Book Description

Carl A. Gibson-Hill was one of colonial Malaya’s last scholar-administrators. As a director of Singapore’s Raffles Museum in the 1950s and editor of the journal of MBRAS, he made significant contributions in diverse fields, including ornithology, photography, history, and maritime studies. His publications display both artistry and intellectual rigour, but perfectionism combined with depression and illness made it difficult for him to carry projects forward. His legacy is a long list of articles, many in publications he edited, and collections of photographs in museum archives. It is a distinguished body of work but fell short of his aspirations.

Gibson-Hill was a man out of sync with his times. His professional life took place against a backdrop of the dissolution of the British Empire and dwindling opportunities for members of the colonial establishment as Singapore and Malaya moved toward independence. Facing early retirement and dissolution of the social order that gave his life meaning, he committed suicide in August 1963, one month before Singapore’s definitive break with its colonial past.

Carl A. Gibson-Hill: Photography, History, Boats, and Birds in Late-Colonial Malaya and Singapore - Brendan Luyt - 9789715425001 - MBRAS

Author: Ricardo T. Jose

ISBN: 9789715425001

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Product Details
Publication Year 2006
Publisher MBRAS
No. of Pages 384
Weight 0.5 kg
Genre History, World War, 1939-1945
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Carl A. Gibson-Hill was one of colonial Malaya’s last scholar-administrators. As a director of Singapore’s Raffles Museum in the 1950s and editor of the journal of MBRAS, he made significant contributions in diverse fields, including ornithology, photography, history, and maritime studies. His publications display both artistry and intellectual rigour, but perfectionism combined with depression and illness made it difficult for him to carry projects forward. His legacy is a long list of articles, many in publications he edited, and collections of photographs in museum archives. It is a distinguished body of work but fell short of his aspirations.

Gibson-Hill was a man out of sync with his times. His professional life took place against a backdrop of the dissolution of the British Empire and dwindling opportunities for members of the colonial establishment as Singapore and Malaya moved toward independence. Facing early retirement and dissolution of the social order that gave his life meaning, he committed suicide in August 1963, one month before Singapore’s definitive break with its colonial past.