September 28, 2007

From Book 11 of The Tao Te Ching

This is from Richard Wilhelm's translation:

Thirty spokes surround the hub:
In their nothingness consists the carriage's effectiveness.
One hollows the clay and shapes it into pots:
In its nothingness consists the pot's effectiveness.
One cuts out doors and windows to make the chamber:
In their nothingness consists the chamber's effectiveness.
Therefore:  what exists serves for possession.
What does not exist serves for effectiveness.
Posted by poetically challenged at 15:29:53 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 23, 2007

Lee Kuan Yew, Singapore's founding father

This is reprinted from my first blog site, which now seems to be defunct.


I suppose no discussion of Singapore would be complete without mention of Lee Kuan Yew. As the first prime minister of Singapore, and indeed the unwitting prime mover toward its independence, Lee is very much the father of modern Singapore.

That was not his original goal, however, and the declaration of independence by Lee on 9 August 1965 was a moment in which he seemed to consider himself a failure. In his memoirs, he speaks of the embarrassment he felt over his emotional display at the press conference announcing Singaporean independence. He broke down in front of the cameras and had to take a 20 minute recess to regain his composure before continuing.

You see, Lee had hopes for a united Federation of Malaysia. And after just two short years, there was a public “divorce” between Singapore and Malaysia. Divorce is the image Lee uses to describe the separation in his memoirs, but it was also carried out as such, metaphorically, in the political arena of the day. During the morning hours of 9 August 1965, an announcement of the separation was read three times in the Malaysian courts, representative of the practice of a man divorcing his wife under the Muslim legal system, where, once the announcement has been made three times, it is impossible for the couple to reconcile. With this three-fold announcement in Malaysia, the separation of the two nations was made permanent, irreversible.

Lee has since earned a reputation as a hard-nosed, iron-fisted, patriarchal ruler of Singapore. And that reputation is deserved, in many ways. And yet he remains well-loved by Singaporeans. That, too, is deserved in many ways.

When Lee unexpectedly became the father of a young, struggling nation, it wasn’t the shiny, clean, thriving world-class city you see today. Many of my friends here tell me how different it was back in those days. There were potential race riots, and great divisions along racial and religious lines. Communist takeover was a very realistic threat, considering what was happening in the region at the time. There were opium dens on every corner, rats running rampant in open drains. It was not the “clean and green” image of Singapore that we know today.

But Lee cleaned the place up. He was a very strong personality in a period when the nation desperately needed leadership. He brought a huge measure of wealth and stability into the country, and into the lives of individual Singaporeans. In a period where race and religion had caused a division between two nations (that was the cause of the breakup of the Malaysian Federation into two separate nations, Singapore and Malaysia), Singapore was able to achieve racial and religious harmony, and today it is perhaps one of the best integrated places I have ever seen.

And all of this came about, to some degree, simply because it was enforced. Policy was set by Lee and his top advisors, and compliance was expected at every level. Non-compliance was met with swift and sure retribution -- often through the pocket book (yes, it is a fine city), and less frequently by more severe means. (Though it is not very common, a sort of forced exile has not been unheard of over the past 40 years of Singapore’s nationhood.)

For most of us Americans, Lee’s domineering micromanaging of the country is not something we welcome or admire. The unquestioning compliance of that generation of Singaporeans, their seeming disinterest in politics, is something we can’t quite understand.

But the fact is, what Lee did worked. This is a changed place, and in a very short time. This blog is getting a little too long to discuss the morality of evaluating a thing strictly by its pragmatic value, but the fact is, it is hard to argue with the results of what Lee has achieved, whatever we may think of the methods.

 


From Third World to First: The Singapore Story, 1965-2000
From Third World to First: The Singapore Story, 1965-2000

Keeping My Mandarin Alive: Lee Kuan Yew's Language Learning Experience
Keeping My Mandarin Alive: Lee Kuan Yew's Language Learning Experience

 

Posted by poetically challenged at 17:01:57 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 18, 2007

Students in China Speak Out for Anti-Piracy

It will be interesting to watch how the next generation in China responds to the whole piracy game.


Posted by poetically challenged at 12:38:23 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 14, 2007

I found it!

I've been trying for some time to figure out how to continue to progress in my language studies.  It seems that all the various programs I've looked at (and started, some) haven't been quite right.

This past week, I've been spending my time in Shanghai looking for an appropriate program, and I have found it.  I will be able to concentrate on lessons for 3 months at a time, and will focus on reading and writing (while improving my oral Chinese, of course).  The school I've found has a very professional approach, and I was impressed with both the staff I met and the materials they use.

I looked at several different programs this past week.  Some, while not quite for me, still looked very good.  I will try, over the next few weeks, to highlight some of those that looked interesting.
Posted by poetically challenged at 12:40:54 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 08, 2007

Ang Lee's latest movie unveiled

The upcoming film by Ang Lee is one I will be watching for with some anticipation.  It looks like it has the potential to be a very captivating movie.


Posted by poetically challenged at 12:42:21 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 04, 2007

Movie: Ran

Akira Kurosawa's Ran is a retelling of the King Lear story, modified to fit the Japanese samurai setting.  It is really a beautiful adaptation, one of my favorites.  Only the recent Chinese film, The Banquet, has really come close as an Asian adaptation of Shakespeare, in my estimation.

Like The Banquet, I think that this film shows some sense of disdain for open expressions of affection, which would be (stereo)typically Asian.  In The Banquet, I think the disdain was more subtle in that the affections were still highlighted on screen, but that the passions were then shown to be the reasons for the king's downfall.  Ran is quite similar in that the king's (Jori's) passionate love for a woman leads to his downfall at the end of it all.  Additionally, though, in Ranaffections between parents and children are treated with some disdain, emphasizing that filial duty is a more appropriate motivation for a child to show respect for his parents.  This was, I thought, especially important in setting this film apart from its source, Shakespeare's King Lear.

I thought the Lear character and his relationship with the Fool was well played.  I loved the change of the daughters to sons, and the interaction between the three.  I liked how the youngest, while disowned, still was given the third castle to keep, and how this came starkly into play.  I loved how Hidetaro failed to commit suicide, leading to his complete stripping of honour/dignity, and his loss of sanity.  The madness was very well played.

Perhaps what I liked best as a sort of innovation in the film was the Sué character, and her brother in place of Tom in the text, or a character into whom both Tom and Goucester were collapsed.  It was really beautifully treated, and the image of him on the cliffside with which the film ends was poignant.  It is a moving ending to a very moving film.

For anyone familiar at all with the genre of samurai films, Ran will feel like familiar ground.  I love how the Lear story is so well adapted. The departures from the source material are well thought out, and very effective.  Ran, for me, is a top-notch film, both as an example of its genre, and as a retelling of Shakespeare's play.

Posted by poetically challenged at 00:13:51 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

September 01, 2007

My Travel Blog

I am migrating my travel blog to a site called Peregrine Online. I know, ironic, huh? Well, it seemed like the thing to do, putting it on its own domain.

I will be writing about the same sorts of things I always have, travel around Singapore, China, and other parts of Asia, as well as other spots I've been around the globe.

I'm adding in another section to the blog, which is more on life in Singapore and Shanghai, especially with tips for foreigners staying in one place or the other (I split my time between the two, though I was brought up in the US).

Hope you'll stop by to see me there.

Posted by poetically challenged at 15:30:34 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |