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Article
Regina Yoong
SARE-Southeast Asian Review of English
(2023)
Article
Shivani Sivagurunathan
SARE-Southeast Asian Review of English
(2023)
Article
International Relations
Pravin Prakash et al.
Summary: This study investigates the Singapore state's responses towards dissent and the modes of control it employs. It argues that understanding the politics of control in Singapore requires recognizing how the state uses liberalisation as a third strategy. The study contributes to a better understanding of how hybrid regimes can expand their control and calls for viewing liberalisation as a means of extending control.
AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
(2022)
Article
Theater
Katia Arfara
Summary: This paper focuses on Mark Teh's long-term investigations into the Baling talks, which aimed to end the Malayan emergency, as well as his performance Baling as a collaborative project that expands the definition of documentary theatre and challenges cultural regionalism and colonial knowledge systems.
THEATRE RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
(2022)
Article
Literary Theory & Criticism
Ann Ang
Summary: This article discusses how memory is influenced by narrative structure in The Gift of Rain, focusing on the spatial and temporal mobility of the narratorial perspective. The novel highlights the cultural origins of Malaysia through hybridity and queer temporality, challenging the limitations of cultural discourse in the country.
CAMBRIDGE JOURNAL OF POSTCOLONIAL LITERARY INQUIRY
(2022)
Article
Language & Linguistics
Mohd Fadhli Shah Khaidzir et al.
Summary: Individuals can attribute profound significance to a location, and Kuala Lumpur offers insights into the environment. Poems depict the connection between individuals and the city.
3L-LANGUAGE LINGUISTICS LITERATURE-THE SOUTHEAST ASIAN JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE STUDIES
(2022)
Article
Area Studies
M. M. Raihanah et al.
Summary: Communicating stories matter when writers highlight the dynamics of mining the most private experiences for material. Malaysian writers, such as Bernice Chauly, have demonstrated the importance of memory and trauma studies in their works, particularly in the memoir "Growing Up with Ghosts," which explores the author's personal investigations and evokes empathy from readers. The ability to capture loss and grief through multigenre, multivocal narratives contributes to the formation of personal identity and discourse.
Article
Language & Linguistics
Mohamad Rashidi Mohd Pakri et al.
Summary: This article examines the representations of the modern Malay in Katherine Sim's Malacca Boy, analyzing the novel's portrayal of Malay identity and its engagement with issues of race and modernity. It also compares the novel to Mahathir Mohamad's The Malay Dilemma to examine its relevance in contemporary political narrative.
GEMA ONLINE JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES
(2022)
Article
Language & Linguistics
Siti Zaharah Syahiera Fauzi et al.
Summary: This paper explores how Nyonya food empowers Peranakan Chinese women, challenging the notion of their assigned secondary roles and highlighting their power and influence within their families and communities.
3L-LANGUAGE LINGUISTICS LITERATURE-THE SOUTHEAST ASIAN JOURNAL OF ENGLISH LANGUAGE STUDIES
(2022)
Biographical-Item
Literature
Mohammad A. Quayum
JOURNAL OF POSTCOLONIAL WRITING
(2022)
Article
Sri Mulyani et al.
Okara Jurnal Bahasa dan Sastra
(2022)
Article
Literature
Neelofer Qadir
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
(2022)
Article
Geography
Tim Bunnell
Summary: In 1991, the Malaysian Prime Minister, Mahathir Mohamad, announced Vision 2020 with the aim of making the country 'fully developed' by that year. Although the crude GDP targets of Vision 2020 were not met, the year 2020 continued to hold significance for Malaysians. This essay reflects on three decades of Vision 2020, analyzing its impact on politics, society, and art.
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH
(2022)
Article
Language & Linguistics
Collin Jerome
Summary: This article examines Malaysian queer literature (MQL) and analyzes its characteristics, content, and writing style as a response to the differential treatment of LGBTQ people in Malaysia. The study reveals MQL as a new genre in Malaysian literature, which aims to initiate discussions on queer topics and challenge gender norms. The analysis of MQL anthologies highlights the multiple conceptions of sexual and gender identities present in the literature, as well as the disruption of sexual and gender norms. This article underscores the importance of using MQL to promote diverse perspectives and challenge existing discourses that discriminate against LGBTQ individuals based on their gender and sexual diversity.
