Academic literature on the topic 'Japanese occupation of Singapore'

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Journal articles on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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Huff, Gregg, and Gillian Huff. "The Second World War Japanese Occupation of Singapore." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 51, no. 1-2 (June 2020): 243–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002246342000017x.

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Japan's Second World War occupation of Singapore was marked by acute shortages of food and basic consumer goods, malnutrition, rampant black markets and social breakdown. We argue that the exploitation of Singapore was extreme and fully accorded with pre-war Japanese policy. Japan used Singapore mainly as a communications centre and port to ship Indonesian oil. Mid-1943 attempts to add manufacturing to the city's role had limited success. Acquiescence of Singaporeans to Japanese rule was a notable aspect of occupation. While part of the explanation is that the occupation was a reign of terror, the economics of shortage conferred on the Japanese considerable leverage in maintaining social control.
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Turnbull, C. Mary, and Paul H. Kratoska. "Malaya and Singapore During the Japanese Occupation." Pacific Affairs 70, no. 4 (1997): 628. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2761355.

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Shimizu, Hiroshi. "The Japanese Fisheries Based in Singapore, 1892–1945." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 28, no. 2 (September 1997): 324–44. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s002246340001448x.

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This paper examines the main factors behind the rise and decline of the Japanese fisheries based in Singapore before the Pacific War, and shows that, as the fisheries contributed greatly to the Singapore economy, they did not constitute a foreign economic enclave in the British colony. It also describes how the Japanese and local fishermen conducted fisheries during the period from 1942 to 1945, and argues that the legacy of the Japanese fisheries outlived the Japanese occupation.
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Phua, Keng Yung. "“Contramodernist Buddhism” in a Global City-State: Shinnyo-en in Singapore." Religions 13, no. 3 (March 21, 2022): 265. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel13030265.

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This article outlines the arrival and adaptation of Shinnyo-en as an example of contramodernist Buddhism in Singapore. Shinnyo-en’s contramodernist spirituality focuses on its founding Itō family. The arrival of Shinnyo-en is situated within the larger contexts of the Singapore–Japan relationship. Social memories of the Japanese occupation lingered within the population amidst increasing Japanese Foreign Domestic Investments in Singapore. These transnational migration trends brought Shinnyo-en practitioners and Shinnyo-en itself to Singapore. Simultaneously, Singapore’s government had been actively monitoring and regulating religious groups in order to maintain religious harmony, societal wellbeing, and ensure the separation of religion and politics in Singapore. This study explores the adaptations of Shinnyo-en’s organisational structure, religious practices, and activities in Singapore from 1983 to 2021. It argues that Shinnyo-en has actively adapted to the Singapore context and has actively courted the state for its political survival, adjusting its activities to gain social recognition from Singapore society as a Buddhist organisation. Despite these adaptations, Shinnyo-en Singapore retains its contramodernist Buddhist spirituality, focusing on its founding Itō family. This article highlights the integration of Shinnyo-en’s contramodernist beliefs within Shinnyo-en’s activities and how this contramodernist spirituality mobilises support for selected social causes through its practitioners.
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Kratoska, Paul H. "Banana Money: Consequences of the Demonetization of Wartime Japanese Currency in British Malaya." Journal of Southeast Asian Studies 23, no. 2 (September 1992): 322–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0022463400006214.

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Japanese forces attacked Malaya late in 1941 and, by 15 February 1942, had occupied the entire peninsula as well as Singapore. Among other changes, the Japanese regime introduced a new currency. Pre-war British currency remained legal tender but rapidly vanished from the open market, and by 1943 the economy operated on Japanese currency, commonly referred to as “banana” money because the ten-dollar note featured a banana plant. By the end of the occupation, the buying power of this currency had deteriorated dramatically, and the country experienced massive inflation as large quantities of money were printed and put into circulation.
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Hue, Guan Thye, Chang Tang, and Juhn Khai Klan Choo. "The Buddhist Philanthropist: The Life and Times of Lee Choon Seng." Religions 13, no. 2 (February 7, 2022): 147. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/rel13020147.

