The Singapore Writers’ Festival kicks off this week – and for the first time in its history, will be taking place entirely online. In these tumultuous times, we asked five Singapore-based poets about why literary festivals are important, what a successful literary festival looks like (to them!), and what they’re most looking forward to at this year’s #SWF:
Tuesday, 27 October 2020
Wednesday, 21 October 2020
The Girl who did a Strip-Dance, by Wang Bang, translated by Nicky Harman
In this post, Nicky Harman translates an article by Wang Bang, a writer, film-maker and translator based in the UK and featured here in September 2020. Wang Bang says, ‘I agreed to write for Love Matters because I think it is all about the making of girls, daring, dashing unconventional girls, about how our girls break away from social norms, toxic masculinities and a rigid, patriarchal society. …The results have been great. Most of my articles have been well received, with some of them getting more than 3,000 likes.’
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The thing that completely changed my relationship with my body was not losing
my virginity, but watching a private striptease. It happened one hot day during
the summer holidays, when I met Star. We had a lot in common: we were both at
the ‘Bonjour Tristesse’ age; and she, like me, had dark skin, and came from a single-parent
family. From then on, I used to tell my mum that I was going to a classmate's home
to do my homework and hang out with Star instead.
There was something particularly fascinating about her body. It seemed
to be softer and lither than anyone else's. I remember we found a dress in the
suitcase her mother had left behind – round-necked, with an A-line skirt – and took
turns to try it on. I got it tangled around my neck and then my elbows got stuck,
but she just wriggled like an eel and the woollen fabric, shrunk from the wash,
slid down over her body.
That
summer holiday, Star seemed obsessed with trying on clothes. It was as if she
was desperately trying to find her grown-up self in this jumble of fabrics and
fibres. One evening, she drew the curtains and whispered to me that she was
going to show me something special. With a mischievous smile, she began to pull
her shirt up, then stopped half-way, pouted, and made a pretence of pulling her
shirt down again, all the time swaying her hips. Finally, she pulled it up to
reveal her small, flat belly… And she danced her way through taking her clothes
off. There was no soundtrack, but her body seemed to open and close rhythmically,
the way a seashell does. It was its own musical box. There was no stage
lighting, but countless beads of sweat at her hairline caught the light instead.
Her dancing was naughty and provocative. It seemed to me then that she had made it up herself, though thinking back now, it was a lot like the striptease in a black and white photo of the American burlesque dancer Mae Dix. Mae Dix wears a hat with sparkly tassels, and holds a slender wand between her fingertips. Her silky dress has fallen to her hips, showing her alabaster backbone, her pert, fleshy buttocks, shaped a bit like a French snail, and her bum crack. She wears a neat pair of dance shoes, with copper-plated soles designed for tip-tapping around the dance floor.
Mae Dix’s act became a sensation. In those days, few women even wore trousers, and hardly anyone had heard of ‘striptease’. Instead, the mainstream media dubbed her teasing, flirty dance moves ‘burlesque’. The male reporters sent to cover the shows practically mobbed the stage, even if afterwards, they wrote about it with scorn.As
girls, Star and I were separated from Mae Dix by nearly a century, but the society
in which we lived did not seem to have grown much more tolerant towards women. My
space, growing up, felt flat, crude and rigid, like a cardboard straitjacket. After
I developed physically, I seemed to lose any right to do anything with my body
apart from gymnastics to the radio broadcasts, sprinting and skipping. We had
to sit bolt upright, walk with our toes turned in, and wear skirts down over
our knees. It was a sin to touch ourselves in private, let alone make a
spectacle of ourselves in public. Only the beautiful were allowed to dance,
because only they qualified to join the dance troupes that added glamour to every
public celebration. And only bad girls combed their hair into giant quiffs, wore
bat sleeves and jeans, and sneaked into pop-up discos in basement fire tunnels.
Our bodies were controlled, as rigidly as if we were statues of women displayed
on the square, by a hidden but highly effective mechanism which reached right
down to the micro level, to our families.
