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The literature of Singapore comprises a collection of literary works by Singaporeans in the country's four main languagues: English, Chinese, Malay and Tamil. As Singapore is a small and relatively modern amalgam of Chinese, Malay and Indian immigrants, the culture of Singapore expresses the diversity of the population as the various ethnic groups continue to celebrate their own cultures while they intermingle with one another. ...
Dance in Singapore comprises traditional and contemporary forms. ...
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After independence, in the 1960s, 1970s and 1980s, Singapore had no film industry, being more concerned with the bread-and-butter issues of economic nation-building. ...
The major public holidays in Singapore reflect the cultural and religious diversity of the country, including the Chinese New Year, Buddhist Vesak Day, Muslim Eid ul-Fitr and Eid ul-Adha (known locally by its Malay names Hari Raya Puasa and Hari Raya Haji respectively), Hindu Diwali (known locally by...
Singapore has long had a burgeoning urban musical scene, and is a center for rock, punk and other popular genres in the region. ...
The politics of Singapore is based on a unitary state with some aspects modelled on the Westminster system of parliamentary government. ...
Singlish, a portmanteau of Singapore and English, is the English-based creole spoken colloquially in Singapore. ...
// Statistical problems There are no statistics on how many homosexuals there are in Singapore or what percentage of the population they constitute. ...
The English language is a West Germanic language that originates in England. ...
// Headline text Bold text Not to be confused with the Malayalam language, spoken in India. ...
Tamil (தமிழ௠) is a classical language and one of the major languages of the Dravidian language family. ...
Introduction
While Singaporean literary works may be considered as also belonging to the literature of their specific languages, the literature of Singapore is viewed as a distinct body of literature portraying various aspects of Singapore society and forms a significant part of the culture of Singapore. A number of Singaporean writers such as Tan Swie Hian and Kuo Pao Kun have contributed work in more than one language; this reflects the influence across languages in the literary culture of this multi-ethnic, multi-language country. However, this cross-linguistic fertilisation is becoming increasingly rare and it is now increasingly thought that Singapore has four sub-literatures instead of one. As Singapore is a small and relatively modern amalgam of Chinese, Malay and Indian immigrants, the culture of Singapore expresses the diversity of the population as the various ethnic groups continue to celebrate their own cultures while they intermingle with one another. ...
Tan Swie Hian (é³çç»; pinyin: Chén Ruìxià n) (born 1943 in Indonesia) is an artist, calligrapher, poet and translator. ...
(The following paragraphs of this section are sourced from: "Creative Writing in Singapore" by Chandran Nair: The Introduction to "Singapore Writing" edited by Chandran Nair for The Society of Singapore Writers, Woodrose Publications, 1977) Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
Singapore has a rich heritage in Creative Writing in the Malay, Chinese, Tamil and English Languages. While there is more emphasis on social and patriotic themes in Malay, Chinese and Tamil, the writer in English finds himself (or herself) more comfortable in the analysis of the individual and his motivations. For the writer in Tamil, Chinese and Malay, a healthy concern with the particulars of everyday life (one could say the minutae of living) and the interweaving of these into the fabric of larger nationalistic, patriotic social events is in no way an offensive experience -- in fact it is expected. The writer in English seems more concerned with discovering an image of the individual self, or extrapolating human experience. The social milieu of the English educated is a middle class one and they have middle class pretensions. The middle class preoccupation with the self has over the years begun to pervade the consciousness of the modern Chinese and Malay writers and is what made it possible for their identification with writers using the English Language. The writer in the English language was a comparatively later phenomenon. Creative writing in English is traced to the establishment in Singapore of an institution of higher education in the arts and sciences, Raffles College, which subsequently became the University of Malaya in Singapore together with the King Edward VII Medical College. One of the high points in writing in English was the early and mid-fifties when a rising anti-colonial nationalism was at play and contributed to the desire to be identified as "Malayan". The poems of Wang Gungwu, Lim Thean Soo and Augustine Goh Sin Tub from this period are in a category by themselves. Except for Wang who managed to move into some detached social poems, the rest are mostly personal and experimental in their use of language. The imagery is for most part forcedly local with rubber trees, durians, laterite etc appearing again and again as do words and phrases from Malay and Chinese. This led to the coining of the word "Engmalchin" to explain the highly rarefied, nationalistic application of such languages in poems in English. Wang Gungwu, historian, educator. ...