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This article examines the life and times of Lee Choon Seng (李俊承), exploring his role as a prominent lay Buddhist leader in Singapore and the broader Chinese Buddhist world. Lee Choon Seng’s influence in society, as well as his adherence to Chinese Mahayana Buddhism, laid an important foundation for him to carry out philanthropic activities within the Buddhist community in Singapore. Before World War II, Lee Choon Seng acted as a patron of the Dharma, sponsoring Buddhist activities and advocating for the idea of revitalizing China in the spirit of Buddhism. During the Japanese Occupation, Lee Choon Seng initiated and led the Buddhist philanthropy movement, which converged into a huge developmental trend in society. In the postwar period, Lee Choon Seng established and served as the inaugural chairman of the Singapore Buddhist Federation, making him a key figure in unifying the Buddhist community in Singapore. As this article demonstrates, Lee Choon Seng’s socio-religious model, which was comprised of a combination of Mahayana Buddhism with social charity and welfare, was an important factor for the promotion of Buddhism among the Chinese community in Singapore.
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Liao, Edgar Bolun. "Creating and Mobilizing “Syonan” Youth: Youth and the Japanese Occupation of Singapore, 1942-1945." Archipel, no. 102 (December 31, 2021): 65–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/archipel.2620.

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Kim, JongHo. "Between cooperation and survival." Social Transformations in Chinese Societies 14, no. 2 (September 3, 2018): 79–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/stics-04-2018-0007.

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Purpose The purpose of this paper is to investigate the survival capability of Chaoshan people in the maritime world of the South China Sea amidst the changing monetary systems of the rival empires and political regimes from 1939 to 1945. It particularly focuses on overseas Chinese remittance business in Shantou under the Japanese rule. Local societies in coastal China and overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asia experienced severe hardships due to the Sino-Japanese War, the Pacific War and the Chinese Civil War. As fighting among the rival empires and regimes intensified, Chinese migrant communities straddling between Southeast Asia and South China had to negotiate and adapt to survive these crises, regardless of whether they were government-affiliated or local autonomous subjects. Design/methodology/approach This research draws on archival materials to investigate the reactions of Chinese migrant communities in Chaoshan region in times of war and regime change. How did local maritime societies and overseas Chinese adapt to the harsh realities of the wartime? How did the Japanese Empire use Wang Jingwei’s puppet government in Nanjing to control the Chaoshan remittance network? How did the remittance network shift its operational structure in face of a wartime crisis? Findings Faced with the wartime crisis and the Japanese occupation, Chaoshan communities used a variety of survival strategies to protect and maintain the overseas Chinese remittance business. In dealing with remittances from Singapore, British Malay and Indonesia, they cooperated with the Japanese military authority and its puppet government to maximize the autonomy of their business operation in the Japanese-controlled East Asian Co-prosperity Sphere. On the other hand, to secure the flow of remittances from French Indochina and Thailand, the indirectly controlled territories in the Japanese Empire, Chaoshan merchants sought an alternative path of delivering remittances, known as the Dongxing route, to bypass the Japanese ban on private remittances from these two regions. Research limitations/implications It would be a better research if more resources, including remittance receipts and documents during the Japanese occupation, could be found and used to show more detailed features of Chaoshan local society. Originality/value This research is the first one to investigate the contradictory features of local Chaoshan society during the Japanese occupation, an under-explored subject in the Chinese historiography.
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Kratoska, Paul H. "SINGAPORE, HONG KONG AND THE END OF EMPIRE." International Journal of Asian Studies 3, no. 1 (January 2006): 1–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1479591405000197.

