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Eurasian Singaporeans

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Eurasians in Singapore)
Eurasians in Singapore
Total population
~18,060[1]
1–2% of Singapore resident population (2020) Non-declared or unaware figures may be higher.
Regions with significant populations
 Singapore
Languages
Singapore English
Religion
Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Kristang people, British people, Portuguese people, Macanese people, Dutch people, Indian diaspora

Eurasian Singaporeans is a term that refers to Singaporeans of mixed EuropeanAsian descent.

The term, which includes – but is not limited to – the creole and indigenous Kristang people, who form a distinct sub-group within the Eurasian community with their own separate language, culture and identity. The Asian ancestry of Eurasians traces to British Malaya, British India, Portuguese India, the Dutch East Indies and French Indochina to other colonies while their European ancestry trace back primarily to Western Europe, particularly the British Isles, although Eurasian settlers to Singapore in the 19th century also came from other European colonies. When the European maritime powers colonised Asian countries from the 16th to 20th centuries, they brought into being a new group of commingled ethnicities known historically as Eurasians.[2]

Early Europeans were primarily male and often had children with local women, as they were usually not accompanied by their womenfolk on their journey to Asia. Initially, the offspring of such a union were brought up as an appendage of European culture, enjoying further advantages not generally accorded to the rest of the local Asian people.[3] In time, as colonial attitudes hardened, Eurasians were largely cast aside by the European authorities and treated much like the rest of the local population, with many of them eventually supporting home rule and independence movements.

European ancestry

[edit]

Romans and Italians

[edit]

The first documented Europeans to visit Southeast Asia were the Romans and Italians. In 166 AD, a Roman mission travelled to China via modern day Vietnam, bringing presents of elephant tusk, rhinoceros horn, and tortoise shell from Southern Asia. Archaeological evidence supports the claim in the Weilüe and Book of Liang that Roman merchants were active in northern Vietnam.[4][5] Between 1275 and 1292, Marco Polo spent 17 years as an emissary of Kublai Khan, visiting tributary kingdoms in modern day Indonesia, Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Vietnam.[6] In the 1320s, Odoric of Pordenone visited Borneo, Champa, and Java.[7] In the 1420s, the Venetian merchant and explorer Niccolo de' Conti married an Indian woman, and travelled extensively in modern day Indonesia, Malaysia, and Vietnam.[8]

Of Portuguese descent

[edit]

Before the arrival of the Dutch, English and French in Asia, the first Europeans to land and seize territory in Asia were the Portuguese. Portuguese spice-traders first sailed to Malacca in 1509, having already established settlements in Goa and other parts of India. Portuguese explorers and conquerors were accompanied by the first Jesuit priests to Southeast Asia via Goa in Portuguese India. Afonso de Albuquerque, the viceroy of India, conquered Malacca (today just a few hours' drive from Singapore) in 1511, while Jesuit Francis Xavier, (a Basque Spaniard serving the Portuguese Crown) arrived in Malacca in 1545. The creole/indigenous descendants of mixed marriages between Portuguese colonisers and local Malay residents are today called the Jenti Kristang, with their own distinctive language, the Kristang language. Many are descended from individuals who lived in Malacca or other parts of Malaya. Others have ancestors who lived in Java or other parts of Indonesia as a result of being expelled from Malacca after the Portuguese were forcibly ejected from Malacca by the Johore-Dutch alliance in 1641. A few Macanese people of Cantonese-Portuguese ancestry from Macau are also living in Singapore.

