This co-authored chapter (Chapter 27 of the Oxford History of the Novel in English Volume 10 The Novel in South and South East Asia) examines history and themes of collective and individual memory in post-1945 English novels of Malaysia, Singapore, and the Philippines. In critical accounts of English fiction the historical novel is generally considered a principal genre of national and cultural identity and this chapter reflects on Anglophone historical fiction from this region
This thesis analyses Singaporean historical novels for their capacity to engage the ‘Singapore Story...
As one of the cornerstones of fiction, writers often use and confront history in their claim to “rea...
This paper focuses on the works of two leading Malaysian novelists, Lloyd Fernando and K S Maniam, o...
South and South East Asia has produced some of the most dynamic, experimental, and commercially succ...
The persistence of memory as a trope in works by Chinese writers in Southeast Asia demonstrates that...
Today widely considered a successful example of nation building and national identity formation, Sin...
This thesis argues that one of the main characteristics of contemporary Chinese Australian literatur...
This chapter (chapter 29 of the Oxford History of the Novel in English Vol 10, The Novel in South an...
This volume offers a comprehensive account of the production of English language novels and related ...
Singapore fell to Japanese forces on 15 February 1942. Within a matter of days, the occupying army t...
The Novel in South and Southeast Asia since 194510The Oxford History of the Novel in Englis
This study focuses on four 21st Century Malaysian novels about the Japanese Occupation, written in E...
Contestations of Memory in Southeast Asia applies a new theoretical literature on social memory to r...
International audienceThis book examines the ways in which ghosts haunt and shape cultural identitie...
Memory has been figured as an important process of placing and locating people and communities, both...
This thesis analyses Singaporean historical novels for their capacity to engage the ‘Singapore Story...
As one of the cornerstones of fiction, writers often use and confront history in their claim to “rea...
This paper focuses on the works of two leading Malaysian novelists, Lloyd Fernando and K S Maniam, o...
South and South East Asia has produced some of the most dynamic, experimental, and commercially succ...
The persistence of memory as a trope in works by Chinese writers in Southeast Asia demonstrates that...
Today widely considered a successful example of nation building and national identity formation, Sin...
This thesis argues that one of the main characteristics of contemporary Chinese Australian literatur...
This chapter (chapter 29 of the Oxford History of the Novel in English Vol 10, The Novel in South an...
This volume offers a comprehensive account of the production of English language novels and related ...
Singapore fell to Japanese forces on 15 February 1942. Within a matter of days, the occupying army t...
The Novel in South and Southeast Asia since 194510The Oxford History of the Novel in Englis
This study focuses on four 21st Century Malaysian novels about the Japanese Occupation, written in E...
Contestations of Memory in Southeast Asia applies a new theoretical literature on social memory to r...
International audienceThis book examines the ways in which ghosts haunt and shape cultural identitie...
Memory has been figured as an important process of placing and locating people and communities, both...
This thesis analyses Singaporean historical novels for their capacity to engage the ‘Singapore Story...
As one of the cornerstones of fiction, writers often use and confront history in their claim to “rea...
This paper focuses on the works of two leading Malaysian novelists, Lloyd Fernando and K S Maniam, o...