Souchou Yao looks at the reasons behind the hegemonic ruling, examining key events such as the caning of American teenager Michael Fay, the judicial ruling on fellatio and unnatural sex, and Singapore's 'war on terror' to show the ways in which the State manages these events to ensure the continuance of its power and ideological ethos.
Lively, and well-written, this book discusses key subject areas such as:
- leftist radicalism and communist insurgency
- nation-building as trauma
- Western 'yellow culture' and Asian Values
- judicial caning and the meaning of pain
- the law and oral sex
- food and the art of lying
- cinema as catharsis
- Singapore after September 11.
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'This is a skilfully written, wide-ranging, and well-organized book whose author has effortlessly assembled a disciplinary eclectic analytical toolkit to produce some of the most interesting, insightful, refreshing, and (unexpectedly) accessible interpretations of contemporary politics in Singapore. The analysis is often very personal and the prose is lively, making this a book that should not only be on scholarly reading lists, but one that will also appeal to intelligent non-academic readers hungry for alternative and innovative ways to explain politics in Singapore' - Kenneth Paul Tan, Sojourn, October 2008
'The broad, thematic analysis, which is clearly the main focus of Yao's efforts, is eclectic, stimulating and rewarding' - Michael D. Barr, Journal of Contemporary Asia, February 2009