Kristang

[edit]

Kristang Eurasians have their own fully separate and natural creole and indigenous culture, identity and language from all other Eurasians and are especially distinct from those who are the offspring of more recent immigrants and expatriates of European and Asian origin (who are also commonly called "Eurasians" in Singapore). The same or similar distinction exists between on the one hand those first- or second-generation Eurasians who typically would share the ethnic identity of one parent more closely, that parent typically not being of Kristang or Portuguese-origin and on the other hand multi-generation(i.e. typically third-generation, fourth-generation and fifth-generation, etc) Eurasians who typically might have at least some distant Kristang-speaking or Iberian-origin ancestry, and many of whom would associate with some Kristang or Portuguese-origin cultural practices (e.g. Kristang songs and Portuguese-origin dances like Jinkli Nona) and dine on Kristang Eurasian dishes like Devil's curry or curry debal in Kristang. As a general rule, first or second-generation Eurasians typically do not have any Kristang-speaking ancestry, do not speak Kristang, generally do not adopt Kristang or Portuguese-origin cultural practices and cues and are less familiar with Kristang Eurasian cuisine, language and history. Simply put, first-generation Eurasians are people whose parents are not Eurasians. Multi-generation (typically third-generation, fourth-generation and fifth-generation, etc) Eurasians are people whose parents or forefathers are themselves Eurasians.[9] Before the twenty-first century, the Kristang were generally disdained and demeaned by other Eurasian groups, being often seen as illiterate, coarse, primitive, backward, unrefined and hypersexual.[10]

Of Dutch descent

[edit]

In 1602, a Dutch trading company called the Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie or VOC (literally "United East Indies Company" but better known in English as the Dutch East India Company) was created to conduct trade in the area east of the Cape of Good Hope and west of the Straits of Magellan. In establishing their numerous trade stations spanning across Asia, the Dutch created independent settler societies in each of their colonies, where Batavia (now Jakarta, Indonesia) became the administrative centre and rendezvous point for the company's Asian shipping traffic.

Between 1602 and 1795, the VOC fitted out some 4,700 ships which carried more than a million Europeans to Singapore. More than 70 percent of the one million passengers never actually returned to Europe, making Asia their new home.[11] These early seafarers were not only made up of Dutch, but also included English, Germans, French Huguenots, Italians, Scandinavians and other Europeans who were employed by the VOC. In time, many were assimilated into Dutch colonies situated throughout Asia (though primarily in modern Indonesia) where they were stationed and became part of the respective communities.

Intermarriages between VOC employees and locals were encouraged, which led to the creation of communities of Dutch descendants.[11] Today, there are only five surviving coherent and large communities who are descended from those early intermarriages. They are the Cape Coloureds (South Africa), Basters and Oorlam (Namibia), Burghers (Sri Lanka), and Indos (Indonesia). Other Dutch groups have persisted as a strain among the Anglo-Burmese and Kristang. The Dutch transferred Malacca to the British in 1825 in exchange for territory in Sumatra. The British colonial administration encouraged migration away from Malacca and as a result many Eurasians and other people moved north to thriving Penang (where other Eurasians fleeing Phuket or moving from Kedah also settled) and later south to Singapore as it grew in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Dutch descendants in Malaysia and Singapore are primarily made up of Eurasians originating from Malacca, as well as others who emigrated from the East Indies, India and Sri Lanka. Leo and Hilda Campbell were Dutch Burghers who arrived in Singapore from Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) in 1910. The couple planned to migrate to Australia like many Eurasians but due to Hilda suffering a stroke, they remained in Singapore.[12]

Of British and Irish descent

[edit]

The British were the most important Europeans in colonial Singapore, as they were the colonial rulers of the island. A number of British settlers arrived after its colonial status changed in 1867. Interracial marriage was very common in colonial days. Even men who had European wives sometimes had local paramours. European women who moved to Southeast Asia tended to die young. British men took Asian partners and their offspring would be Eurasian. Some who had British nationality preferred to settle in Britain or other parts of the Commonwealth, especially Australia. Many British and other European men of retirement age, instead of going back to cold Europe, would settle in Australia with Asian women, with fewer staying on in Singapore. Apart from being warmer than Europe, Australia was less judgemental than Europe or colonial Singapore to mixed marriages and mixed offspring.[13] Independent Singapore's second President, Benjamin Sheares, was a Eurasian of English lineage. E. W. Barker, the former Law Minister, was of mixed- Portuguese, Irish, Japanese, Scottish, Malay and German descent. Author Rex Shelley was of mixed English, Portuguese, Malay and Buginese ancestry. National swimmer Joseph Schooling is a third-generation Singaporean, and is of Eurasian ethnicity. His parents are Colin and May Schooling. May is a Chinese Malaysian and a Singapore permanent resident; while Colin, a businessman, was born in Singapore. Colin's grandfather was a British military officer who married a local Portuguese-Eurasian in Singapore. The last name Schooling is believed to be an anglicised surname that originated in Germany.[14]

