The Shek Kip Mei Myth

Squatters, Fires and Colonial Rule in Hong Kong, 1950-1963

Do you like this document?

Notes

Please login to add notes

Staging Nation examines the complex relationship between the theatrical stage and the wider stage of nation building in postcolonial Malaysia and Singapore. In less than fifty years, locally written and produced English language theatre has managed to shrug off its colonial shackles to become an important site of community expression. This groundbreaking comparative study discusses the role of creative writing and the act of performance as actual political acts and as interventions in national self-constructions. It argues that certain forms of theatre can be read as emerging oppositional cultures that contribute towards the deepening of democracy by offering contending narratives of the nation.

Jacqueline Lo is Senior Lecturer at the School of Humanities, Australian National University. She has published widely on postcolonial theory, performance studies and Asian-Australian cultural politics. She is the editor of Theatre in Southeast Asia, and co-editor of Diaspora: Negotiating Asian-Australia.

Pearson-logo1
Uvk
Oreilly-media-logo3
Packtpublishing

Book Details

Authors

Alan Smart

Categories

Social Science > Anthropology > Cultural

Publishers

Hong Kong University Press

Publication year : 2006

License: All rights reserved ©

Times read: 0

Share book page

My Annotations