ABSTRACT

In an age of increasingly fragmented migration, consumption, and globalisation, how do diasporic individuals navigate their ethnic identities? Diasporas, Weddings and the Trajectories of Ethnicity investigates the ways that Chinese Singaporeans shape their Chineseness through wedding rituals and artefacts. Proposing a framework of ethnic identity as a journey, this book will

  • Interrogate the processes underlying diasporic ethnicity-making through weddings.
  • Offer new concepts of transdiasporic space, ethnic tastes, and aesthetic dissonance.
  • Explore the intersections between commercialism, ethnicity, and socio-economic divides.
  • Map the micro-social ramifications of ethnic and racial policy in Singapore.

As a former professional wedding photographer, Terence Heng brings a sociological lens to the scripted and spontaneous arena of social interactions that is the wedding day. By combining ethnographic observation, photography, and poetry, Heng reveals the many decisions and demands that underscore Singaporean Chinese weddings, offering novel insights into the roles of the bridal couple, their social networks, and the wedding industry.

chapter

Introduction

chapter Chapter 3|12 pages

Weddings as Sites of Ethnicity-Making

chapter Chapter 6|18 pages

Taste Performances

Making Ethnic Lifestyles Interactive

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Ethnic Taste and Aesthetic Dissonance

chapter |10 pages

Epilogue

Look on my Hands and See it ThereA Visual Essay of Chinese Migrant Workers in Singapore 1