Love, death and debt restructuring

My work consists of two parts – the first 24,000 words from the start of a novel I’ve written, Love Death and Debt Restructuring (“Love, Death etc”), and an exegesis detailing the focus of my writing and research. The novel draws on my first-hand experiences as an adopted, Eurasian growing up in Aus...

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Main Author: Gresham, Jonathan Paul
Other Authors: Boey Kim Cheng
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136561
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1365612020-12-09T01:16:38Z Love, death and debt restructuring Gresham, Jonathan Paul Boey Kim Cheng School of Humanities kcboey@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Literature::Singapore My work consists of two parts – the first 24,000 words from the start of a novel I’ve written, Love Death and Debt Restructuring (“Love, Death etc”), and an exegesis detailing the focus of my writing and research. The novel draws on my first-hand experiences as an adopted, Eurasian growing up in Australia and England, and as a financial adviser on the restructuring of Thai Petrochemical Industries Pcl from 1999 to 2003. Stories make meaning by demonstrating causality, sequence and agency in respect of selected events resulting in change (Burroway 271-275). Adoption narratives in particular show that stories are a creative means that adoptees use to negotiate the unknowable aspects of their past. My novel explores this in a narrative of adoptee experience in an Australian and Southeast Asian setting. Through my fiction and exegesis, I explore how identity formation, transcultural and transnational issues interact in an adoption context to demonstrate how “the search for an unavailable origin compels imaginative work that itself constitutes identity” (Homans 2013, 114). Specifically, at the start of the novel I show the protagonist, Paul Moore, leaving from Australia and discovering new forms of kinship and belonging in Thailand. With this emphasis I wish to show in my work that the journey of self-discovery is not found explicitly in a return to, or recovery of the past but in creating new connections and affiliations in the present. Master of Arts 2019-12-30T02:20:13Z 2019-12-30T02:20:13Z 2019 Thesis-Master by Research Gresham, J. P. (2019). Love, death and debt restructuring. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136561 10.32657/10356/136561 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Humanities::Literature::Singapore
spellingShingle Humanities::Literature::Singapore
Gresham, Jonathan Paul
Love, death and debt restructuring
description My work consists of two parts – the first 24,000 words from the start of a novel I’ve written, Love Death and Debt Restructuring (“Love, Death etc”), and an exegesis detailing the focus of my writing and research. The novel draws on my first-hand experiences as an adopted, Eurasian growing up in Australia and England, and as a financial adviser on the restructuring of Thai Petrochemical Industries Pcl from 1999 to 2003. Stories make meaning by demonstrating causality, sequence and agency in respect of selected events resulting in change (Burroway 271-275). Adoption narratives in particular show that stories are a creative means that adoptees use to negotiate the unknowable aspects of their past. My novel explores this in a narrative of adoptee experience in an Australian and Southeast Asian setting. Through my fiction and exegesis, I explore how identity formation, transcultural and transnational issues interact in an adoption context to demonstrate how “the search for an unavailable origin compels imaginative work that itself constitutes identity” (Homans 2013, 114). Specifically, at the start of the novel I show the protagonist, Paul Moore, leaving from Australia and discovering new forms of kinship and belonging in Thailand. With this emphasis I wish to show in my work that the journey of self-discovery is not found explicitly in a return to, or recovery of the past but in creating new connections and affiliations in the present.
author2 Boey Kim Cheng
author_facet Boey Kim Cheng
Gresham, Jonathan Paul
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Gresham, Jonathan Paul
author_sort Gresham, Jonathan Paul
title Love, death and debt restructuring
title_short Love, death and debt restructuring
title_full Love, death and debt restructuring
title_fullStr Love, death and debt restructuring
title_full_unstemmed Love, death and debt restructuring
title_sort love, death and debt restructuring
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2019
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/136561
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