In the mid-fifties and early sixties there rose a group of writers in English, only a few of whom are alive today--Ee Tiang Hong, Edwin Thumboo, Llyod Fernando and Oliver Seet. A "younger" group among whom Wong Phui Nam was most outstanding arose a few years later and moved away from the conscious Malayaness of their immediate predecessors, but found themselves unsure of direction; though convinced of their interest in writing. Edwin Thumboo's "Rib of Earth" published in 1956 was decidedly a milestone but had its strengths and weaknesses. Among the strengths are an individual voice, a willingness to extend imagery into readings from the past, an urge to explore the individual and what made it possible to be part of the whole, and yet a piece apart, at the same time. The weaknessess are mainly images that run out of hand because language is not firmly held, the need to be seen; to be in full control of the expression, its idiom and direction -- a too careful and pointed exposition of values and direction. One admires the craftmanship but feels the loss of the human being. Against this, Wong Phui Nam's "How the Hills are Distant" (1965) provides an indication of the less disciplined mind waging war, discovering in the self, new avenues, new dimensions. Phui Nam is essentially a participant, though his observation can be as dry, pointed and cutting as Thumboo's sixties poems. Phui Nam utilises wide ecclectic reading, weaving into the poems an inspired montage of the real and unreal. The poetry does not sooth; it awakens primal nagging. Emeritus Professor Edwin Nadason Thumboo (born November 22, 1933) is a Singaporean poet. ...
During this period (1950-1963), prose writing was almost negligible. Herman Hochstadt's "The Compact and Other Stories" is about the only collection. Llyod Fernando, then a short story writer, published his first novel after 20 years. Of the other writers, Awang Kedua (Wang Gung Wu, again) had surest control of language and development of theme. It was however, poetry and not prose that surged forward in the sixties beginning with Robert Yeo, Dudely de Souza, Arthur Yap(died in 2006) and Wong May. The achievements of these writers were consolidated and enlarged by the establilshment of "FOCUS", the journal of the Literary Society of the University of Singapore, so much so that when the next group of writers, Lee Tzu Pheng, Mohd Hj Salleh, Yeo Bock Cheng, Pang Khye Guan, Syed Alwi Shahab and Chandran Nair(now living in Paris) arrived at the University in 1965, there was already in existence within the confines of the University, a micro-tradition of writing and publishing in English. The arrival of Edwin Thumboo to the English Department from the Civil Service was an added impetus. Robert Yeo,Singaporean Poet, Playwright, Novelist, was born Robert Yeo Cheng Chuan(1940), // Yeo is a retired lecturer of the National Institude of Education and Nanyang Technological University. ...
Arthur Yap (b. ...
Lee Tzu Pheng was born (1946) and educated in Singapore. ...
Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
At around this time too, Goh Poh Seng (now living in Canada), who had actually taken a year off to do nothing but write in Dublin and London (and almost starved as a result), arrived to begin work as a Medical Officer at the General Hospital. He started "TUMASEK" a journal for the publication of Singapore/Malayan writing; the fourth such attempt -- the first being "WRITE" begun by Herman Hochstadt and others in the late 1950's; the second,"MONSOON" edited by Lim Siew Wai in the early sixties; the third, the aforementioned "FOCUS". "TUMASEK" however followed "MONSOON" into death after a few issues but Goh pushed forward undaunted and founded together with Lim Kok Ann, CENTRE 65 which presented the first ever "Poetry and Folk Music Festival" to Singaporeans at the Cultural Centre in 1966. The Centre provided Goh with the framework to develop as a playwright beginning with his "Moon is Less Bright" and going on to "When Smiles are Done". Goh later decided that his particular field was prose; "The Immolation" being his first novel. Goh Poh Seng was born in Malaya in 1936. ...
The poets of the mid-sixties extended their style and techniques in the seventies and published in local and international journals and also in individual collections--Robert Yeo's "Coming Home Baby" and Arthur Yap's "Only Lines" in 1971, Chandran Nair's "Once the Horsemen and Other Poems" in 1972, and "After the Hard Hours, This Rain" in 1975. The impetus of the sixties was carried over into the seventies and among the names that emerged in poetry were Chung Yee Chong, Sng Boh Kim, Ernest Lim, and Geraldine Heng, who achieved a remarkable fluency of style in a single volume work, "White Dreams". Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
Here is what Edwin Thumboo has to say about some of these poets in his Introduction to "The Second Tongue": An Anthology of Poetry from Malaysia and Singapore, 1976 Emeritus Professor Edwin Nadason Thumboo (born November 22, 1933) is a Singaporean poet. ...
