Singapore gay literature

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Singapore gay literature covers LGBT-related writing in Singapore and include plays, novels, short stories and poetry. They also include non-fiction works include books and essays or chapters within journals, websites or books for either scholarly or general readers. In the following, works are categorised by literary genre.

Contents

[edit] Plays

The increasing boldness of local authors in sympathetically addressing LGBT themes is intertwined with the growth of English-language theatre in Singapore since the mid-1980s. It was in theatre that writers first challenged the cultural taboo surrounding homosexuality. A fairly regular stream of gay plays were staged in Singapore throughout the 1990s, raising the public profile of sexual minorities.

  • Lest the Demons Get To Me (1993) by Russell Heng depicts a dilemma in which a male-to-female transsexual resents having to dress up as a man to perform funeral rites as her dead father’s only son. The play highlights a society that is rather crushing on the protagonist’s desire to be true to herself. [1] [2]
  • Private Parts (1994), a comedy by Michael Chiang, addresses the theme of Singapore society’s capacity to come to terms with gender minorities in the form of transsexuals. The Straits Times reported that "Private Parts, with its remarkable performances and poignant message, is a special production that should not close until every person in this country has seen it". The play has also been performed in Mandarin. [3]
  • Mergers and Accusations (1995) and Wills and Secession (1996) by Eleanor Wong, the first two parts of a trilogy, tell the story of a lesbian marrying a man, leaving him and falling in love with a woman. In charting her heroine’s personal struggle to win acceptance from family and social circle, Wong pushes the 'coming out' message and moves closer to activism than seen in Heng or Chiang's more descriptive treatment of the subject. [4] [5]

(For other plays, see Singapore gay theatre).

[edit] Novels

Novels with LGBT-related themes began emerging in Singapore literature scene in the 1990s. Among the earliest work is Different Strokes (1993) by David Leo portraying victims of AIDS. [6]

[edit] Short stories

LGBT-themed stories are found in different collections of short stories. Examples are:

[edit] Poetry

Cyril Wong came out into the scene in 2000 with poetry that was confessional in style but universal in scope. Completely "out" in newspaper and magazine interviews, he is the only openly-gay poet to win the National Arts Council's Young Artist Award for Literature. His books include:

(Read reviews of Wong's work archived on his website:[16])

While Luo Qining's poem Asshole (found in Onewinged), disparages and stereotypes effeminate behaviour as gay and "asshole", the epithet could also refer to the abusers in the poem, which invokes sympathy for the effeminate character.

Alvin Pang's The Scent of the Real, a tribute to Cyril Wong, is value-neutral and talks of Cyril Wong's sexuality as a fact, not something disgusting or abject.

Toh Hsien Min and Yong Shu Hoong have written poems about friends coming out to them in On a Good Friend's Admission that he is Gay and A Friend's Confession. Both were suspicious that their friends wanted sexual relations with them.

Gwee Li Sui in the eponymous book with the poem Who wants to buy a book of Poems talks about how (most of the) poets are limp-wristed and "ah kua". In the following poem, Edward, he depicts the sad life of a cross-dresser past his prime.

[edit] Non-fiction

Academic works address various issues related to LGBT.

There is also a medical reference writing on sex-reassignment.

  • Cries from Within (1970) by S. Shan Ratnam; Victor H. H. Goh and Tsoi Wing Foo- an illustrated and user-friendly tome on sex-reassignment surgery and its attendant psychological considerations by two eminent gynaecologists and a psychiatrist. [19]

A few works on gender studies for both general readers and academic interests

The following are works mainly for general readers.

[edit] LGBT writing on the Internet

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