Of other European descent

[edit]

Other Eurasians in Singapore have parents or are descended from individuals who originated from various parts of Western Europe and its former colonies such as in the Americas, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa or elsewhere. There are also some Filipino people of partial Spanish descent. Former Nominated Member of Parliament Eunice Olsen's father is of Swedish and Portuguese descent. His grandfather married a Chinese woman in Shanghai and brought her to Singapore. Geraldene Lowe's mother’s family was called Luth and came from Schleswig-Holstein, then part of Denmark. During Bismarck’s unification of Germany, they headed to Asia and Australia and married people from various nationalities.[13]

Asian ancestry

[edit]

Of Chinese descent

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Olympic gold medallist swimmer Joseph Schooling is a Eurasian, as is his father Colin Schooling. His mother May Schooling is a Chinese-Malaysian while his father is of British, Swedish, Kristang and Portuguese descent.

Of Malay and Indonesian descent

[edit]

Author Rex Shelley was of mixed English, Portuguese, Malay and Buginese ancestry.

Of Japanese and Korean descent

[edit]

Other Eurasians in Singapore have parents or are descended from individuals who originated from Japan, Korea or other parts of East Asia. An example is TV personality and presenter Stephanie Carrington, who is half White American and half Korean.[15]

Double-barrelled race classification in official documents

[edit]

Since January 2010, the Government in Singapore has allowed the double-barrelling of race classification by parents of different races when they register their children. A child may be registered, for instance, as Malay-Caucasian or Caucasian-Chinese. Before 2010, the government required children to register as a single race, which was required to be the father's. The added flexibility is in response to increasing demographic diversity driven by immigration and more multi-cultural marriages.[16]

Culture and traditions

[edit]

Languages and Kristang (Portuguese-based creole)

[edit]
Shepherd's pie, a common Eurasian dish

English is generally spoken as a first language by almost all Eurasians in Singapore. A number of Eurasians speak Asian languages like Malay, Chinese (Mandarin or other Sinitic Languages) or Tamil as a second or third language. Like many Singaporeans, Eurasians will commonly speak Singlish. Some of the elder generation of Kristang Eurasians, typically those who have a Portuguese surname or are of Kristang-speaking descent, speak the Portuguese creole known as Cristão or Papia Kristang (Speaking Kristang) – the Kristang language at home and within their small community. Kristang is a dying patois and is only spoken by a small minority of Eurasians.

Religion and education

[edit]

The Eurasian community in Singapore includes people that belong to different religions and to no religion, but most of them are Christians, mostly Catholic, with religious celebrations like Christmas typically being an integral part of their lifestyle. Many Eurasians in Singapore have been educated in Catholic mission schools like St Joseph's Institution. Protestant Eurasians in Singapore include Anglicans (Episcopals), Presbyterians, Methodists, Lutherans and Evangelicals. Eurasians looked upon an English education as a passport to a better life in colonial Singapore and so their children were among the first to enrol in the earliest English language schools when they were set up. They attained the highest literacy rate among the local groups here. This enabled them to secure comfortable employment, in both public and private sectors, following in the footsteps of their fathers and as a family tradition for the future generations.[3]

Eurasian cuisine

[edit]

Eurasian culinary traditions include Eurasian smore (a beef stew), mulligatawny soup (mulligatani in Kristang), shepherd's pie, vindaloo (vin d'arlo in Kristang) and curry devil (aka "kari debal", "curry debal" or "devil's curry"). Desserts include putugal and sugee cake made with semolina, a dessert that is also associated with the Eurasians, but also with the Peranakan Chinese. Pineapple tarts are also a much-loved dessert, often served at Christmas in Eurasian homes. While the pineapple tart origins are elusive, its fascinating history can be traced back to the Eurasian community, as it combines a unique blend of culinary influences - the pineapple, which was introduced to Asia in the 16th century by the Spanish and Portuguese, made into a jam that is blended with Southeast Asian spices like the star anise, cloves and cinnamon, and baked in a pastry form that applies baking techniques introduced by the Portuguese.