. . ." Arthur Yap, whose Only Lines appeared in 1971, is also a painter and short-story writer. His is the poetry of acute observation, one that distances and evaluates landscape, incident and situation through a decidedly wry, at times, laconic eye. Both the tone and the direction of the poetry come close to the borders of, but do not enter, irony. Arthur Yap (b. ...
"squat under the sultan's monument is seen and appraised. hands reached out spanning the years to pluck the rambutans the sultan had never eaten, throw the shells down river a little later the boat pulled from the Jetty, there was a lull and then the landscape settled down." (Panchor)
And yet the same powers of observation distil gentleness and pathos as in the first section of 'tanah rata' where the painter and poet in Yap meet to arrange a scene which then gradually comes alive with passers-by. The colour and spaciousness of the prospect are reiterated in a gesture that takes us away from the foreground. But the moment we feel the picture is complete and our responses neatly arranged, we are disturbed by a new presence: "to which we can add to old woman weeding nodding to flowers gradually growing upwards and ending where the slope begins"
The method, especially in the way it leads the reader, ought not to give the impression of fine verbal calculations only. Here, as in his other poems, Yap is deeply responsive to the human centre of things. There is hardly a poem in which this primary interest is not present. Suffering man is imaged obliquely in 'minimum excavation'; or explicitly in 'Old House at Ang Siang Hill'. The concern extends to an examination of relationships as in 'In Passing': "you brought, from a friend, an l.p. for us to share with regards. you exclaimed in chinatown that it was all so intriguing while we, not wanting to be perfunctory, left you to your intrigue, then, at the airport, with its mural, its coffee, we waited, while talking and talking, for you to comment on the fine building, the mural assembling the sea- front or, even the airconditioning. but you were fumbling your bag for your sweater."
Yap's poems are subtle commentaries; they reveal rather than explore in the way that much of Chandran Nair's poetry is exploration. 'Once The Horsemen'(1972) communicates the variety of Nair's poetic world, and the note of urgency with which he attempts his themes. Image and metaphor abound, are part and parcel of 'the wrestle with experience'. For the raid into the inarticulate to achieve what Shelley called 'new materials of knowledge' amounts to an essential self-understanding to harmonise the ways of thought and feeling. By taking many themes as grist for his maw, Nair's poetry ranges over the feelings of a Hindu bride to the Roman emperor, Caligula. The simultaneous forays into life and language and the myths and legends of East and West, have strengthened and extended the coordinating power of Nair's idiom. At their best they are capable of passages of this quality: Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
"walk the vinyard, where love grows. the vines climb the trellis into a sun no longer drying and the wind that once roared vengeance is gentle on the skin, penitent. walk the vinyard and be content while the fences come down one by one." ('after the hard hours, this rain')
The achievement here is of a high order. Tone merges with rhythm and rhythm moves obedient to a compound of thought and feeling. There is no hustling for effect that at times disrupts some of the poems in 'Once A Horsemen'. Snug in their context, the words create and project fully what the poet intends. But each poet has to define his or her own exploration. Some show a certain caution, nurse their resources 'stylistic and emotional' to gain a slower but less erratic development. Almost without exception, Lee Tzu Pheng's poems have clarity and richness of texture. There is a nice balance between the potential of her subject and its realization. Her poems are neither over- nor under-written. Her subjects are familiar but the way they are shaped identifies them as attempts to gain an integrated response to the bed-rock of experience principally of human relationships. At the core is the need for a more inward and real contact, in circumstances of stress, of living in a time when the old life is under pressure. There is an unusual but typical tact and modesty because the 'I' in her poetry does not attempt to quarrel with or dominate her world, but instead seeks individual motives and meanings in accommodations between herself, circumstances and environment. This is because the 'I' is not the conventional ego, but rather an identity, a sensitiveness, a consciousness whose reaching out is powerful yet modest in its assumptions. Lee Tzu Pheng was born (1946) and educated in Singapore. ...