‘You
should stop showing off your body every time you go out, okay?’ my mother would
say, casting a stern, anxious eye over the sleeveless top I liked to wear
because it was hot. ‘You’re asking for some hoodlum to slash your back. Have
you any idea how many perverts there are out there, just waiting to slash a
girl who’s showing a bit of back?’ My mother tried to teach me that clothes
fell into two categories: ordinary, workaday, old clothes, were one sort. The
other sort were for special occasions, when it was permissible to wear
something a bit prettier. Jeanette Winterson writes in her memoir Why Be Happy When You Could Be Normal
about her mother: ‘She had two sets of false
teeth, matt
for everyday, and a pearlised set for “best”.’ Every
time I read this, I smile wryly.
If I hadn’t met Star, I would never have had the guts to stand in front of the mirror, examine my body, caress it, dance with it, go with it, let alone set off with it to cross continents and find my own way in life. No matter how critical other people are about my body, I have learned to accept it. I’m in love with all the ways it allows me to express myself. I think of it as a musical instrument, its every movement performing a dance. And I am the only person with the right to play it.
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Wang Bang’s column was written for RNW Media, Netherlands radio station, Love Matters Chinese website
Thursday, 15 October 2020
Popular Filipino author/columnist & podcaster, Jessica Zafra's first novel, The Age Of Umbrage
Sunday, 4 October 2020
10 Junji Ito Horror Manga Recommendations
Since it's spooky season, I wanted to highlight one of Japan's most famous horror manga artists/writers - Junji Ito. For those not in the know, manga are Japanese comics, and Ito's realistic and hyper-detailed artwork, combined with his macabre and haunting plots, are a perfect nightmare cocktail. Here are ten recommendations to start you off, from his longer-form works to short stories. Also, to existing Junji Ito fans, yes, there are plenty of well-known recommendations here, but if I didn't list your personal favorite, well, there's always next Halloween...
Friday, 2 October 2020
Tsundoku #14 - October 2020
In England i've lit the first fires of the autumn and settled down to read. It might not be so chilly all over the world but whether by the fire or the pool, here's some Asia-related books that caught my eye and built my tsundoku for this October. As ever fiction first....
Monday, 28 September 2020
Taking Down Borders: An interview with poet Zakir Hossain Khokan
Since the launch of the Migrant Worker Poetry Competition in 2014, Singapore’s migrant writing community has grown exponentially, with migrant-led initiatives like ‘One Bag, One Book’ slowly joining the mainstream of a burgeoning poetry scene. Events like the Global Migrant Festival and the Migrant Literary Festival have enlivened the literary calendar, while in 2018, Stranger to Myself – a collection of poetry and prose by Bangladesh-born MD Sharif Uddin – won the top prize at the Singapore Book Awards.
Capturing the spirit of these developments was the release of Call and Response: A Migrant/Local Poetry Anthology in 2018. Now that the COVID-19 pandemic has placed the situation of Singapore’s migrant community under the spotlight, publisher Math Paper Press has commissioned a second release of this landmark anthology, with a portion of the proceeds going to HealthServe, a migrant advocacy NGO.
In this interview, we speak to one of the anthology’s co-editors, Zakir Hossain Khokan, about how the pandemic has affected the community, and his hopes for the book:
Friday, 25 September 2020
Translation goes in both directions
Nicky Harman writes: It seems obvious that there is literary translation from English into Chinese, as well as from Chinese into English, but very little has been written in English about what travels in that direction, and what impact it has on Chinese readers. It is a subject that fascinates me. So I was delighted when I got the chance to interview Wang Bang.
Wang Bang has translated Peter Hughes’s Behoven poems (Oystercatcher Press, 2009) for Professor He Ping, a well-known critic, author and professor at the College of Arts at Nanjing Normal University. Readers can explore them on this bilingual page here. I asked her to tell me more about this project.
