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Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia

Book

Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia

DOI link for Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia

Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia book

Engendering discourse in Singapore and Malaysia

Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia

DOI link for Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia

Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia book

Engendering discourse in Singapore and Malaysia
ByAdeline Koh, Yu-Mei Balasingamchow
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2015
eBook Published 9 June 2015
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315767260
Pages 208
eBook ISBN 9781315767260
Subjects Area Studies, Politics & International Relations, Social Sciences
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Koh, A., & Balasingamchow, Y.-M. (2015). Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia: Engendering discourse in Singapore and Malaysia (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315767260

ABSTRACT

Singapore and Malaysia are rapidly modernising, globalising Asian states which, although being distinct nations since 1965, share common elements in the on-going struggle over the meaning of gender and sexuality in their societies. This is the first book to discuss a range of discourses around gender in these two countries.

Women and the Politics of Representation in Southeast Asia: Engendering Discourse in Singapore and Malaysia seeks to give an overview of how gender and representation come together in various configurations in the history and contemporary culture of both nations. It examines the discursive construction of gender, sexuality and representation in a variety of areas, including the politics of everyday life, education, popular culture, literature, film, theatre and photography. Chapters examine a range of tropes such as the Orientalist "Sarong Party Girl," the iconic "Singapore Girl" of Singapore Airlines, and the figure of pious Muslim femininity celebrated by Malaysian NGO IMAN, all of which play important roles in delineating limitations for gender roles. The collection also draws attention to resistance to these gender boundaries in theatre, film, blogs and social media, and pedagogy.

Bringing together research from a variety of humanistic and social science fields, such as film, material culture, semiotics, literature and pedagogy, the book is a comprehensive feminist survey that will be of use for students and scholars of Women’s Studies and Asian Studies, as well as on courses on gender, media and popular culture in Asia.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|15 pages

Introduction

ByADELINE KOH AND YU-MEI BALASINGAMCHOW

chapter 2|17 pages

Dangerous sexuality in Singapore: the Sarong Party Girl

ByCHRIS HUDSON

chapter 3|27 pages

Consuls, consorts or courtesans? ‘Singapore Girls’ between the nation and the world

BySIMON OBENDORF

chapter 4|19 pages

New forms of colonial gazing in Singaporean Chinese wedding photography

ByTERENCE HENG

chapter 5|22 pages

The trouble with modernity: melodrama and the independent heroine in selected contemporary Malaysian-Malay films

ByHANITA MOHD MOKHTAR-RITCHIE

chapter 6|18 pages

Nationhood and selective memory: a case study of the official remembering of the Cantonese black and white amah

ByCATHERINE GOMES

chapter 7|20 pages

‘What will it cost you today?’ The gendered discourse of parenting

ByMICHELLE M. LAZAR

chapter 8|15 pages

Gendered dimensions of Islamisation: the case of IMAN

BySYLVA FRISK

chapter 9|20 pages

Confronting issues of belonging and non-belonging in the works of four female Malaysian theatre practitioners

BySUSAN PHILIP

chapter 10|16 pages

Interrogating gender in a Singapore classroom

ByCHITRA SANKARAN AND CHNG HUANG HOON
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