Through an examination of characters’ relationships and encounters in Claire Tham’s 2013 novel The Inlet, I argue that state narratives of racial identity and national progress may dislocate Singaporean Chinese subjects from a sense of homeliness, by engendering nostalgia for an uncertainly located cultural hinterland. My analysis, which also responds to literary critics Sim Wai-chew and Angelia Poon’s earlier, divergent conclusions about class and linguistic power relations in the novel, intervenes in the common misidentification of the Chinese in Singapore as members of a global diaspora. Instead, in exploring characters’ attitudes within the text towards social and spatial elements that produce cultural alienation and challenge national ...
Nearly eleven million Chinese migrants live outside of China. While many of these faces of China’s g...
This thesis studies The Awakening (1984), Singapore’s first locally produced long-running drama seri...
Kwame Anthony Appiah, in his treatise on cosmopolitanism, declares: The world is getting more cr...
Through an examination of characters’ relationships and encounters in Claire Tham’s 2013 novel The I...
© 2016 Dr Sylvia AngIn spite of an outflow of mainland Chinese migrants since the late 1970s into ar...
This thesis examines representations of Singaporean identity and selfperception from a position of d...
National identity has always been an issue in Singapore. With the influx of immigrants, Singaporeans...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.In Imagined Diasporas: ...
This essay uses Ng Kim Chew and Ah Niu’s works to demonstrate the lure that diaspora signifies for M...
The persistence of memory as a trope in works by Chinese writers in Southeast Asia demonstrates that...
Notorious for its ever-changing urban landscape, Singapore has seen plenty of projects in recent yea...
Migrants from mainland China now make up nearly a million of Singapore’s total population of 5.4 mil...
Understanding East Asian cultural flows in Singapore hinges on a nuancedunderstanding of race and et...
[Introduction]: Singaporean Literature in English is plentiful, vibrant and diverse, reflecting the ...
This thesis will look at literary works by authors of two different generations, who both represent...
Nearly eleven million Chinese migrants live outside of China. While many of these faces of China’s g...
This thesis studies The Awakening (1984), Singapore’s first locally produced long-running drama seri...
Kwame Anthony Appiah, in his treatise on cosmopolitanism, declares: The world is getting more cr...
Through an examination of characters’ relationships and encounters in Claire Tham’s 2013 novel The I...
© 2016 Dr Sylvia AngIn spite of an outflow of mainland Chinese migrants since the late 1970s into ar...
This thesis examines representations of Singaporean identity and selfperception from a position of d...
National identity has always been an issue in Singapore. With the influx of immigrants, Singaporeans...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.In Imagined Diasporas: ...
This essay uses Ng Kim Chew and Ah Niu’s works to demonstrate the lure that diaspora signifies for M...
The persistence of memory as a trope in works by Chinese writers in Southeast Asia demonstrates that...
Notorious for its ever-changing urban landscape, Singapore has seen plenty of projects in recent yea...
Migrants from mainland China now make up nearly a million of Singapore’s total population of 5.4 mil...
Understanding East Asian cultural flows in Singapore hinges on a nuancedunderstanding of race and et...
[Introduction]: Singaporean Literature in English is plentiful, vibrant and diverse, reflecting the ...
This thesis will look at literary works by authors of two different generations, who both represent...
Nearly eleven million Chinese migrants live outside of China. While many of these faces of China’s g...
This thesis studies The Awakening (1984), Singapore’s first locally produced long-running drama seri...
Kwame Anthony Appiah, in his treatise on cosmopolitanism, declares: The world is getting more cr...