ABSTRACT

Asian City Crossings is the first volume to examine the relationship between the city and performance from an Asian perspective.

This collection introduces "city as method" as a new conceptual framework for the investigation of practices of city-based performing arts collaboration and city-to-city performance networks across East- and Southeast Asia and beyond. The shared and yet divergent histories of the global cities of Hong Kong and Singapore as postcolonial, multiethnic, multicultural, and multilingual sites, are taken as points of departure to demonstrate how "city as method" facilitates a comparative analytical space that foregrounds in-betweenness and fluid positionalities. It situates inter-Asian relationality and inter-city referencing as centrally significant dynamics in the exploration of the material and ideological conditions of contemporary performance and performance exchange in Asia. This study captures creative dialogue that travels city-based pathways along the Hong Kong-Singapore route, as well as between Hong Kong and Singapore and other cities, through scholarly analyses and practitioner reflections drawn from the fields of theatre, performance, and music.

This book combines essays by scholars of Asian studies, theatre studies, ethnomusicology, and human geography with reflective accounts by Hong Kong and Singapore-based performing arts practitioners to highlight the diversity, vibrancy, and complexity of creative projects that destabilise notions of identity, belonging, and nationhood through strategies of collaborative conviviality and transnational mobility across multi-sited networks of cities in Asia. In doing so, this volume fills a considerable gap in global scholarly discourse on performance and the city and on the production and circulation of the performing arts in Asia.

chapter 1|30 pages

Introduction

Mapping the terrain: Hong Kong, Singapore, and the city as method

chapter 3|19 pages

From 1989 to 1997 and beyond

Zuni Icosahedron’s transnational explorations

chapter 4|23 pages

Dialectics as creative process and decentring China

Zuni Icosahedron and Drama Box’s One Hundred Years of Solitude 10.0: Cultural Revolution

chapter 5|21 pages

Thoughts on cross-cultural collaboration by Mok Chiu-yu, a Hong Konger

What we did and why there was little interaction with Singapore

chapter 6|18 pages

Augustine Mok Chiu-yu’s intercultural Asian People’s Theatre

Imagining ‘the third way’ for Hong Kong

chapter 7|20 pages

Solitude to solidarity

Imagined transnational alliance of humanity against bestial hegemony

chapter 8|13 pages

Crossing-over as strategy

chapter 9|25 pages

The city and the artist

Alice Theatre Laboratory’s Seven Boxes Possessed of Kafka in Shanghai

chapter 10|23 pages

Unequal cosmopolitanisms

Staging Singaporean nanyin in and beyond Asia

chapter 11|13 pages

Minor translocalism

Messy and marginal networks in and beyond Singapore. An interview with Tan Suet Lee

chapter 12|8 pages

Facilitating exchange

chapter 13|8 pages

Postscript

Asian city crossings as a strategy for freedom?