Prominence in the media, entertainment and fashion industries

[edit]

Eurasians are prominent in the media, entertainment and fashion industry and are sought after because of their mixed look. In Singapore, Eurasian models are sometimes called 'Pan-Asians' for their mixed appearance. Apart from displaying certain Singaporean beauty standards, a common belief among those in the advertising industries of both Singapore and Malaysia is that a Eurasian model can appeal to different ethnic groups of Asian origin and thus there would be no need to create different advertisements to target different groups. For example, an advertisement featuring a Malaysian-Eurasian face could be used in places like Sri Lanka, Nepal, Thailand or Singapore because non-Eurasian Malaysians with their diverse origins could pass off as a Sri Lankan, Nepalese, Thai or Singaporean.[17]

In media and entertainment, father and son Brian and Mark Richmond, Vernetta Lopez and Jean Danker are well-known radio personalities.[18]

Eurasians in Singapore have also made their mark in the artistic and cultural domains. Jeremy Monteiro is a renowned jazz musician and Cultural Medallion winner. Rex Shelly was an award-winning writer known for his novels that feature the Eurasian community in Singapore and Malaysia.[18]

'Eurasiana - A Musical Tribute'

[edit]

In June 2009, 'Eurasiana - A Musical Tribute' marking the 90th anniversary of the Eurasian Association was performed at the Esplanade Concert Hall. It was a showcase of Eurasian music, dance and culture in Singapore.[19] Also performing was the 50-piece Singapore Pop Orchestra led by Maestro Iskandar Ismail.

Places associated with Eurasians

[edit]

Soon after the founding of Singapore by Stamford Raffles in 1819, people from other trading centres in Asia including Eurasians came to Singapore. Wealthy Eurasians set up home along Waterloo Street and Queen Street in the area between Bras Basah Road and Middle Road, not far from today's Singapore Management University. The types of houses that they lived in included shophouses, two-storey houses, terrace houses and bungalows. These were typically owned by well-to-do merchants and traders. The houses on Queen Street also consisted of shophouses that were occupied by non-Eurasian coolies. The living conditions in these shophouses were poor but at least the coolies could live close to where they worked. These houses on Queen Street were owned by the more well-to-do Eurasians. Nearby were Catholic schools like St Joseph's Institution and the Convent of the Holy Infant Jesus as well as other well-known schools that used to be located in the vicinity. A number of buildings and churches of the period in the vicinity still stand today. Today, few Eurasians can be found residing in the Waterloo Street and Queen Street area.

Eurasian families moved out from the enclaves to other locations such as the government quarters in Bukit Timah, the countryside areas in Serangoon and Upper Serangoon, and the then coastal region of Tanjong Katong. There were even kampongs (Malay for “villages”) along Haig Road and Siglap Road that had a concentration of Eurasian families. Another Eurasian enclave known as Little England was located in the area bounded by Farrer Park, Norfolk Road and Rangoon Road. The roads in the area were all named after English counties and towns. Eurasians today can now be found spread thinly across the island in both private and public housing. In past times, many Eurasians lived in the Katong area, as did prominent tour guide Geraldene Lowe in her youth.[13] Katong is commonly considered Singapore's main Eurasian enclave because of some history, modern Eurasian literature and the present location of the Eurasian Association, it is more of a Peranakan Chinese enclave.