"Must I like an oyster repose in the shell, hearing only the dumb scream of the sea-surge outside, moving me against knowledge, and perhaps will, to new habitations, new graves; or shall I let in, now, a small grain of sand, suffer its torment and harden this sickness to pearl." ('A Thought')
A central problem consists of the poet's encounter with the world at large, between an active humanity and the harsh aggressiveness imaged in the 'scream of the sea-surge'. Thesis-antithesis; the synthesis is that movement to new 'knowledge. . perhaps will. . . new habitations'. There is the choice of protecting oneself against the world, shutting it out, or letting it in; to suffer and through that gain a thing beautiful. She opts for a commitment to troubled waters. This spirit informs her poems, so that while they each deal with their particular theme or occasion, they also relate to her basic position as in 'Nightpiece', 'New Year's Morning' or 'Prospect of a Drowning'. Lee's most notable poem to date, 'My Country And My People', brings together personal and public history with candour. By straddling the two worlds, by subsuming the public to the personal, the poem acquires both a wider frame of reference and an intimacy that would otherwise be lacking. Lee speaks on behalf of a generation: "My country and my people I never understood. I grew up in China's mighty shadow, with my gentle, brown-skinned neighbours; but I keep diaries in English. I sought to grow in humanity's rich soil, and started digging on the banks, then saw life carrying my friends downstream.
Yet, careful lending of the human heart may make a hundred flowers bloom and perhaps, fence-sitting neighbour, I claim citizenship in your recognition of our kind. My people, and my country, are you, and you my home."
In addition to her usual range of technical resources, Lee has very skilfully, in the last stanza, utilised phrases "hundred flowers bloom?, fence-sitting neighbour" that harbour a special potency in politics, national, regional and international.
(The following paragragh is sourced from "Journeys:Anthology of Singapore Poetry", 1995, edited by Edwin Thumboo) Today the younger poets writing in English, Leong Liew Geok, Angeline Yap, Boey Kim Cheng,Heng Siok Tian, Paul Tan, Yong Shu Hoong, Cyril Wong and Felix Cheong, show a more "diffusive" sensibility: rather then treating the self as linked to a core or primal place or time (Singapore before independence, a childhood haunt), their poems are conscious of the change and flux, the dispersions and returns which are appropriate to comtemprorary Singapore society. Cyril Wong is a Singapore poet and author of four books of poetry: squatting quietly, the end of his orbit, below: absence and unmarked treasure. ...
Felix Cheong is a Singaporean poet who was born Felix Cheong Seng Fei. ...
Literature in English Singaporean literature in English started with the Straits-born Chinese community in the colonial era; it is unclear which was the first work of literature in English published in Singapore, but there is evidence of Singapore literature published as early as the 1830s. The first notable Singaporean work of poetry in English is possibly F.M.S.R., a pastiche of T. S. Eliot by Francis P. Ng, published in London in 1935. This was followed by Wang Gungwu's Pulse in 1950. The Singapore Strait, as seen from East Coast Park. ...
Events and Trends Electromagnetic induction discovered by Michael Faraday Dutch-speaking farmers known as Voortrekkers emigrate northwards from the Cape Colony Croquet invented in Ireland Railroad construction begins in earnest in the United States Egba refugees fleeing the Yoruba civil wars found the city of Abeokuta in south-west Nigeria...
Thomas Stearns Eliot, OM (September 26, 1888 â January 4, 1965) was an American (naturalised British) poet, dramatist and literary critic, whose works, such as The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, The Waste Land, The Hollow Men, and Four Quartets, are considered defining achievements of twentieth century Modernist poetry. ...
London (pronounced ) is the capital city of England and the United Kingdom. ...
1935 (MCMXXXV) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will take you to calendar). ...
Wang Gungwu, historian, educator. ...
1950 (MCML) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will take you to calendar). ...
With the independence of Singapore in 1965, a new wave of Singapore writing emerged, led by Edwin Thumboo, Kirpal Singh, Goh Poh Seng, Lee Tzu Pheng, Arthur Yap,and Chandran Nair,. It is telling that many critical essays on Singapore literature name Thumboo's generation, rightly or wrongly, as the first generation of Singapore writers. Poetry is the predominant mode of expression; it has a small but respectable following since independence, and most published works of Singapore writing in English have been in poetry. 1965 (MCMLXV) was a common year starting on Friday (the link is to a full 1965 calendar). ...