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As major Asian trading centres and former British colonies, Singapore and Hong Kong inevitably have parallel histories. Although their destinies diverged in the latter part of the twentieth century, comparisons between the two places are useful in developing an understanding of the historical circumstances of each city, and also in developing regional perspectives. The burden of the present article lies in three arguments. First, while the Japanese occupation is often seen as a climactic event in Asian history that destroyed the colonial world and set in motion the transition to independence, the economic policies that defined the post-war era were initiated by colonial regimes during the 1930s and continued by nationalist governments after 1945. Second, the political trajectories followed by Singapore and Hong Kong in the first post-war decades were largely determined by unanticipated developments relating to the cold war, and did not follow logically from the situation that existed in the 1930s, or even when the war ended in August 1945. Third, while both places were seen as colonial relics in post-war Southeast Asia and had to contend with nationalist policies that were incompatible with their social make-up and business practices, efforts to assimilate them within national states were unsuccessful, and they continued to flourish as global city states.
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Huang, Jianli. "Entanglement of Business and Politics in the Chinese Diaspora: Interrogating the Wartime Patriotism of Aw Boon Haw." Journal of Chinese Overseas 2, no. 1 (2006): 79–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/179325406788639084.

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AbstractThis article focuses on the wartime experiences of Aw Boon Haw who was the renowned billionaire peddler of the Tiger Balm ointment and owner of an influential chain of regional newspapers. After the Sino-Japanese War broke out in July 1937, he traveled from Singapore to the wartime Chinese capital of Chongqing to meet up with Chiang Kai-shek and his Guomindang leaders. But soon after, he opted to stay in Hong Kong throughout the occupation period and became closely associated with the Japanese-sponsored government of Wang Jingwei, even making a trip to Tokyo to meet the Japanese Prime Minister. When the war ended, amidst accusations of him having been a traitor who collaborated with the occupation authorities, he switched his loyalty back to China and the British colonial settlements and resumed his business operations and philanthropic activities. This wartime experience of Aw brings into sharp relief the sort of political entanglement which prominent Chinese overseas business people can be entrapped in. Suspicions about his wartime patriotism initially hounded him and he had to issue denials. However, in the midst of confusion over the outbreak of the Chinese Civil War and the American reversal of occupation policy in Japan, there was an absence of formal governmental or public actions, allowing the issue to fade away and Aw's business and charity to return to normalcy. It was more than 30 years later, at the height of the economic reopening of Communist mainland China and the renewed importance of Chinese overseas capital in the 1980s and 1990s, that Aw's wartime patriotism was re-examined, this time calculated to pass a new and presumably last verdict that Aw had been most unfairly judged and that he was actually an iconic true overseas Chinese patriot. This posthumous honor was conferred on him despite the fact that the supposedly new empirical evidence was far from conclusive. It was an act of political restoration in semi-academic garb and enacted with an eye to facilitating further business ties between a resurgent China and the Chinese diaspora.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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Goh, Cheng Fai, and 吳殷輝. "The Japanese occupation of Malaya and Singapore (1941-1945) : narrating trauma and memory in 21st century Malaysian novels in English." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/10722/198824.