The leading association for Eurasians in Singapore is the Eurasian Association at 139 Ceylon Road in Katong. The Eurasian Association has played a major role in uniting the community and developing a stronger shared identity. It also a self-help group which serves the Eurasian community in Singapore. It has expanded the definition of Eurasian to include any person of mixed European and Asian parentage. Previously, only persons whose fathers were of European origin or who had European surnames were considered Eurasian.[18] As of the end of 2013, there were 2,128 members of the Eurasian Association of Singapore.[20]

The Singapore Recreation Club facing the Padang, Singapore near City Hall, founded by several Eurasian men, is considered to a social and sports club that is popular amongst the Eurasians in Singapore. E.W. Barker played sports like cricket and hockey for the Singapore Recreation Club (SRC) between 1934 and 1941, when the SRC was almost the strongest team in Singapore.[21]

Eurasians during the Japanese occupation

[edit]

During the Japanese occupation of Singapore, Europeans and Eurasian Singaporeans were generally spared the harsher treatments by the Japanese than other racial groups; however, many of them became an increasing nuisance for their activist efforts, in particular the Catholic societies, who fostered strong community bonds with the local Chinese. From December 1943 to April 1944, a combination of a collapsing currency, rising food and continued social activism culminated in the reactionary and punitive land acquisition strategy which relocated about 400 Roman Catholic Chinese and 300 European/Eurasian families (of which most were land-owners and many Chinese households also ran small businesses or shop-keeps from their homes) that forcibly acquired land and fixed property from homeowners in exchange for an equal area of dry land two miles from the town of Bahau in Negeri Sembilan state in Malaya. Propagandised in the ironic manner of sending them off to live happier, better lives as a purely Catholic community where they could run their own affairs despite the reality that it was meant as a punishment. The responsibility for administering the affairs of the settlement was mockingly bestowed to prominent activist for Chinese welfare under occupation Roman Catholic bishop Monseigneur Adrian Devals. On his own accord, Dr Charles Joseph Pemberton Paglar, President of the Eurasian Welfare Association visited the settlement frequently to bring much needed medical and other supplies as well as give the populace moral strength. Although many of the settlers were educated through missionary schools, and many of the landowners had practised limited subsistence farming on their properties in Singapore, the soil at the Bahau settlement was intentionally apportioned by the Japanese as it consisted of non-arable land where there was insufficient water for irrigation. While the Japanese kept to their policy of restraint against the Europeans and Catholics (mindful of their German and Italian allies), the measure was deliberately intended to result in hardship for the settlers. The entire process which resulted in the deaths of about 500 settlers was extensively concealed under propaganda which sought to portray the departure of Catholic families from Singapore as a willing venture. As many who were relocated were generally of higher social and economic status, the propaganda which depicted better lives, created a resentment in the local populace and misplaced sense of betrayal against those that had initially defended them against the Japanese. The perverse nature of the Japanese propaganda was highly effective and would have lasting ramifications of distrust between the local races and their former colonial protectors.[22] Many suffered from malnutrition, as their subsistence farming attempts could not provide self-sufficiency. In addition, they were plagued by malaria and other diseases. An estimated 500 settlers lost their lives, including Bishop Devals who helped many others to survive the ordeal. After the Japanese surrendered to the British in August 1945, the survivors were allowed to return to Singapore however were not compensated for their land or property.[23]

