<tt id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"><pre id="6hsgl"></pre></pre></tt>
          <nav id="6hsgl"><th id="6hsgl"></th></nav>
          国产免费网站看v片元遮挡,一亚洲一区二区中文字幕,波多野结衣一区二区免费视频,天天色综网,久久综合给合久久狠狠狠,男人的天堂av一二三区,午夜福利看片在线观看,亚洲中文字幕在线无码一区二区
          US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文

          The anguish and the anxiety

          By Richard Lim ( China Daily ) Updated: 2014-10-18 05:58:48

          The anguish and the anxiety

          [Photo by Li Min/China Daily]

          I am neither of the East nor the West, and Beijing brings home to me painfully how tiny Singapore is.

          With age, the anguish has lost its sharp edges, become less acute. Now there is only a dull ache.

          In the 1990s, when I came to China regularly, on temple grounds and in parks like Du Fu's Thatched Cottage in Chengdu, confronted with the calligraphic inscriptions on steles that I could not make out, I was made to feel less Chinese.

          I could not - and still cannot - read and write Chinese, and in China, more than back home in Singapore, I felt more keenly the loss and a sense of inadequacy.

          My forebears had sailed to the Nanyang - South Seas - from a county near Xiamen in China's Fujian province, and settled in colonial Singapore. Although my childhood foundation is Chinese, growing up as I did in an extended household that spoke the Fujian or Minnan dialect, I was schooled in English and have used English as a tool of my trade since I became an adult. I think in English, even though it is not my native language.

          The anguish and the anxiety

          In my youth in the 1960s and 1970s, the English-educated in Singapore generally sniffed at things Chinese, although we enjoyed the kung fu flicks that came out of Hong Kong at the time. The Taiwanese weepies and pop songs and the Chinese television drama serials on local television, some of us indulged as guilty pleasures.

          I was very much influenced by the '60s counterculture in the West, and reading the literature popular at that time and listening to its angry rock anthems, I imagined myself one among the counter-cultural youths, a child of the West. I wore my hair long ("let my freak flag fly") and jeans a couple of sizes too large (there weren't jeans of Asian sizes yet).

          It wasn't until I could afford to travel to San Francisco in the early 1980s that I found out that I did not actually belong in the West, as an ABC (American-born Chinese) perhaps would. I ventured into the clubs on North Beach that played high-decibel heavy-metal rock and, in my arrested adolescent naivete, expected to be welcomed by the crowds - they were my kind, weren't they? But I found myself unacknowledged and alone at the bar, nursing my Barcadi coke. I was like an extra who had wandered onto the wrong movie set.

          I believe that when I began coming to China in the 1990s, I was unconsciously trying to reclaim my Chinese heritage. But without the language, the heritage was not mine to claim. I had read in English the works of the Tang poets like Du Fu, Li Bai and Wang Wei, but because I could recognize some Chinese characters, I realized how much was lost in translation.

          So I was neither of the East nor the West - that was my anguish.

          I could, of course, learn Mandarin, master it, and gain direct access to my heritage. But English is a harsh mistress. My hold on the language was tenuous, and I feared being abandoned should I learn Mandarin, something I could not afford since it was the medium of my work - and all my thoughts.

          The late Chinese premier Zhou Enlai reportedly once remarked that Lee Kuan Yew, the founding father of independent Singapore, was a banana - yellow on the outside but white inside. Lee is a Straits-born Chinese whose family spoke Malay and English, and he went up to Cambridge after the Japanese Occupation. But he knew early the dangers of deracination. He sent his three children to Chinese-medium schools before switching them to English-language ones at the post-secondary level.

          Lee himself started learning Mandarin when he became a politician - the majority of Singapore voters are Chinese and at the time many were uneducated or had gone to Chinese schools - and he has not stopped learning it since. On his 91st birthday last month, he refused to skip his Mandarin class. But he will be the first to admit that he has not mastered the language, in the way that his children have, because they had learned it when they were young. In recent years, Lee has been photographed in public events wearing the changsan, the traditional Chinese formal wear, perhaps as a nod to his Chinese roots, even though he has always believed in a multiracial Singapore.

          He laid down too a strict policy for bilingualism, and today's young have benefited from it. The better-educated ones are effectively bilingual, and some are even bicultural. They suffer no crisis in identity, seeing themselves as Singaporeans and are comfortable in both East and West.

          I envy them, but time has eased my earlier anguish. I am glad for my current job in Beijing, because it offers me the opportunity to at least learn to speak Mandarin more. In the office, I speak a mix of English and Mandarin with my colleagues. In my apartment in the evenings, I tune in to the dramas on television to soak up the language. And in order that I do not lose the touch of my mistress' hand, I keep up my regimen of reading.

          Having been in Beijing for almost two months, I remain awed by its immensity. The sheer scale of it has brought home to me clearly and painfully again how tiny Singapore is. We are but a fleck in the awakened dragon's eye. So even though I am grateful that my leaders have transformed a former swampy colonial outpost into a thriving city-state, allowing me to live a relatively comfortable life, I am as anxious as the younger ones are about its future. From anguish to anxiety - the angst does not go away.

           

          Editor's Picks
          Hot words

          Most Popular
          ...
          主站蜘蛛池模板: 久久久久免费精品国产| 秋霞鲁丝片成人无码| 亚洲av片在线免费观看| 成人字幕网视频在线观看| 有码中文字幕一区三区| 国产美女被遭强高潮免费一视频| 亚洲国产精品无码中文| 黄色一级片免费观看| 最近中文国语字幕在线播放| 久久九九久精品国产| 中国少妇人妻xxxxx| 久久国产乱子伦免费精品无码| 国产欧美日韩视频怡春院| 久久久精品人妻一区二区三区 | 91精品啪在线观看国产91九色| 丰满少妇高潮无套内谢| 亚洲第一狼人成人综合网| 国产午夜精品无码一区二区| 中文字幕日韩精品东京热| 人人妻人人做人人爽| 国产精品涩涩涩视频网站| 亚洲精品日本久久久中文字幕| 国产精品小粉嫩在线观看| 国产亚洲综合欧美视频| 日本三级理论久久人妻电影| 国产精品 无码专区| 国产精品任我爽爆在线播放6080| 日韩大片高清播放器| 亚洲国产中文字幕在线视频综合 | 亚洲av无码一区二区三区网站| 大香伊蕉在人线国产免费| 欧美极品色午夜在线视频| 欧美日韩一区二区三区视频播放 | 日韩精品永久免费播放平台| 国产一区二区精品尤物| 欧美日韩精品免费一区二区三区 | 国产AV午夜精品一区二区三区| 51妺嘿嘿午夜福利| 亚洲综合专区| 国产精品亚洲二区在线播放| 国产人妻熟女呻吟在线观看|