Yonfan's Bugis Street [electronic resource] /Kenneth Chan.
By: Chan, Kenneth [author.].
Contributor(s): Project Muse [distributor.] | Project Muse.
Material type: BookSeries: New Hong Kong cinema: ; UPCC book collections on Project MUSE: ; UPCC book collections on Project MUSE: Publisher: Baltimore, Maryland : Project Muse, 2016 2015); Hong Kong [China] : Hong Kong University Pres, [2015] 2015)Description: 1 online resource (1 PDF (xiii, 173 pages) :) illustrations.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9789888313266.Subject(s): Yang, Fan, 1947- -- Criticism and interpretation | Bugis Street (Motion picture) -- History and criticism | Prostitution in motion pictures | Transsexuals in motion pictures | Bugis Street (Singapore) -- History | Singapore -- In motion picturesGenre/Form: Electronic books. | Electronic books. DDC classification: 791.437209 Online resources: Full text available:"Yonfan's filmography": page [157].
Includes filmography (pages [159]-161) and bibliographical references (pages [163]-173).
Introduction : Bugis Street as historical-political-cultural discourse -- 1. Bugis Street as pop cultural archive -- 2. Bugis Street as sexuality on screen -- 3. Bugis Street as transnational queer cinema -- 4. Bugis Street as queer space and time -- Conclusion : Bugis Street as un-community.
Bugis Street was famous (or notorious) for being a haunt of transgender prostitution in the early decades of postcolonial Singapore. Since then the site has been a source of touristic obsession and local cultural anxiety. In his 1995 film Bugis Street, director Yonfan brings the short lane back to vivid cinematic life. By focusing on the film's representations of queer sexualities and transgender experience, this book contends that the under-appreciated Bugis Street is a significant instance of queer transnational cinema. The film's playful yet nuanced articulations of queer embodiment, spatiality, and temporality provide an unexpected intervention in the public discourses on LGBT politics, activism, and cultures in Singapore today. This book's arrival at a much more complicated and contradictory picture of the discursive Bugis Street, through the examination of Yonfan's film and a range of other cultural and literary texts, adds a new critical dimension to the ongoing historical, geographical, sociological, ethnographic, and artistic analyses of this controversial space.
Description based on print version record.
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