GEMA ONLINE JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE STUDIES
(2022)
Article
Theater
Catherine Diamond
Summary: At the 2021 Bangkok International Performing Arts Meeting (BIPAM), Southeast Asian dramatists presented new works that combined personal histories with the overarching political struggles in the region. One presentation, Deleted Scenes in SEA: Ownership Under Censorship, not only addressed censorship and self-censorship issues, but also intertwined the distinct cultural identities of Singapore, Indonesia, and Thailand by reenacting previously banned scenes. This adaptation of each other's censored scenes and the recreation of similar experiences in countering political repression required empathetic imagination, potentially serving as a new theatrical platform for fostering regional solidarity.
NEW THEATRE QUARTERLY
(2022)
Article
Literature
Sanghamitra Dalal et al.
Summary: The Ghost Bride, a magical realist bestseller by Yangsze Choo, was adapted into a Netflix series that presents a re-orientalised metropolitan cosmopolitanism, aimed at global consumption. Set in colonial Malacca, the story explores the dynamics of reorientalism and cosmopolitanism, depicting local culture for a global audience.
STUDIA UNIVERSITATIS BABES-BOLYAI PHILOLOGIA
(2022)
Article
Bima Iqbal Khadafi
Journal of Language and Literature
(2022)
Article
Literature
Ann Ang et al.
Article
Literature, African, Australian, Canadian
Kelly Yin Nga Tse
Summary: This article critically examines the novel "The Gift of Rain" by Malaysian Chinese writer Tan Twan Eng, focusing on its reparative work in relation to Japanese imperialism in Asia. The novel presents a Buddhist-inflected queer romance between the Anglo-Chinese protagonist and his Japanese aikido master, suggesting an ethics of reconciliation. By questioning the specific Asian imperial encounter of the Japanese Occupation, the novel expresses a desire for restoring cultural connections in postcolonial Asia.
JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE
(2022)
Article
Communication
Terrie Siang-Ting Wong
Summary: This essay challenges the celebratory idea that "Crazy Rich Asians" represents unequivocal progress for Asian/American media representation from a postcolonial perspective. Through textual analysis, the essay examines the portrayal of Asian subjectivities in the film within the context of race relations in the United States, Singapore, and between the United States and Asia. It concludes by discussing the impact of yellowface mockery and ambivalence on both Asian and Asian American identities, and argues for the continued relevance of yellowface theorizations in unpacking representations of Asian/American subjectivities in filmic texts produced by, for, and with Asians.
JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AND INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION
(2022)
Article
Literature
Vandana Saxena
Summary: This study examines the position of excluded memories, stories, and narratives in the historical imagination of a nation through Bakhtin's concept of chronotopia, which explores the temporal and spatial aspects of history. It argues that the network of chronotopes establishes the past as a relational realm open to engagement. This is particularly relevant in multicultural postcolonial societies where official history is contested and multiple narratives coexist. Through a close reading of Tash Aw's The Harmony Silk Factory, this study explores the multiplicity of chronotopes and their dialogic relationships in historical narratives, emphasizing their significance in postcolonial multicultural nations.
CRITIQUE-STUDIES IN CONTEMPORARY FICTION
(2022)
Article
Literature, African, Australian, Canadian
Philip Smith
Summary: This article examines the significance of Singaporean science fiction within its historical context, revealing its role as social criticism and challenging dominant narratives. The research highlights the themes of new and old, and foreign and familiar, and how they are used to counter prevailing narratives.
JOURNAL OF COMMONWEALTH LITERATURE
(2022)
Article
Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary
Sheat Fun Chow et al.
Summary: Caruth's trauma model suggests that traumatic events are difficult to understand directly, while art forms can serve as a medium to convey and release silenced trauma, helping to overcome the difficulties of language in expressing trauma.
PERTANIKA JOURNAL OF SOCIAL SCIENCE AND HUMANITIES
(2022)