Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore

In recent years, scholars and experts have agreed that a nostalgia phenomenon and hype has swept across Singapore. Discussion of nostalgia has manifested in two main varieties. One, the “fuzzy sentimental feeling” exhibited in our longing for a lost physical landmark or landscape. Two, defined as a...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Tay, Nika Hui Min
Other Authors: Lisa Onaga
Format: Final Year Project (FYP)
Language:English
Published: 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69754
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author Tay, Nika Hui Min
author2 Lisa Onaga
author_facet Lisa Onaga
Tay, Nika Hui Min
author_sort Tay, Nika Hui Min
collection NTU
description In recent years, scholars and experts have agreed that a nostalgia phenomenon and hype has swept across Singapore. Discussion of nostalgia has manifested in two main varieties. One, the “fuzzy sentimental feeling” exhibited in our longing for a lost physical landmark or landscape. Two, defined as a “hipster heritage impulse” exhibited through an urban sprawl of hipster cafes, fashionable stores such as Naiise or BooksActually and gentrification of ‘hip’ areas within estates of Tiong Bahru and Haji Lane. Such is the intriguing trend of marketed nostalgia that has gone seemingly overlooked and unexplored within the scholarship and discussion in Singapore, the latter being one which has manifested through a capitalistic consumption and a material production. A consumed nostalgia: a commodity, a product, a physical thing that can be bought and sold. In particular, my object and subject of focus is the Good Morning Towel. Aside from the Good Morning Towel being just a towel, it has been transformed, re-produced and re-designed into an array of ‘new’ everyday merchandises. Now, the Good Morning Towel has become a tangible commodity and relic that can be bought and consumed. In this essay, I argue that the Good Morning Towel and its numerous reinventions exist within the dichotomy of the public-private functionality-symbolism dichotomy. Furthermore, I posit that the Good Morning Towel – as an everyday object – is not one that is passive or static. But rather the Good Morning Towel has established itself as a contested ‘site’ whereby narratives, meaning-making and memories are constructed and weaved into the material production of the Good Morning Towel and its commodities. Ultimately, this essay seeks to answer two key questions. One, to explore how narratives, meaning and memories are constructed and weaved into the (material) production and commodization of the Good Morning Towel and; Two, who(s) makes nostalgia; Whose nostalgia is being exhibited and memorialized.
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spelling ntu-10356/697542019-12-10T13:36:45Z Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore Tay, Nika Hui Min Lisa Onaga School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities In recent years, scholars and experts have agreed that a nostalgia phenomenon and hype has swept across Singapore. Discussion of nostalgia has manifested in two main varieties. One, the “fuzzy sentimental feeling” exhibited in our longing for a lost physical landmark or landscape. Two, defined as a “hipster heritage impulse” exhibited through an urban sprawl of hipster cafes, fashionable stores such as Naiise or BooksActually and gentrification of ‘hip’ areas within estates of Tiong Bahru and Haji Lane. Such is the intriguing trend of marketed nostalgia that has gone seemingly overlooked and unexplored within the scholarship and discussion in Singapore, the latter being one which has manifested through a capitalistic consumption and a material production. A consumed nostalgia: a commodity, a product, a physical thing that can be bought and sold. In particular, my object and subject of focus is the Good Morning Towel. Aside from the Good Morning Towel being just a towel, it has been transformed, re-produced and re-designed into an array of ‘new’ everyday merchandises. Now, the Good Morning Towel has become a tangible commodity and relic that can be bought and consumed. In this essay, I argue that the Good Morning Towel and its numerous reinventions exist within the dichotomy of the public-private functionality-symbolism dichotomy. Furthermore, I posit that the Good Morning Towel – as an everyday object – is not one that is passive or static. But rather the Good Morning Towel has established itself as a contested ‘site’ whereby narratives, meaning-making and memories are constructed and weaved into the material production of the Good Morning Towel and its commodities. Ultimately, this essay seeks to answer two key questions. One, to explore how narratives, meaning and memories are constructed and weaved into the (material) production and commodization of the Good Morning Towel and; Two, who(s) makes nostalgia; Whose nostalgia is being exhibited and memorialized. Bachelor of Arts 2017-03-25T02:39:57Z 2017-03-25T02:39:57Z 2017 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69754 en Nanyang Technological University 71 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Humanities
Tay, Nika Hui Min
Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title_full Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title_fullStr Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title_short Fabricating memories, narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed ‘Nostalgia’ in Singapore
title_sort fabricating memories narratives and identities through the good morning towel and its consumed nostalgia in singapore
topic DRNTU::Humanities
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/69754
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