5.6.14

Starry Island: New Writing from Singapore


Not that everything here is about islands, but it just so happens that I have two short stories that will be published in MANOA, a literary journal published by the University of Hawai‘i Press, and they've decided to title the volume, "Starry Island: New Writing from Singapore".

The full list of contributors has just been published on MANOA's Facebook page (not on their blog, though), and it's thrilling to see the names of so many authors and poets whom I admire. *squee*

My two stories that will appear in MANOA are "Lighthouse" and "Grandmother". "Lighthouse" is a little story that really seems to have legs: it first appeared in Balik Kampung (2012), then it was selected for the inaugural volume of the Epigram Books Collection of Best New Singaporean Short Stories: Volume One (2013), and now it's going to be in MANOA. "Grandmother" was recently shortlisted for the Commonwealth Short Story Prize. I didn't win; the Asia prize went to Sara Adam Ang, whose work I hope to read very soon. But as with "Lighthouse", I've been very pleasantly surprised that the story resonates with foreign readers, even though in many respects both are (to my mind) very Singaporean stories.

I'm also feeling a little wistful about "Lighthouse" because it was recently announced that the Bedok Lighthouse, which inspired the story (although it's never mentioned by name), is going to be moved to a different block of flats in Marine Parade next year. I thought I was writing about something fairly unchangeable at the time, but real life has once again shown that nothing ever really stays in the same place in Singapore.

I suppose at least we'll always have stories ...

For copies of MANOA, it looks like you'll have to order online. Let's see if we can engineer getting some copies to Singapore for direct sales.

Edited to add (8 July):
As Pete mentioned in the comments below, NUS Press will be distributing the book in Singapore. Copies should be available in bookstores from late July and look out for book events too! For readers outside Singapore, you can order online.

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1.6.14

Islands, islands everywhere

Ready for opening

Since early this year, I've been working with Marcus Ng on an exhibition about Singapore's offshore islands, which opens at the National Museum of Singapore today. The detailed information isn't on the museum website yet, but here it is:
Balik Pulau: Stories from Singapore's Islands
2 June - 10 August 2014
Stamford Gallery, National Museum of Singapore

Singapore is not just one "sunny island, set in the sea", but an archipelago of more than 70 islands. For centuries, these islands have been important landmarks for sailors, and also home to different communities who lived off their waters. After Singapore gained independence, however, the islands were transformed dramatically and nearly all their inhabitants resettled on the mainland.

This exhibition, Balik Pulau, is a return to the islands, in memory and spirit, to recover the stories of those who lived, worked and played there. With new video interviews, archival images, historic boats, personal mementoes and specimens of marine life, the exhibition charts the changes that have taken place and how a new generation is rediscovering our islands and forging new links to them. Come and explore Singapore's offshore islands anew, and be inspired to even visit these places yourself.

View from the former Shell club on Pulau Bukom

From the start, people who heard about the project were always excited because the story of the islands is one of those aspects of Singapore history that are somewhat forgotten in plain sight. The islands are right there, if you know where to look, but in everyday conversation we're more likely to mention Singapore as an "island-city-state" (singular island, please, because that's what keeps the ruling government's siege-mentality narrative in place).

In May, we were in the final stages of putting the exhibition together, it turned out that there were a whole bunch of other island-related projects that have been germinating at the same time:
  • A new play Senang by Singapore playwright Jean Tay, which was staged at the School of the Arts from 15 to 25 May. The work was inspired by the prison riot that took place on Pulau Senang in 1963. (Dave Chua also wrote a short story inspired by the incident, "Senang", which can be found in his collection The Beating and Other Stories.)
  • Singapura Stories held a fantastic seminar at the National Library on 17 May, "Kampong Histories of the Southern Islands". The speakers were Normala Manap, Ivan Kwek, Suriana Suratman and Imran bin Tajudeen. We've referred to the former two scholars' work in exhibition research on Pulau Seking, and it was great to hear the others too.
  • As part of the Singapore HeritageFest, NUS Museum and artist Charles Lim will be staging a follow-up to their excellent exhibition "In Search of Raffles's Light". The recently-concluded exhibition (it ran 24 October 2013 - 27 April 2014) took as its starting point Raffles Lighthouse on Pulau Satumu.
I can't remember ever hearing so much buzz about the islands.

Almost ready for the exhibition opening

For our show, the museum's exhibitions setup teams have been hard at work for the past two weeks, getting everything ready. They delicately suspended fibreglass specimens of marine animals from the ceiling, hoisted seaworthy koleh and jongkong (traditional boats) into position, got all the audio and video productions playing like they're supposed to, and made sure every last blade of (artificial) grass and every grain of (artificial) sand was in place. It's been really exciting to see everything coming together, and I can't wait to see what visitors make of it.

There's no opening event today. The doors are simply unlocked at 10 a.m. and admission is free (kinda like how the islands used to be, heh). We'll be organising some talks and related activities in conjunction with the Singapore HeritageFest in July, but I suggest you see the exhibition first.

So if you've ever been curious about the names of all the damn islands that make up Singapore, or wondered what it was like to live on an island as recently as in 1994 (when the last villagers in the southern islands were evicted resettled), or want to see what kind of life --- human and non-human --- still thrives on our islands, please come and see Balik Pulau. The islands have been waiting long enough for their day in the sun.

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