Notable Eurasian Singaporeans

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Census 2020" (PDF). Singapore Department of Statistics. Retrieved 16 June 2021.
  2. ^ Asian and Pacific Migration Journal 24 (2), 'The postcolonial ambiguities of Eurasian pan-ethnicity in Singapore', J. Lowe and M. Mac an Ghaill (2015, Page 234); Indonesia and the Malay World 43 (126), 'Children of Decolonisation: Postcolonial (Indo) Eurasian Communities in Indonesia and the Netherlands', R. Hewett (2015, Page 192)
  3. ^ a b Lam Pin Foo blog 'Singapore Eurasians - The Inheritors of Western and Asian Cultures' 31 March 2011
  4. ^ The Tongking Gulf through history (PDF). James Anderson, Tana Li, Nola Cooke. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. 2011. ISBN 978-0-8122-0502-2. OCLC 794700625.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  5. ^ "China and the Ancient Mediterranean World: A Survey of Ancient Chinese Sources" (PDF). Sino-Platonic Papers. 242. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.698.1744.
  6. ^ "The Book of Ser Marco Polo : vol.2 / Page 340 (Grayscale High Resolution Image)". dsr.nii.ac.jp. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  7. ^ "The Travels of Friar Odoric, Blessed Odoric of Pordenone. …". www.nas.gov.sg. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  8. ^ "Niccolò dei Conti | Italian merchant". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
  9. ^ Braga-Blake, Myrna, ed. (1992). Singapore Eurasians : Memories and Hopes. Co-researched by Ann Ebert-Oehlers. Singapore: Times Editions for the Eurasian Association, Singapore. ISBN 981-204-367-5.
  10. ^ Wong, Kevin Martens (2023). "Terror, trauma and the transhuman: Exploring possible representations of Kristang / Portuguese-Eurasian identity erasure in Kevin Martens Wong's Altered Straits and Stuart Danker's Tinhead City, KL". In Chelliah, S; Singh, Bijender (eds.). World Literature: Words of Wisdom. Rudra Publishers. pp. 41–52.
  11. ^ a b Dutchmalaysia.net - The Easternization of the West: Children of the VOC by Dennis De Witt (2006)
  12. ^ Straits Times 'Orphan who became a houseboy has lived his life in service - picking up skills along the way' - 9 August 2015
  13. ^ a b c Expat Living Singapore 'Guide to Katong: Our colourful tour of Singapore's East Coast neighbourhood' 13 June 2014
  14. ^ "More than Devil Curry". Todayonline.com. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  15. ^ "Stephanie Carrington's beauty secrets". AsiaOne. 6 July 2014. Archived from the original on 25 June 2016. Retrieved 30 April 2016.
  16. ^ "Mixed-race S'poreans can have double barrelled IC category". www.asiaone.com. Retrieved 4 June 2021.
  17. ^ Kemper, Steven (1 May 2001). Buying and Believing: Sri Lankan Advertising and Consumers in a Transnational World. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 9780226430409. Retrieved 29 May 2018 – via Google Books.
  18. ^ a b c Singapore Infopedia Eurasian community - Stephanie Ho 2013
  19. ^ The Neweurasian 'What a wonderful show' July–September 2009 Pg 10-12
  20. ^ Straits Times 'Some Eurasians frustrated for being mistaken as foreigners in Singapore', 5 October 2014
  21. ^ History Blog - E.W Barker - historyof07.blogspot.sg
  22. ^ Straits Times 'New book tells of hardship in Malayan jungles for 3,000 from Singapore during Japanese Occupation' - Benson Ang 12 Oct 2014
  23. ^ Singapore Infopedia 'Bahau settlement' - Joshua Chua
  24. ^ "MTV looks to new VJs to boost ratings". Asiaone.com. Retrieved 29 May 2018.
  25. ^ Singapore Infopedia Lloyd Valberg - Joanna HS Tan 2010

Further reading

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General works

[edit]
  • Kraal, Diane, ed. (2005). Gateway to Eurasian Culture. Illustrated by Wing Fee. Singapore: Asiapac. ISBN 981-229-356-6.
  • Braga-Blake, Myrna, ed. (1992). Singapore Eurasians : Memories and Hopes. Co-researched by Ann Ebert-Oehlers. Singapore: Times Editions for the Eurasian Association, Singapore. ISBN 981-204-367-5.
  • De Silva, Melissa (2017). Others Is Not A Race. Singapore: Math Paper Press. ISBN 978-191-531-022-4.
  • De Witt, Dennis (2007). History of the Dutch in Malaysia. Malaysia: Nutmeg Publishing. ISBN 978-983-43519-0-8.
  • Miller, David (2014). DutyBound. Singapore: DM Books. ISBN 978-981-09-2390-7.
  • Miller, David (2014). Bahau, the Elephant & the Ham. Singapore: DM Books. ISBN 978-981-09-0244-5.
  • Kraal, David (2005). The Devil in Me : Tasty Tidbits on Love and Life : Confessions of a Singapore Eurasian. Singapore: Angsana Books. ISBN 981-3056-78-9.
  • Rappa, Antonio L. (2013). Saudade: The Culture and Security of Eurasians in Southeast Asia. Ethos Books and the Singapore Management University's Wee Kim Wee Centre.
  • Scully, Valerie; Catherine Zuzarte (2004). Eurasian Heritage Dictionary : Kristang-English/English-Kristang. Singapore: SNP International. ISBN 981-248-052-8.
  • Tessensohn, Denyse; Steve Hogan (ill.) (2001). Elvis Lived in Katong : Personal Singapore Eurasiana. Singapore: Dagmar Books. ISBN 981-04-4316-1.
  • Tessensohn, Denyse; Steve Hogan (ill.) (2003). Elvis Still Lives in Katong. Singapore: Dagmar Books. ISBN 981-04-9928-0.