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This study focuses on four 21st Century Malaysian novels about the Japanese Occupation, written in English, and explores the representations of trauma, narrative and memory in these novels in relation to trauma theory and Malaysian Literature in English. Trauma studies take as its point of departure the idea that an overpowering event, powerful enough to break the shield of consciousness, can return as symptoms of compulsive and/or repetitive behaviours after a period of latency that brings the traumatized victim back to the event. However, trauma is seen not as, or as the result of a single, isolated event, but as a condition that repeats itself across different temporalities. This argument is taken up in the analysis of four novels that use the Japanese Occupation as a theme and/ or setting, which examines the attempts of reconstructing the traumatic events of the Occupation in narrative, as well as the narrative strategies that display the breakdown of temporality in trauma. This thesis consists of 5 chapters. The introduction of this thesis, which forms the first chapter, establishes the groundwork for the rest of the dissertation, and situates the study in its historical, literary and theoretical contexts. It provides the background of earlier scholarship on Malaysian Literature in English, the historical scholarship on the Japanese Occupation and its relation to this analysis, and the theoretical background that informs the argument of this study. Chapter Two explores Tan Twan Eng‟s The Gift of Rain, and discusses the significance of using the first-person, autobiographical style when writing about trauma, as well as the role that narrative features such as flashbacks play to show a sense of the dual temporality of trauma. It also examines the need for the presence of a listener-as-witness when narrating trauma, in relation to the novel as a survivor narrative. Chapter Three focuses on the relationship between history and memory, as well as remembering and forgetting, in relation to Tan‟s second novel, The Garden of Evening Mists. It explores how trauma can fragment the self and collective identities of traumatized subjects. It also explores the difficulty of incorporating trauma into a meaningful life-narrative. Chapter Four analyzes Vyvyanne Loh‟s Breaking the Tongue, and explores the significance of using the second-person narrative when narrating trauma, which can be seen as a strategy to represent the dissociation that comes with trauma. It also analyzes the significance of the delay in the temporal structure in the narratives of traumatized subjects, and explores the importance of dreams and nightmares in these novels. This chapter also examines the crisis of witnessing that the characters are confronted with in the face of trauma. Chapter Five explores Rani Manicka‟s The Rice Mother, a family saga. This chapter examines the notion of transgenerational trauma and postmemory, and how trauma can be transmitted through silences from one generation to the next. It pays close attention to the different forms of media used in the transmission of trauma, and also discusses the issue of replacement children who are born after traumatic loss.
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Master of Philosophy
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Khamsi, Khatera. "Portrayals of national identity in Singapore's school textbook narratives of the Japanese occupation." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2018. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/10045749/.

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The portrayal of periods of war and occupation in school texts have played a central role in the process of constructing national identity around the world. This study examines how the history of the Japanese Occupation (1942-1945) has been used in the construction and maintenance of a Singaporean national identity, by analyzing the portrayals of the different ethnic groups in Singapore (the Self) and of Japan (the main Other) in school textbooks and museum exhibits dealing with that period. The thesis examines all ten government-authored primary- and lower-secondary-level history and social studies textbooks from 1985 to 2015, and exhibitions in national museums from 2006 to 2017 for the purpose of triangulation. It examines the way images of the Self and the Other have changed and contributed to the state-sponsored constructions of a national identity in Singapore. For this purpose, this study identifies and applies a new set of analytical categories for analyzing the Self, the internal Other, and the external Other. The analysis is used to assess the explanatory power of the prevailing theories distinguishing between civic and ethnic forms of nationalism. The findings show that, despite the official adoption and rhetoric of multiracialism, an ethnocultural conception of the nation has prevailed until today, and that overall there has been a gradual shift towards an increasingly multicultural conception of the nation. The findings also show that the ‘Japan’ presented in the textbook narrative of the Japanese Occupation, both as archetypal enemy and military model, has been the ‘Japan’ that Singapore needed for its own nation building and identity formation. While the findings show neither a clear convergence with nor rejection of one theory or another regarding the civic-ethnic typology, Brown’s (2000) addition of the multicultural type to the civic-ethnic typology of conceptions provides a more nuanced and useful tool for the analysis of the trend found in the Singapore textbooks.
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Crabb, Dawn Nora. "Navigating the Wreck: Writing women’s experience of the Japanese Occupation of Singapore. Salvaged from the Wreck: A novel -and- Diving into the Wreck: A critical essay." Thesis, Edith Cowan University, Research Online, Perth, Western Australia, 2021. https://ro.ecu.edu.au/theses/2416.

