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Sino-Malay
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Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 454–473.
Published: 01 September 2022
...Tom G. Hoogervorst Abstract Batavia, the capital of the former Netherlands Indies, was home to a popular Chinese-run printing industry that published works in the Malay vernacular. Two 1920s Sino-Malay poems reveal firsthand accounts of the city's vibrant sociocultural landscape. Sair park...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 265–282.
Published: 01 September 2022
...” novels set in the multicultural and multiethnic environment of the Malaysian state of Sarawak, in the northern portion of the island of Borneo. The next two articles focus on literature from the region that is now Indonesia. In “Urban Life in Two 1920s Sino-Malay Poems,” Tom G. Hoogervorst examines...
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Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 509–514.
Published: 01 September 2022
..., the huaxiaosheng 華校生 and the yimin 遺民, archipelagic imaginaries and oceanic epistemologies, resource extraction politics and labor history, the condition of semiwild and posthumanism); and less examined literary genres (popular literature, classical Chinese and Sino-Malay poetry, flash fiction, Philippine...
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Journal Article
Prism (2021) 18 (2): 479–500.
Published: 01 October 2021
... published in 1954 and 1953, respectively, under the pseudonym Lu Baiye 魯白野 (also spelled Lo Po-yeh). These essays, in which Li Xuemin poetically reclaims local history and culture from a Southeast Asian, rather than a Sino- or Western-centric perspective, were written during a period when local nationalist...
Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 474–490.
Published: 01 September 2022
... as a Sino-Southeast Asian or a Sinophone Indies author in a long-distance nationalist vein, but to consider the particular focus on the dynamics between patriotism and sexuality in three stories: “Nandao huailianqu” 南島懷戀曲 (Elegy for the Southern Isles, 1933), “Meiyou baba” 没有爸爸 (Got No Dad, 1933...
Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 319–336.
Published: 01 September 2022
... of Chicago Press , 2021 . Stenberg, Josh . Minority Stages: Sino-Indonesian Performance and Public Display . Honolulu : University of Hawai‘i Press , 2019 . Stenberg, Josh , and Budiman Minasny . “ Coolie Legend on the Deli Plantation: Tale, Text and Temple of the Five Ancestors...
Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 283–300.
Published: 01 September 2022
... comprising the two characters feng 風 (wind) and tu 土 (soil, land, earth), which, when put together, mean the customs and manners characteristic of a place. As proposed above that the Chinese equivalent of Sinophone/xenophone could be Sino-/xenophone/wind or huayi feng 華夷風, now I will explain...
Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 355–373.
Published: 01 September 2022
... his English sojourn. Yet he calls himself “an old fogey from the previous dynasty” ( qianchao yilao 前朝遺老) (177; 244), referring ambiguously to either the late Qing or the minguo 民國 (Republican China) period, which oddly hints at a Sino-Southeast Asian temporal continuity. In addition, despite...
Journal Article
Prism (2023) 20 (2): 265–296.
Published: 01 September 2023
..., and visual artists. 28 Another example is the Toki Experimental Project on Intangible Cultural Heritage, which originated from a Sino-Japanese collaboration at Shanghai Expo 2010 and subsequently evolved into an annual trans-Asian festival based in Nanjing, with satellite events in Tokyo and Hong Kong...
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Journal Article
Prism (2022) 19 (2): 411–427.
Published: 01 September 2022
... suffering, the original story is as follows: During the period of political transition in the 1940s and 1950s, a large number of revolutionaries who had fought to overthrow the Kuomintang (KMT) regime were imprisoned in a concentration camp called the Sino-American Cooperative Organization. On the eve...