Academic

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  • Hewett, Rosalind (2015) 'Children of Decolonisation: Postcolonial Indo (Eurasian) communities in Indonesia and the Netherlands', Indonesia and the Malay World, 43 (126): 191-206.
  • Lowe, John; Mac an Ghaill, Mairtin (2015), 'The postcolonial ambiguities of Eurasian pan-ethnicity in Singapore', Asian and Pacific Migration Journal, 24 (2): 232-45.
  • Pereira, Alexius (1997) ‘The Revitalization of Eurasian Identity in Singapore’, Asian Journal of Social Science, 25 (2): 7-24.
  • Pereira, Alexius (2006) ‘No Longer “Other”: The Emergence of the Eurasian Community in Singapore’. In: Lian KF (ed) Race, Ethnicity and the State in Malaysia and Singapore. Leiden: Brill, 5-32.
  • Rappa Antonio (2000) ‘Surviving the Politics of Late-modernity: the Eurasian Fringe Community of Singapore’, Asian Journal of Social Science, 28 (2): 153-80.
  • Rocha, Zarine (2011) ‘Multiplicity within Singularity: Racial Categorization and Recognizing “Mixed Race” in Singapore’, Journal of Current Southeast Asian Affairs, 30 (3): 95-131.
  • Rocha, Zarine (2014) ‘Stretching out the categories’: Chinese/European narratives of mixedness, belonging and home in Singapore, Ethnicities, 14 (2) 279-302.

Family histories

[edit]
  • Scully-Shepherdson, Martha (2006). Looking Back : A Family's History Discovered and Remembered. Singapore: Martha Scully-Shepherdson. ISBN 981-05-6271-3.
  • Shepherdson, Kevin Linus; Percival Joseph Shepherdson (co-researcher) (2003). Journey to the Straits : The Shepherdson Story. Singapore: The Shepherdson Family. ISBN 981-04-9926-4.

Fiction

[edit]
  • Danker, Stuart (2020). Tinhead City, KL. Kuala Lumpur: Epigram Books. ISBN 978-981-490-162-8.
  • Lazaroo, Simone (1994). The World Waiting to Be Made. South Fremantle: Fremantle Arts Centre Press. ISBN 1-86368-089-6.
  • Lazaroo, Simone (2000). The Australian Fiancé. Sydney: Pan Macmillan Australia. ISBN 0-330-36200-3.
  • Lazaroo, Simone (2006). The Travel Writer. Sydney: Pan Macmillan Australia. ISBN 978-0-330-42256-7.
  • Schirmer, Edmund (2012). When There Were Tigers in Singapore. Marshall Cavendish International (Asia) Pte Ltd. ISBN 978-9814398176.
  • Shelley, Rex (1993). People of the Pear Tree. Singapore: Times Books International. ISBN 981-204-449-3.
  • Shelley, Rex (1991). The Shrimp People. Singapore: Times Books International. ISBN 981-204-292-X.
  • Wong, Kevin Martens (2017). Altered Straits. Singapore: Epigram Books. ISBN 978-981-475-787-4.