Life : it is your choice?

Social norms serve as implicit guides to our way of living - especially so in Singapore. Over decades, the pro-family policies of Singapore and its sociocultural climate - in the name of economic development and “Asian values” - have inevitably paved a singular, expected life trajectory for its citi...

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Main Author: Tan, Jie Lin
Other Authors: Nanci Takeyama
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77992
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-779922019-12-10T11:28:02Z Life : it is your choice? Tan, Jie Lin Nanci Takeyama School of Art, Design and Media DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Visual communication Social norms serve as implicit guides to our way of living - especially so in Singapore. Over decades, the pro-family policies of Singapore and its sociocultural climate - in the name of economic development and “Asian values” - have inevitably paved a singular, expected life trajectory for its citizens: have a ‘good’ education, a ‘good’ job, a ‘happy’ marriage, ‘accomplished’ children and a ‘comfortable’ retirement. Monetary incentives and benefits are given by the government to encourage certain ways of life, but inevitably ends up reinforcing this single narrative. Many Singaporeans consciously or unconsciously make their life choices in order to receive these benefits to get ahead in life. This single story is what is defined to be the ‘normal’ Singaporean life. When we are convinced that such norms are the only path acceptable and ideal, it excludes all others who wish not, or simply cannot fit into this single story, by the differences of class, gender, sexuality, race, etc. We Singaporeans tend to believe it is all up to the individual to make their life choices, and the failure to live up to the single story becomes a responsibility of the individual and individual family units - despite the strong social expectations and structural factors. This project is a metaphor of Singapore’s norms - in five categories it deconstructs structural factors – especially government’s social policies and benefit schemes, to ask the question: Life: who’s choice is it? Is it your choice? Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Communication 2019-06-11T01:31:37Z 2019-06-11T01:31:37Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77992 en Nanyang Technological University 27 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration
DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Visual communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Visual arts and music::Drawing, design and illustration
DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication::Visual communication
Tan, Jie Lin
Life : it is your choice?
description Social norms serve as implicit guides to our way of living - especially so in Singapore. Over decades, the pro-family policies of Singapore and its sociocultural climate - in the name of economic development and “Asian values” - have inevitably paved a singular, expected life trajectory for its citizens: have a ‘good’ education, a ‘good’ job, a ‘happy’ marriage, ‘accomplished’ children and a ‘comfortable’ retirement. Monetary incentives and benefits are given by the government to encourage certain ways of life, but inevitably ends up reinforcing this single narrative. Many Singaporeans consciously or unconsciously make their life choices in order to receive these benefits to get ahead in life. This single story is what is defined to be the ‘normal’ Singaporean life. When we are convinced that such norms are the only path acceptable and ideal, it excludes all others who wish not, or simply cannot fit into this single story, by the differences of class, gender, sexuality, race, etc. We Singaporeans tend to believe it is all up to the individual to make their life choices, and the failure to live up to the single story becomes a responsibility of the individual and individual family units - despite the strong social expectations and structural factors. This project is a metaphor of Singapore’s norms - in five categories it deconstructs structural factors – especially government’s social policies and benefit schemes, to ask the question: Life: who’s choice is it? Is it your choice?
author2 Nanci Takeyama
author_facet Nanci Takeyama
Tan, Jie Lin
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Jie Lin
author_sort Tan, Jie Lin
title Life : it is your choice?
title_short Life : it is your choice?
title_full Life : it is your choice?
title_fullStr Life : it is your choice?
title_full_unstemmed Life : it is your choice?
title_sort life : it is your choice?
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77992
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