Gender and Discipline in ‘The Singapore Story’: The Female Chinese Factory Workers in Perspective, c. 1980-c. 1990
In his conclusion toRickshaw Coolie, James Warren underscores the intention of his book, which is to ‘bring back to Singapore’s own Chinese people and society, asingkehcoolie culture and history, which is, finally, their own – a People’s History (Warren 1986, 326).’ In the two decades since the publ...
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Zusammenfassung: | In his conclusion toRickshaw Coolie, James Warren underscores the intention of his book, which is to ‘bring back to Singapore’s own Chinese people and society, asingkehcoolie culture and history, which is, finally, their own – a People’s History (Warren 1986, 326).’ In the two decades since the publication ofRickshaw Coolie, Warren’s intentions have been echoed in a comparatively small but growing body of literature on Singapore’s history. But what is People’s History? What do such histories offer to the readers in the present especially with regard to past and existing trends in the practice of writing |
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