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E-grāmata: Decolonizing the History Curriculum in Malaysia and Singapore

(National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore),
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Decolonizing the History Curriculum in Malaysia and Singapore is a unique study in the history of education because it examines decolonization in terms of how it changed the subject of history in the school curriculum of two colonized countries – Malaysia and Singapore. Blackburn and Wu’s book analyzes the transition of the subject of history from colonial education to postcolonial education, from the history syllabus upholding the colonial order to the period after independence when the history syllabus became a tool for nation-building. Malaysia and Singapore are excellent case studies of this process because they once shared a common imperial curriculum in the English language schools that was gradually ‘decolonized’ to form the basis of the early history syllabuses of the new nation-states (they were briefly one nation-state in the early to mid-1960s). The colonial English language history syllabus was ‘decolonized’ into a national curriculum that was translated for the Chinese, Malay, and Tamil schools of Malaysia and Singapore. By analyzing the causes and consequences of the dramatic changes made to the teaching of history in the schools of Malaya and Singapore as Britain ended her empire in Southeast Asia, Blackburn and Wu offer fascinating insights into educational reform, the effects of decolonization on curricula, and the history of Malaysian and Singaporean education.

Introduction 1(9)
1 History in the imperial curriculum of Malaya and Singapore (1899--1930s)
10(20)
2 Teaching history and imperial citizenship in the 1930s
30(16)
3 The beginnings of the `decolonization' of colonial education (1942--1952)
46(18)
4 Creating an `Asia-centric' history syllabus for a Malayan nation (1952--1959)
64(25)
5 Tensions over a common national history in the early postcolonial state (1959-1965)
89(21)
6 The formation of a `Malaysian-centric' history syllabus
110(26)
7 Separation and a `Singapore-centric' history syllabus
136(24)
Conclusion 160(6)
Appendices 166(1)
Appendix 1 The historical structure of the Malaysian and Singapore school systems 167(1)
Appendix 2 History syllabus from the 1899 Education Code 168(1)
Appendix 3 History syllabuses from the Education Codes of 1928 and 1936 169(1)
Appendix 4 Singapore 1958 history syllabus 170(5)
Appendix 5 The Federation of Malaya 1959 history syllabus 175(5)
Bibliography 180(15)
Index 195
Kevin Blackburn is Associate Professor in History at the National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore, where he has taught since 1993. He is the author of Education, Industrialization and the End of Empire in Singapore (2017), and co-author, with Karl Hack, of War Memory and the Making of Modern Malaysia and Singapore (2012).

ZongLun Wu studied the development of the Singapore history syllabus during his graduate research at the National Institute of Education in Singapore. He has also taught history in the Singapore schools.