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Essay: 'Jive talkin': Language and identity politics in Forever Fever

2010, Tan, Marcus Cheng Chye

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Elephant head on white body: Reflexive interculturalism in Ganesh versus the Third Reich

2016, Tan, Marcus Cheng Chye

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K-contagion: Sound, speed, and space in “Gangnam Style”

2015, Tan, Marcus Cheng Chye

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Spectres of Shakespeare: Ong Keng Sen’s Search: Hamlet and the intercultural myth

2016, Tan, Marcus Cheng Chye

Located within the myth of Shakespeare’s universality is a belief in the power and poeticism of his language. If we acknowledge Richard Eyre’s assertion that ‘the life of the plays is in the language’, what becomes of this myth when Shakespeare is ‘transferred’ across cultures? What happens to Shakespeare’s ‘universality’ in these cultural re-articulations? Using Ong Keng Sen’s Search Hamlet (2002), this paper examines the transference of myth and/as language in intercultural Shakespeares. It posits that intercultural imaginings of Shakespeare can be said to expose the hollow myth of universality yet in a paradoxical double-bind reify and reinstate this self-same myth.

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Performative silence: Race, riot and the end of multiculturalism

2016, Tan, Marcus Cheng Chye

On 8 December 2013, the monotonous placidity of Singapore’s streets was disrupted by anti-social violence in a district called Little India. Such acts of mass aggression were unheard of in a country whose policies of multiculturalism have been hailed as exemplary for developed nations. This article examines the conditions and consequences of the riot in Singapore and posits that the event signified a rupture in the politics of multicultural practice. It analyses media representations, official state narratives and vitriolic public responses to consider how the voices of the rioters have been violently silenced. Framed by what Georges Bataille terms the dialectic of civilised speech versus silent violence, where silence is regarded as dispossession and objectification, and vocality as empowerment and subjectivity, this article will consider the performativities of silence and violence and the ways the riot is an event of dissensus, a politics of interruption that fractures hegemonic state-prescribed narratives of multiculturalism.