The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue

This paper addresses the entanglement of language, history, and mutilated bodies in Vyvyane Loh’s Breaking the Tongue. Set in Singapore during the 1940s, Breaking the Tongue presents a fragmented, disorderly third-person narrative of Claude Lim, an Anglicised Singaporean-Chinese who experiences life...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lui, Karen Jia Yi
Other Authors: Kevin Andrew Riordan
Format: Thesis-Master by Research
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145286
_version_ 1826129262365638656
author Lui, Karen Jia Yi
author2 Kevin Andrew Riordan
author_facet Kevin Andrew Riordan
Lui, Karen Jia Yi
author_sort Lui, Karen Jia Yi
collection NTU
description This paper addresses the entanglement of language, history, and mutilated bodies in Vyvyane Loh’s Breaking the Tongue. Set in Singapore during the 1940s, Breaking the Tongue presents a fragmented, disorderly third-person narrative of Claude Lim, an Anglicised Singaporean-Chinese who experiences life under the British and Japanese Empires. His interactions with family members such as his father, Humphrey, and Grandma Siok, and encounters with new friends like Han Ling-li and Jack Winchester influence and shape his perspective on his precarious identity as a Singaporean-Chinese. The third-person narrative is interrupted by the seemingly arbitrary presence of Chinese characters and a dream-like second-person narrative of Claude the Body’s torture by the Japanese. This dissertation explores the role of language and mutilated bodies in isolated passages or scenes in redefining notions of identity and history. Touted as “a revelatory book of both novel and history”, Breaking the Tongue’s revelatory quality is subjective as Loh engages in withholding through cryptic dreams and the Chinese language. This project examines the ability of languages to provide specific frameworks that allows a community to make meaning of the world and establish their position in it. However, languages are not all-encompassing. While another language may be able to convey specific nuances that are absent in other languages, it remains fluid due to the subjectivity of interpretation that resists fixed definitions.
first_indexed 2024-10-01T07:37:46Z
format Thesis-Master by Research
id ntu-10356/145286
institution Nanyang Technological University
language English
last_indexed 2024-10-01T07:37:46Z
publishDate 2020
publisher Nanyang Technological University
record_format dspace
spelling ntu-10356/1452862023-03-11T20:16:54Z The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue Lui, Karen Jia Yi Kevin Andrew Riordan School of Humanities KRiordan@ntu.edu.sg Humanities::Literature::Singapore Humanities::Language::English This paper addresses the entanglement of language, history, and mutilated bodies in Vyvyane Loh’s Breaking the Tongue. Set in Singapore during the 1940s, Breaking the Tongue presents a fragmented, disorderly third-person narrative of Claude Lim, an Anglicised Singaporean-Chinese who experiences life under the British and Japanese Empires. His interactions with family members such as his father, Humphrey, and Grandma Siok, and encounters with new friends like Han Ling-li and Jack Winchester influence and shape his perspective on his precarious identity as a Singaporean-Chinese. The third-person narrative is interrupted by the seemingly arbitrary presence of Chinese characters and a dream-like second-person narrative of Claude the Body’s torture by the Japanese. This dissertation explores the role of language and mutilated bodies in isolated passages or scenes in redefining notions of identity and history. Touted as “a revelatory book of both novel and history”, Breaking the Tongue’s revelatory quality is subjective as Loh engages in withholding through cryptic dreams and the Chinese language. This project examines the ability of languages to provide specific frameworks that allows a community to make meaning of the world and establish their position in it. However, languages are not all-encompassing. While another language may be able to convey specific nuances that are absent in other languages, it remains fluid due to the subjectivity of interpretation that resists fixed definitions. Master of Arts 2020-12-16T08:25:31Z 2020-12-16T08:25:31Z 2020 Thesis-Master by Research Lui, K. J. Y. (2020). The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue. Master's thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145286 10.32657/10356/145286 en This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC 4.0). application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
spellingShingle Humanities::Literature::Singapore
Humanities::Language::English
Lui, Karen Jia Yi
The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title_full The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title_fullStr The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title_full_unstemmed The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title_short The broken bodies of language and history in Vyvyane Loh’s breaking the tongue
title_sort broken bodies of language and history in vyvyane loh s breaking the tongue
topic Humanities::Literature::Singapore
Humanities::Language::English
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145286
work_keys_str_mv AT luikarenjiayi thebrokenbodiesoflanguageandhistoryinvyvyanelohsbreakingthetongue
AT luikarenjiayi brokenbodiesoflanguageandhistoryinvyvyanelohsbreakingthetongue