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This thesis is in two parts. The first and major part consists of a historical novel followed, in part two, by an essay. The title of this thesis, “Navigating the Wreck”, refers metaphorically to the Fall of Singapore in 1942, the ensuing human tragedy unleashed on the people of Singapore and Malaya, and the literary and historical processes of exploring, interpreting and depicting the past. The Japanese occupation of Singapore has, to date, been described mostly by Western historians and former prisoners of war who have forged a predominant patriarchal narrative. In that narrative—despite the all-encompassing nature of the occupation and the cataclysmic effect it had on civilians—women are virtually invisible. The objective of this thesis is to privilege women’s experiences by ethically gathering, analysing and re-imagining the accounts of a group of women of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds—Chinese, Indian, Malay, Eurasian—who lived through the occupation, using historical fiction to engage as broad a readership as possible. As well as literary praxis, research centres on analysis of relevant literature, including eight ethnically diverse published female memoirs and eleven women’s oral histories held by the National Archive of Singapore. The essay discusses the artefact-centred, pragmatic and self-reflexive bricolage approach of this thesis, its feminist and phenomenological framework and my ethical responsibility and outsider authorial position as a white Australian woman reliant on local witness accounts. Feminist concerns addressed in the thesis are invisibility, plurality and intersectionality and I adopt a critical feminist phenomenology based on five aspects of Simone de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex to discuss the aims and the research and writing processes of the thesis. Working within that framework, I summarised and categorised female oral interview data from audio and written transcripts enabling comparison of each woman’s individual experience of the war and the effects that the occupation had on each woman’s life situation, revealing a diverse set of experiences, some of which influenced my literary choices. By immersing myself in the particular remembered experiences of each of the female interviewees and considering their stories against the tapestry of my own extensive lived experience of the physical, cultural and social world of Singapore, as well as an in-depth investigation of other historical data and male and female written memoirs, I identified gaps and silences that needed to be addressed. These include the strategic household, wage earning, food-supplying and charitable role that women played in the dangerous and difficult situation of the occupation as well as the ignored or marginalised active participation of women in Singapore’s pre-war anti-colonial communist movements, support for and armed participation in anti-Japanese activities in China as well as the jungle-based guerrilla militias in Malaya, and the urban anti-Japanese underground in Singapore. The essay weaves the creative thinking and practical processes of researching and writing the novel through discussion of practice, literature, theory, methodology and craft, retrieving and exposing what is usually submerged in the creative process to indicate a matrix of production.
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Mitter, Rana Shantashil Rajyeswar. "The Japanese occupation of Manchuria." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.627538.

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Chow, Ka-kin Kelvin, and 周家建. "Hong Kong and Malaya under the Japanese occupation 1941-1945." Thesis, The University of Hong Kong (Pokfulam, Hong Kong), 1999. http://hub.hku.hk/bib/B42574833.

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Chow, Ka-kin Kelvin. "Hong Kong and Malaya under the Japanese occupation 1941-1945." Click to view the E-thesis via HKUTO, 1999. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record/B42574833.

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Wong, Alphonsus Lock Sek. "The transferability of Japanese management practices : the case of Singapore." Thesis, University of Bradford, 1990. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.317025.

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Lin, Pei-Yin. "Culture, colonialism and identity : Taiwanese literature during the Japanese occupation period." Thesis, SOAS, University of London, 2001. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.249751.

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Yung, Li Yuk-wai. "The Chinese resistance movement in the Philippines during the Japanese occupation /." [Hong Kong : University of Hong Kong], 1991. http://sunzi.lib.hku.hk/hkuto/record.jsp?B13009400.

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Lee, Hyun Kyung. "Dealing with difficult heritage : South Korea's responses to Japanese colonial occupation architecture." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2015. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.709101.

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Books on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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H, Kratoska Paul, ed. Malaya and Singapore during the Japanese occupation. Singapore: Distributed by Singapore University Press, 1995.

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Board, Singapore National Heritage, and National Archives (Singapore), eds. The Japanese occupation, 1942-1945: A pictorial record of Singapore during the war. Singapore: Times Editions, 1996.

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When there were tigers in Singapore: A family saga of the Japanese occupation. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2012.

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Duncan, Maisie. A cloistered war: Behind the convent walls during the Japanese occupation. Singapore: Marshall Cavendish Editions, 2010.

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A cloistered war: Behind the convent walls during the Japanese occupation. Singapore: Times Editions, 2004.

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A young girl's wartime diary: The journal of a teenager written during the Japanese Occupation of Singapore. Singapore: Lingzi Media, 2007.

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In the grip of a crisis: The experiences of a teenager during the Japanese occupation of Singapore, 1942-45. [Singapore?: Rudy Mosbergen, 2007.

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Chan, Chow Wah. Light on the lotus hill: Shuang Lin Monastery and the Burma Road. Singapore: Khoon Chee Vihara, 2009.

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Light on the lotus hill: Shuang Lin Monastery and the Burma Road. Singapore: Khoon Chee Vihara, 2009.

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Sarah, Harrison. Secrets of our hearts. Sutton, Surrey, England: Severn House, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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Kwok, John. "Memories of the Japanese Occupation: Singapore’s First Official Second World War Memorial and the Politics of Commemoration." In Japan as the Occupier and the Occupied, 226–48. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137408112_12.

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Hayes, Louis D. "The Occupation." In Introduction to Japanese Politics, 24–37. Sixth edition. | New York, NY : Routledge, 2018.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315277097-3.

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Chu, Cindy Yik-yi. "Japanese Occupation And Internment, 1941–1942." In The Diaries of the Maryknoll Sisters in Hong Kong, 1921–1966, 97–119. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230604179_5.

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Kennedy, Joseph. "Singapore Scene." In British Civilians and the Japanese War in Malaya and Singapore, 1941–45, 40–61. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-08691-7_3.

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Takeda, Kiyoko. "Occupation Policy and the Emperor System." In The Dual-Image of the Japanese Emperor, 105–49. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1988. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-05546-3_8.

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Chu, Cindy Yik-yi. "Stanley Civilian Internment Camp During Japanese Occupation." In Foreign Communities in Hong Kong, 1840s–1950s, 133–54. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781403980557_7.

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Neary, Ian. "From the Occupation to the new Ten-Year Plan." In Dōwa Policy and Japanese Politics, 54–68. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003127994-4.

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Suzuki, Kazuhito, and Low Sui Pheng. "The Construction Industry and International Firms in Singapore." In Japanese Contractors in Overseas Markets, 37–60. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-7244-5_3.

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Kennedy, Joseph. "The Fall of Singapore." In British Civilians and the Japanese War in Malaya and Singapore, 1941–45, 1–18. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-08691-7_1.

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Ku, Wei-ying. "Catholic Church in Taiwan During the Japanese Occupation." In The Catholic Church in Taiwan, 39–67. Singapore: Springer Singapore, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-10-6665-8_3.

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Conference papers on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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Nair, Syamala. "Indian Women During The Japanese Occupation In Malaya, 1941-1945." In International Conference on Humanities. European Publisher, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.15405/epsbs.2020.10.02.48.

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Oshio, Kazuto. "Transnational Encounters in “Private Spaces” of the Japanese Allied Occupation." In The Twelfth International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS 12). Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789048557820/icas.2022.061.

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Ramli, Sharulnizam, and Saiful Akram Che Cob. "Rhetorical manifestation through the language of visuals during Japanese occupation in Malaya." In PROCEEDINGS OF 8TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON ADVANCED MATERIALS ENGINEERING & TECHNOLOGY (ICAMET 2020). AIP Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/5.0053083.

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Cob, Saiful Akram Che. "Visual Propaganda: A Symbolic Anti-thesis towards Japanese Occupation in Malaya (1942-1945)." In 1st International Conference on Interdisciplinary Arts and Humanities. SCITEPRESS - Science and Technology Publications, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5220/0008765103770381.