N: How did you come across Peter Hughes and Oystercatcher Press, and what do you like about his poetry?
W: The first time I bumped into ‘oystercatchers’, they were not those waders with red beaks, dressed in black cloaks, they were well printed pamphlets with abstract, geometric, mostly hand-painted covers, the kind of visual vocabulary that recalled me to Abstract Expressionism. I soon learnt that they were poetry pamphlets produced by the poet Peter Hughes, who also used his own paintings for the covers. I was immediately intrigued and was hoping to write an article about Peter. I asked David Rushmer, my husband, who is also a poet and had been published by Oystercatcher Press, to introduce me to Peter. A week later, we were in Norfolk, walking against the brisk wind, the oystercatchers rising swiftly from the waves, whilst Peter narrated his early life stories to me from his house on the coast; his surreal adventures working as a translator for the Italian Army and how he endeavored to make sense of the instructions on Russian landmines. I then wrote a story titled ‘The Poet Who lives next to the Lighthouse’; it was surprisingly well received and hit over 600 likes overnight. I thought it could be a great opportunity to introduce Peter’s work to Chinese readers, so I started work translating a small section of his poems. His work is not easy to digest at all but I found them fascinating, it’s like playing with a Rubik’s cube, I have to solve one word (normally a verb) first, before I can rotate to the next layer, and the magic is dark, sensory, musical, dreamy, imaginative and philosophical.
N: How did Professor He Ping get involved?
W: I thought it would be great if I could persuade someone to publish a pamphlet of Peter’s work, a duplication of Oystercatcher Press in both Chinese and English. And an independent publisher in China had agreed to publish the pamphlet. I sent off the work, which is a small part of ‘Behoven’, kindly chosen by Peter and waited, but nothing was certain with the unsettled publishing rules in China. Bored of waiting I sent the manuscript to Professor He Ping, and amazingly he published it right away on a literary journal ‘A Flower to You’ run by his MA students.
N: Which is your favourite poem in the selection published here?
W: Sonata 1 in F minor, op.2, no. 1, Sonata in A major, op. 10.no.2 and the bears in Sonata in A major, op. 10.no.2.
N: Could you say something about the challenges of translating them?
W: The hidden cultural references, the metaphors, they really did my head in. For instance, the phrase
“even if it is called a patio”. What is special about a patio? Is it because it’s a posh word from Spanish? Or, because of its overly ornamental design by the English?
Some sentences seemed to be more straightforward, but can still require a lot of cultural understanding.
“when strangers
with sledge-hammers
& shorts passed
the whole piano
through a bangle”
I had to peep through a keyhole of time to understand that he is talking about “Piano Smashing Contests” in England in the bonkers 1950s!
N: Did you listen to Beethoven while you were translating?
W: No, I really needed to concentrate!
N: Anything else you'd like to say about the special challenges of translating poetry?
W: Poetry often takes liberties that prose would not. Poetry by its nature is often very compact and can include a duplicity of meaning in a single word or phrase which is very difficult to reproduce in another language. I wish I were a poet, it would be easier for me to undertake such an impossible task. I would love to see more work being translated from both languages, work from my generation, and from new emerging writers.
Here is my article about Peter and his press, with some beautiful pictures: The Poet Who lives next to the Lighthouse, in Chinese with a selection of the poems in English.
N: I'm fascinated by which English writers have an impact in China and in Chinese, so He Ping's project seems particularly interesting.
W: This is from Professor He Ping on why he published my translations. I think his response is great: “I am interested in what British writers, including poets, are writing recently. All literature today, regardless of nationality or mother tongue, is part of world literature. And of course, it is also out of friendship with Wang Bang and my trust in her judgment, that I promoted the works of these two poets [Richard Berengarten and Peter Hughes] on my graduate students’ WeChat public account. Modern Chinese literature has always had strong links with British English writing, so I am keen to promote contemporary British writers, poets and their writing wherever possible, in any Chinese literary media where I have some influence.”