Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995

The Bookworm Short Stories are a series of children’s books produced between 1988 and 1995. This period lies sandwiched between the 1983/4 recession (which sparked the postindustrial shift in Singapore’s economic landscape and policy), and the years leading up to and following the new millennium....

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Main Author: Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi
Other Authors: Katherine Blyn Wakely-Mulroney
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151101
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1511012023-03-11T20:16:04Z Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995 Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi Katherine Blyn Wakely-Mulroney Scott Michael Anthony School of Humanities smanthony@ntu.edu.sg, kmulroney@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Literature The Bookworm Short Stories are a series of children’s books produced between 1988 and 1995. This period lies sandwiched between the 1983/4 recession (which sparked the postindustrial shift in Singapore’s economic landscape and policy), and the years leading up to and following the new millennium. The Bookworm Short Stories, as literary texts, and as material objects produced and consumed in Singapore provide a unique view of this time; of expressions and distinct ideas which elude official histories and accounts of the past, yet which might be drawn together to articulate new historical perspectives. Specifically, this thesis identifies a burgeoning shared culture which, moreso than the decades prior, underwent a process of formation and diversification specific to the local environment and identity during this period. And, as the product of a distinct period before the codification of “Singaporeaness,” this culture is foundational to the years that would follow – as lingering layers which undergird the shared structures and ideologies which continue to change alongside Singapore. This thesis’ findings specifically emerge through analysis of the Bookworm Short Stories as children’s literature, drawing on theories and concepts from children’s literature scholarship. The child and childhood (as defined, conceived, expressed, and situated in Singapore) within the Bookworm Short Stories illuminates wider patterns, and draws together sites of interaction which might be otherwise seen as disparate. Revealed through the text and paratext is a Singaporean culture which emerged both from concerted, state-led nation-building efforts, and through cultural, private processes of experiencing and negotiating Singapore during a time of accelerated social, political, and economic change. This thesis finds embedded across the series expectations, ideals, and anxieties that reflect those processes, and which might be located and interrogated as interconnecting and interacting strands within a Singaporean culture - such as between legislation, morality, and consumption. This thesis posits that the shared culture it identifies was the subject of dynamic diversification, while nevertheless shaping itself around core preoccupations which impacted how that culture chose to construct and articulate its priorities, consensus, and actions. Those core preoccupations were, firstly, the creation and focus on an ideal (defined specifically against an unideal), and, secondly, a preoccupation with potential futures. This thesis further contends that even as this distinct Singaporean culture expanded to incorporate new meanings and complex dynamics, it also, ironically, contracted and began to restrict itself. In deconstructing and making complex how these preoccupations might condition both past and present, this thesis argues for a view of the past that eschews static, homogenous versions of Singapore’s trajectory, suggesting that reframing the past is vital to negotiating Singapore’s present Master of Arts 2021-06-23T05:53:27Z 2021-06-23T05:53:27Z 2021 Thesis-Master by Research Lim, R. J. Y. (2021). Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151101 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151101 10.32657/10356/151101 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf 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
spellingShingle Humanities::Literature
Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi
Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
description The Bookworm Short Stories are a series of children’s books produced between 1988 and 1995. This period lies sandwiched between the 1983/4 recession (which sparked the postindustrial shift in Singapore’s economic landscape and policy), and the years leading up to and following the new millennium. The Bookworm Short Stories, as literary texts, and as material objects produced and consumed in Singapore provide a unique view of this time; of expressions and distinct ideas which elude official histories and accounts of the past, yet which might be drawn together to articulate new historical perspectives. Specifically, this thesis identifies a burgeoning shared culture which, moreso than the decades prior, underwent a process of formation and diversification specific to the local environment and identity during this period. And, as the product of a distinct period before the codification of “Singaporeaness,” this culture is foundational to the years that would follow – as lingering layers which undergird the shared structures and ideologies which continue to change alongside Singapore. This thesis’ findings specifically emerge through analysis of the Bookworm Short Stories as children’s literature, drawing on theories and concepts from children’s literature scholarship. The child and childhood (as defined, conceived, expressed, and situated in Singapore) within the Bookworm Short Stories illuminates wider patterns, and draws together sites of interaction which might be otherwise seen as disparate. Revealed through the text and paratext is a Singaporean culture which emerged both from concerted, state-led nation-building efforts, and through cultural, private processes of experiencing and negotiating Singapore during a time of accelerated social, political, and economic change. This thesis finds embedded across the series expectations, ideals, and anxieties that reflect those processes, and which might be located and interrogated as interconnecting and interacting strands within a Singaporean culture - such as between legislation, morality, and consumption. This thesis posits that the shared culture it identifies was the subject of dynamic diversification, while nevertheless shaping itself around core preoccupations which impacted how that culture chose to construct and articulate its priorities, consensus, and actions. Those core preoccupations were, firstly, the creation and focus on an ideal (defined specifically against an unideal), and, secondly, a preoccupation with potential futures. This thesis further contends that even as this distinct Singaporean culture expanded to incorporate new meanings and complex dynamics, it also, ironically, contracted and began to restrict itself. In deconstructing and making complex how these preoccupations might condition both past and present, this thesis argues for a view of the past that eschews static, homogenous versions of Singapore’s trajectory, suggesting that reframing the past is vital to negotiating Singapore’s present
author2 Katherine Blyn Wakely-Mulroney
author_facet Katherine Blyn Wakely-Mulroney
Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi
format Thesis-Master by Research
author Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi
author_sort Lim, Rebekah Jia Yi
title Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
title_short Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
title_full Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
title_fullStr Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
title_full_unstemmed Hidden culture : excavating Singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
title_sort hidden culture : excavating singapore's past through the bookworm short stories, 1985–1995
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/151101
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