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Fujita, Hiroko, and Leng Leng Thang. "Creating ‘my space’: Lived Experiences of Japanese Women in Singapore." In The Twelfth International Convention of Asia Scholars (ICAS 12). Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789048557820/icas.2022.019.

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Sato, Akiko. "Analysis of Japanese Multinational firms’ Research and Development Activities in Singapore." In 2018 IEEE International Conference on Technology Management, Operations and Decisions (ICTMOD). IEEE, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/itmc.2018.8691273.

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R. Sarmiento, Roman. "The Natural Calamities and the Cultural Propaganda in the Midst of Japanese Occupation in the Philippines (1942-1945)." In Annual International Conference on Contemporary Cultural Studies (CCS 2017). Global Science & Technology Forum (GSTF), 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5176/2382-5650_ccs17.12.

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Lensun, Sherly, Mayske Liando, and Jemmy Mukuan. "The Application of Direct Strategy in Learning Japanese Language through Songs (Historical Study of Japan’s Occupation in Minahasa 1942-1945)." In Proceedings of the International Conference on Social Science 2019 (ICSS 2019). Paris, France: Atlantis Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2991/icss-19.2019.55.

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Al-Badawi, Habib. "Sengo kenpo 1947 Vs. Meiji kenpo 1889: comparative study." In Development of legal systems in Russia and foreign countries: problems of theory and practice. ru: Publishing Center RIOR, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.29039/02061-6-20-37.

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This article is a comparative study between not only two manuscripts of constitutions of Japan, but also analytic research revealing all the cultural, ideological, and political aspects that led the Japanese authorities to adopt each of them. The Meiji Constitution was proclaimed in 1889 during the imperialistic phase of Japanese history where the country was named Empire of Greater Japan (大日本帝国), where Tokyo was a dominant world power. While the recent Constitution of Japan (日本国憲法) was issued in 1947 under the supervision of the Supreme Commander for the Allied Powers (SCAP), which is eventually, a foreign occupation authority. Through the detailed analysis, premising, and reasoning this study will reveal the historical events that resulted those constitutions and will open the debate to discuss the future prospects of the Japanese armament attempts, which is confined and restricted by Article 9 (日本国憲法第9条).
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Ohkura, Michiko, and Tetsuro Aoto. "Systematic Study of Kawaii Products: Relation Between Kawaii Feelings and Attributes of Industrial Products." In ASME 2010 International Design Engineering Technical Conferences and Computers and Information in Engineering Conference. ASMEDC, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/detc2010-28182.

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In Japan, the cute aesthetic is abused by many organizations and for many purposes including police mascots, and warning signs for dangerous areas. Although using cute to motivate and inform might seem strange, cute does offer potential. Dr. Cheok and his team at the National University of Singapore argued that Japanese ‘kawaii’ embodies a special kind of cute design, which reduces fear and makes dreary information more acceptable and appealing. Various Japanese kawaii characters such as Hello Kitty and Pokemon have become popular all over the world. However, since few studies have focused on kawaii attributes, we systematically analyze the kawaii interfaces themselves: kawaii feelings caused by such attributes as shapes, colors, and materials. Our aim is to clarify a method for constructing a kawaii interface from the research results. Kawaii might be one important kansei value for future interactive systems and industrial products of Asian industries. We previously performed experiments and obtained interesting tendencies about such kawaii attributes as shapes, colors, and sizes. Although questionnaires are the most common form of kansei evaluation, they suffer from such demerits as linguistic ambiguity, the possibility of mixing the intensions of experimenters and/or participants into the results, and interruption of the system’s stream of information input/output. Thus, to compensate for these demerits, we examined the possibility with biological signals. In this article, these experiments and their results are outlined.
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Reports on the topic "Japanese occupation of Singapore"

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Sinclair, II, and Peter T. Men of Destiny: The American and Filipino Guerillas during the Japanese Occupation of the Philippines. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, December 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada558187.

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