Affiliation:
1. National University of Singapore, Department of Geography1 Arts Link, Singapore 117570
Abstract
In this article, I begin with the position that knowledge production and reproduction is partial and situated. Through an examination of academic research on and teaching of religion in Singapore, I demonstrate how scholarly interventions at once re-present and conceal religion as experienced and lived. I posit that the partiality of such interventions is due to the influential official narrative about religion in Singapore, so that what is studied and taught reflects certain dimensions of religious life and religious-secular relations that dominate official discourse. In particular, through academic writing (and to a lesser extent, teaching), religion in Singapore is constructed as a particular mosaic of social, cultural, and political life, socially relevant, culturally rich, spatially manifested, transnationally linked, politically delicate, and historically steeped. Drawing from this reflection on Singapore, I emphasize the need to recognize the geography, sociology, and politics of knowledge (re)production, and to decenter the notion that there is an emerging “Asian religious studies.”
Subject
Religious studies,History
Reference83 articles.
1. “Making Sense of an Evolving Identity: A Survey of Studies on Identity and Identity Formation among Malay-Muslims in Singapore”;Aljunied;Journal of Muslim Minority Affairs,2006
2. “Confucianism as Folk Religion in Singapore: A Note in Studies in Chinese Folk Religion in Singapore and Malaysia”;Beh;Contributions to South Asian Ethnography,1983
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