Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910

Mainstream written narratives of Singapore from the early 20th century, such as One Hundred Years of Singapore (1921) and An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore (1902), created a heavily fictionalized historical record steeped in myths, legends, and fantasies. Such fictional constructions...

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Main Author: Wong, Lydia Wei Ling
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Format: Thesis-Master by Coursework
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2022
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157093
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1570932023-03-11T20:03:40Z Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910 Wong, Lydia Wei Ling - School of Art, Design and Media Jennifer Ray Burris jburris@ntu.edu.sg Visual arts and music::Art museums and galleries Mainstream written narratives of Singapore from the early 20th century, such as One Hundred Years of Singapore (1921) and An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore (1902), created a heavily fictionalized historical record steeped in myths, legends, and fantasies. Such fictional constructions were augmented by visual representations from colonial-era Singapore (1860– 1910): landscapes and botanical drawings; early photographic studios; and museum exhibition displays. Through close examination of such archival material from these five transformative decades, this paper examines how fantastical accounts of a place, its geographies, its peoples, and its epistemological structures were created and established as factual record in part due to widely-circulated visual representations. Furthermore, it argues that much existing scholarship and research in the region—from museum exhibitions to studies that remain heavily indebted to colonial records and archives established by a British colonial government catering to a European public—contains traces of such biases; an acknowledgement of epistemic violence within constructed visual spaces. As a counter-methodology, this study proposes to apply a Derridean-influenced process of sous rature to archival material from colonial-era Singapore in order to reveal an inherent indeterminacy within such material, which in turn offers multiple divergent narratives and new meanings. In doing so, this analytical process will begin to dismantle fictive constructions and non-factual understandings in order to “counter-map” colonial Singapore by using the same visual material previously used to construct its fantastical histories. Master of Arts (Museum Studies and Curatorial Practices) 2022-05-10T12:30:20Z 2022-05-10T12:30:20Z 2019 Thesis-Master by Coursework Wong, L. W. L. (2019). Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157093 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157093 en 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 Visual arts and music::Art museums and galleries
spellingShingle Visual arts and music::Art museums and galleries
Wong, Lydia Wei Ling
Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
description Mainstream written narratives of Singapore from the early 20th century, such as One Hundred Years of Singapore (1921) and An Anecdotal History of Old Times in Singapore (1902), created a heavily fictionalized historical record steeped in myths, legends, and fantasies. Such fictional constructions were augmented by visual representations from colonial-era Singapore (1860– 1910): landscapes and botanical drawings; early photographic studios; and museum exhibition displays. Through close examination of such archival material from these five transformative decades, this paper examines how fantastical accounts of a place, its geographies, its peoples, and its epistemological structures were created and established as factual record in part due to widely-circulated visual representations. Furthermore, it argues that much existing scholarship and research in the region—from museum exhibitions to studies that remain heavily indebted to colonial records and archives established by a British colonial government catering to a European public—contains traces of such biases; an acknowledgement of epistemic violence within constructed visual spaces. As a counter-methodology, this study proposes to apply a Derridean-influenced process of sous rature to archival material from colonial-era Singapore in order to reveal an inherent indeterminacy within such material, which in turn offers multiple divergent narratives and new meanings. In doing so, this analytical process will begin to dismantle fictive constructions and non-factual understandings in order to “counter-map” colonial Singapore by using the same visual material previously used to construct its fantastical histories.
author2 -
author_facet -
Wong, Lydia Wei Ling
format Thesis-Master by Coursework
author Wong, Lydia Wei Ling
author_sort Wong, Lydia Wei Ling
title Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
title_short Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
title_full Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
title_fullStr Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
title_full_unstemmed Fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial Singapore from 1860-1910
title_sort fictive constructions in visual space: counter-mapping colonial singapore from 1860-1910
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2022
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/157093
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