Emeritus Professor Edwin Nadason Thumboo (born November 22, 1933) is a Singaporean poet. ...
Goh Poh Seng was born in Malaya in 1936. ...
Lee Tzu Pheng was born (1946) and educated in Singapore. ...
Arthur Yap (b. ...
Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
There were varying levels of activity in succeeding decades until the late 1990s when poetry in English in Singapore found a new momentum with a whole new generation of poets under the age of 40 now actively writing and publishing, not only in Singapore but also internationally. Since the late-1990s, local small presses such as Firstfruits and Ethos Books have been actively promoting the work of this new wave of poets. Some of the more notable include Boey Kim Cheng, Alvin Pang, Cyril Wong, Felix Cheong and Alfian bin Sa'at (who is also celebrated as a playwright). The poetry of this younger generation is often politically aware, self-questioning, transnational and cosmopolitan, yet frequently presents intensely focused and highly individualised perspectives of Singaporean life, society and culture. Some poets have been labeled Confessional for their intensely personalised writing, often dealing with intimate issues such as sexuality. See also 1990s, the band The 1990s decade refers to the years from 1990 to 1999, inclusive, sometimes informally including popular culture from the very late 1980s and from 2000 and beyond. ...
Established in 1997, Ethos Books is a small press focusing on publishing literary works, primarily from writers in Singapore. ...
Alvin Pang (Chinese: å¯å¯æ; born 1972, Singapore) was named 2005 Young Artist of the Year (Literature) by the National Arts Council Singapore. ...
Cyril Wong is a Singapore poet and author of four books of poetry: squatting quietly, the end of his orbit, below: absence and unmarked treasure. ...
Felix Cheong is a Singaporean poet who was born Felix Cheong Seng Fei. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with transnationalism. ...
Look up cosmopolitan in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
A confessional poet traffics in intimate, and perhaps derogatory, information about him or herself, in poems about illness, sexuality, despondence and the like. ...
Drama in English found expression in Goh Poh Seng, who was also a notable poet and novelist, and later in Kuo Pao Kun, who also wrote in Chinese, sometimes translating his works into English. The late Kuo was a vital force in the local theatre renaissance in the 1980s and 1990s, being the artistic director of Substation for many years. Some of his plays, like The Coffin is Too Big for the Hole (1984) and Lao Jiu (1990), are classics of the genre. Goh Poh Seng was born in Malaya in 1936. ...
The examples and perspective in this article or section may not represent a worldwide view. ...
See also 1990s, the band The 1990s decade refers to the years from 1990 to 1999, inclusive, sometimes informally including popular culture from the very late 1980s and from 2000 and beyond. ...
1984 (MCMLXXXIV) was a leap year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
This article is about the year. ...
Fiction writing in English did not start in earnest until after independence. Short stories flourished as a literary form, the novel arrived much later. Although she began as a short story writer, Penang-born Catherine Lim has been Singapore's most widely read author, thanks partly to her first two books Little Ironies - Stories of Singapore (1978) and Or Else, The Lightning God and Other Stories (1980), which gained prestige by being incorporated into texts for the GCSE, as well as to her Asian themes of gender-dominance, which marked her as a distant cousin to Asian-American writers such as Amy Tan. She has also been writing novels, such as The Bondmaid (1998) and Following the Wrong Gods Home (2001), and publishing them to an international audience since the late 1990s. Rex Shelley hails from an earlier colonial generation, although he began publishing only in the early 1990s. His first novel The Shrimp People (1991) won a National Book Prize. Another National Book Prize winner Su-Chen Christine Lim's works are much more feminist-inclined, although she has moved beyond such distinctions in her latest novel A Bit of Earth (2004). Gopal Baratham, a neurosurgeon, started as a short story writer and later wrote politically-charged works like A Candle or the Sun (1991) and Sayang (1991), which courted some controversy when first published. Of the younger generation, Philip Jeyaretnam has shown promise but has not published a new novel since Abraham's Promise (1995), while Colin Cheong can lay claim to being one of Singapore's most prolific contemporary authors. State motto: Bersatu dan Setia (United and Loyal), formerly Let Penang Lead Location in Malaysia Government Capital George Town (5. ...
