ABSTRACT

This text argues that Nietzsche’s idea of invalid policy that is believed to be valid and Heidegger’s concept of doubt as the reason for a representation are essentially the same idea. Using this insight, the text investigates vignettes from colonial occupation in Southeast Asia and its protest occupations to contend that untruth, covered in camouflages of constancy and morality, has been a powerful force in Asian history. The Nietzschean inflections applied here include Superhumanity, the eternal return of trauma, the critiques of morality, and the moralisation of guilt. Many ideas from the Heideggerian canon are used, including the struggle for individual validity amidst the debasement and imbalance of Being. Concepts such as thrownness, finitude and the remnant cultural power of Christianity, are also deployed in an exposé of colonial practices. The book gives detailed treatment to post-colonial Malaya (1963), Japanese occupied Hong Kong (1941–1945), and the tussle with communism in Cold War Singapore and Malaya, as well as the question of Kuomintang KMT validity in Hong Kong (1945–1949) and British Malaya (1950– 1953). The book explains the struggles for identity in the Hong Kong protest movement (2014–2020) by showing how economic distortion caused by landlordism has been covered by aspirations for freedom.

chapter 1|20 pages

Openings

chapter 2|12 pages

Heidegger and Nietzsche

chapter 3|8 pages

Statues

Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia (1963)

chapter 7|14 pages

Fading Validity

KMT Nationalism in Hong Kong (1946–1950)

chapter 8|9 pages

Representing Christendom

Singapore’s Maria Hertogh Riots (1950)

chapter 10|10 pages

The KMT in British Malaya

Failing Futurism (1950–1953)

chapter 14|7 pages

Closings