Imagining Asia
Panel on Imagining Asia, featuring (L to R) Tash Aw, Madeleine Thien, Boey Kim Cheng and University of London Professor of Humanities Roger Kain, courtesy of Elaine Chiew |
Rabindranath Tagore had a construct for Asia; he called it
“a continental mind of Asia.” Asia thus was conceived as more than geographical
landmass and the surrounding oceans, but even mapping it geographically can
prove tricky as its Western borders are conjoined with Europe. Asia as a continent also encompasses a
multitude of languages, cultures, ethnicities, religious practices, economic
pursuits and livelihoods. Keep in mind also the strategic configuration of powers and militarism
which accompanied the formation of ASEAN, APEC and various other regional affiliations, as well that the turn-of-the-century ideological
conception of Asia as envisioned by Okakura Kakuzõ in Ideals of the East was as a
foil of the East against the encroachments of the West, already forecasting
Japan’s military ambitions at that time. Thus, returning to the question of “imagining Asia”
and specifically how Asian writers like Tash Aw, Madeleine Thien and Boey Kim
Cheng imagine Asia, already implicate deeper framing issues of how long we will
remain locked within this semantical conception of Asia as a singular, cohesive
entity, Asians who are immigrants to the West as writers with fragmented
identities, and all of this understood with reference to the West.