Chinese diasporic culture and national identity: The taming of the Tiger Balm Gardens in Singapore

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Abstract

The Tiger Balm Gardens or Haw Par Villa, built in the 1930s by overseas Chinese pharmaceuticals tycoon Aw Boon Haw, has been and remains a symbol of the positioning of Singapore's Chineseness. In the colonial era, it marked the success not only of one man but also of the Chinese migrant community. In the later period of nation-building, it was initially considered as a challenge to multiracialism and nationhood. However, as state policy shifted towards an ethnicized cultural identity as prompted by the rise of Asia as a major economic force, especially China, the Villa was renovated first into an orientalized theme park and then resuscitated as the repository of diasporic Chinese entrepreneurship. Amidst these state initiatives, the history of the Villa and its founder were sidelined. © 2007 Cambridge University Press.

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Huang, J., & Hong, L. (2007). Chinese diasporic culture and national identity: The taming of the Tiger Balm Gardens in Singapore. Modern Asian Studies, 41(1), 41–76. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0026749X05002349

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