Catherine Lim (Chinese: æå®é³) is a Malaysian-born Singaporean, a Straits-born Chinese author, born in 1942, in Penang, Malaysia. ...
1978 (MCMLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Sunday. ...
1980 (MCMLXXX) was a leap year starting on Tuesday. ...
GCSE is an acronym that can refer to: General Certificate of Secondary Education global common subexpression elimination - an optimisation technique used by some compilers This is a disambiguation page — a navigational aid which lists other pages that might otherwise share the same title. ...
Amy Tan (Chinese: èæ©ç¾; pinyin: Tán ÄnmÄi), an American writer, was born February 19, 1952 in Oakland, California several years after her parents immigrated to the U.S. from China. ...
1998 (MCMXCVIII) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar, and was designated the International Year of the Ocean. ...
2001: A Space Odyssey. ...
See also 1990s, the band The 1990s decade refers to the years from 1990 to 1999, inclusive, sometimes informally including popular culture from the very late 1980s and from 2000 and beyond. ...
See also 1990s, the band The 1990s decade refers to the years from 1990 to 1999, inclusive, sometimes informally including popular culture from the very late 1980s and from 2000 and beyond. ...
1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Su-Chen Christine Lim (born 1948) is a writer and playwright in Singapore. ...
2004 (MMIV) was a leap year starting on Thursday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Dr. Gopal Baratham (September 9, 1935 â April 23, 2002) was a Singaporean author and physician. ...
1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
1991 (MCMXCI) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
Philip Jeyaretnam, son of veteran opposition politician J._B._Jeyaretnam (JBJ), graduated from Cambridge University in 1986 with First-Class Honours in Law. ...
1995 (MCMXCV) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Gregorian calendar. ...
List of Singaporean writers - Aaron Lee, poet and lawyer
- Abdul Ghani Bin Abdul Hamid
- Muhammad Ariff Ahmad
- Gopal Baratham, neurosurgeon and writer
- Boey Kim Cheng, poet
- Colin Cheong, poet and novelist
- Felix Cheong, Poet
- Michael Chiang, playwright
- Rohani Din
- Ivy Goh Nair, Journalist and writer
- Goh Poh Seng, poet and novelist
- Philip Jeyaretnam, novelist and lawyer
- Rama Kannabiran
- Russell Lee
- Lee Tzu Pheng, poet
- Liang Wern Fook
- Catherine Lim, novelist
- Su-Chen Christine Lim, novelist
- Shirley Lim, poet and critic
- Chandran Nair, poet and Artist
- Alvin Pang, poet and editor
- Villayil Raman Gopala Pillai, Malayalam Novelist
- Daren Shiau, poet, novelist and lawyer
- Rex Shelley, novelist
- Robert Yeo, playwright and Poet
- Kirpal Singh, poet and critic
- Huzir Sulaiman, playwright
- Hwee Hwee Tan, novelist
- Colin Tan, poet
- Tan Swie Hian, poet, translator, calligrapher, and artist
- Simon Tay, poet and lawyer
- Edwin Thumboo, poet and academic
- I Ulaganathan
- James Villanueva, textbook-writer, poet, novelist, playwright
- Cyril Wong, poet and countertenor
- Eleanor Wong, academic lawyer and playwright
- Arthur Yap, poet
- Yong Shu Hoong, poet
Aaron Song Lee (born 1992 in China) is an American football player who currently plays for the San Francisco 49ers. ...
Dr. Gopal Baratham (September 9, 1935 â April 23, 2002) was a Singaporean author and physician. ...
Felix Cheong is a Singaporean poet who was born Felix Cheong Seng Fei. ...
Goh Poh Seng was born in Malaya in 1936. ...
Philip Jeyaretnam, son of veteran opposition politician J._B._Jeyaretnam (JBJ), graduated from Cambridge University in 1986 with First-Class Honours in Law. ...
Russell Lee and his team of ghost writers were the authors of True Singapore Ghost Stories, a series of books that have been among the most popular sources of ghost stories in Singapore ever since Book 1 was released in the early 1990s. ...
Lee Tzu Pheng was born (1946) and educated in Singapore. ...
Catherine Lim (Chinese: æå®é³) is a Malaysian-born Singaporean, a Straits-born Chinese author, born in 1942, in Penang, Malaysia. ...
Su-Chen Christine Lim (born 1948) is a writer and playwright in Singapore. ...
