of Illustrations.............................................................................................................. v Acknowledgements............................................................................................................ vi Vita...................................................................................................................................viii Abstract............................................................................................................................... x Chapter 1 Introduction....................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]