Shirley Geok-lin Lim (born 1944) is an award-winning Malaysian-born American writer of poetry, fiction, and criticism, and one of Hong Kongs most-published authors. ...
Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
Alvin Pang (Chinese: å¯å¯æ; born 1972, Singapore) was named 2005 Young Artist of the Year (Literature) by the National Arts Council Singapore. ...
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Njekkad. ...
Daren Shiau (b. ...
Robert Yeo,Singaporean Poet, Playwright, Novelist, was born Robert Yeo Cheng Chuan(1940), // Yeo is a retired lecturer of the National Institude of Education and Nanyang Technological University. ...
Hwee Hwee Tan was born in Singapore in 1974. ...
Tan Swie Hian (é³çç»; pinyin: Chén Ruìxià n) (born 1943 in Indonesia) is an artist, calligrapher, poet and translator. ...
Emeritus Professor Edwin Nadason Thumboo (born November 22, 1933) is a Singaporean poet. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Cyril Wong is a Singapore poet and author of four books of poetry: squatting quietly, the end of his orbit, below: absence and unmarked treasure. ...
Eleanor Wong is a writer and playwright in Singapore. ...
Arthur Yap (b. ...
Selected works English - After the Hard Hours, This Rain - Chandran Nair (1975)
- Army Daze - Michael Chiang (1984)
- Below: Absence - Cyril Wong (2002)
- The Bondmaid - Catherine Lim (1995)
- The Brink of an Amen - Lee Tzu Pheng (1991)
- Eight Plays - Huzir Sulaiman (2002)
- First Loves - Philip Jeyaretnam (1988)
- Fistful Of Colours - Su-Chen Christine Lim (1993)
- Foreign Bodies - Hwee Hwee Tan (1997)
- Frottage - Yong Shu Hoong (2005)
- I Chose to Climb - Colin Tan (2001)
- If We Dream Too Long - Goh Poh Seng (1973)
- Mammon Inc. - Hwee Hwee Tan (2001)
- Man Snake Apple - Arthur Yap (1988)
- Once the Horsemen and Other Poems' - Chandran Nair (1972)
- Ricebowl - Su-Chen Christine Lim (1984)
- Singapore Accent - Ivy Goh Nair,aka B J Wu (1980)
- The Shrimp People - Rex Shelley (1991)
- The Space of City Trees - Arthur Yap (2000)
- The Stolen Child - Colin Cheong (1989)
- A Third Map - Edwin Thumboo (1993)
- Unmarked Treasure - Cyril Wong (2004)
- The Visage of Terrorism - The Hounds of Hell - James Villanueva (2006/2004)
- A Visitation of Sunlight - Aaron Lee (1997)
Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
Army Daze is a Singaporean film made in 1996. ...
Cyril Wong is a Singapore poet and author of four books of poetry: squatting quietly, the end of his orbit, below: absence and unmarked treasure. ...
Philip Jeyaretnam, son of veteran opposition politician J._B._Jeyaretnam (JBJ), graduated from Cambridge University in 1986 with First-Class Honours in Law. ...
Su-Chen Christine Lim (born 1948) is a writer and playwright in Singapore. ...
Arthur Yap (b. ...
Chandran Nair was born in Kerala, India in 1945. ...
Su-Chen Christine Lim (born 1948) is a writer and playwright in Singapore. ...
Emeritus Professor Edwin Nadason Thumboo (born November 22, 1933) is a Singaporean poet. ...
This article or section does not cite its references or sources. ...
Chinese Malay - Jangan Tak Ada (collection of poems) - Muhammad Ariff Ahmad (1990)
- Diari Bonda (Mother's Diary) - Rohani Din (1997)
- Anugerah Buat Syamsiah (An Award for Syamsiah) - Rohani Din (2001)
Tamil - Cantana Kinnam - I Ulaganathan (1966)
See also As Singapore is a small and relatively modern amalgam of Chinese, Malay and Indian immigrants, the culture of Singapore expresses the diversity of the population as the various ethnic groups continue to celebrate their own cultures while they intermingle with one another. ...
// Introduction This article is a survey of LGBT-related writing in Singapore. ...
External links - Quarterly Literary Review Singapore
- Singapore literature
- Poetry in Singapore
- Introduction to "Second Tongue"
- Singapore individual Poets
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