The Asian Bookshelf

The Asian Bookshelf

Home to words and voices from Asia today The Asian Bookshelf is a podcast delving into the world of Southeast Asian literature. It focusses on narratives, characters, and themes. It is co-hosted by acclaimed Asian-based writers T.A.Morton and Jon Gresham, and educator and presenter Devika Misra. It explores Southeast Asian fiction and nonfiction books: what works for readers and why; movie and streaming potential, emerging trends, and spotlights key industry figures. This show is for the discerning reader keen to take a deeper dive into the region’s exciting stories and emerging voices.

Episodes

  1. The Asian Bookshelf talks to Dr Rosslyn Prosser and Dr Mandakini Arora on teaching Creative Writing in Singapore

    09/15/2024

    The Asian Bookshelf talks to Dr Rosslyn Prosser and Dr Mandakini Arora on teaching Creative Writing in Singapore

    Writer, Jon Gresham, talks to Dr Rosslyn Prosser and Dr Mandakini Arora about teaching and studying creative writing at LaSalle College of Arts, the differences between teaching CW in Singapore and Australia, successful international South East Asian writers, submitting overseas, the process of decolonizing the anglo-centricity and colonial overhang of creative writing education, and the challenge of finding and exploring creativity. Dr Rosslyn Prosser is the Programme Leader of La Salle’s MA in Creative Writing, Dr Prosser is an academic & writer who has published a range of forms and genres from academic publication to life-writing, prose and creative non-fiction. She has taught creative writing, literary studies, media and communications and gender studies in Australian universities for over 20 years and at LaSalle for the last 2 years. Dr Mandakini Arora is a writer and has edited Small Steps, Giant Leaps: A History of AWARE and the Women’s Movement in Singapore (AWARE, 2007) & Jean Marshall’s Pahang Letters, 1953–54: Sidelights on Malaya During the Emergency (Ethos, 2017). She holds a PhD in history from Duke University & graduated from La Salle with an MA in Creative writing this year Books mentioned Mathew Salesses, Craft in the Real World: Rethinking Fiction Writing & Workshopping (Catapult, 2021) Felicia Rose Chavez, The Anti-Racist Writing Workshop: How to Decolonize the Creative Classroom(Haymarket Books, 2021) Barbara W Tuchman, The Guns of August (Penguin Random House, 1994, originally published in 1962) Olga Tokarczuk, Flights (Fitzcarraldo Editions, 2017) Benjamin Labatut, The Maniac (Pushkin Press, 2023) Akhil Sharma, Teaching Creative Writing in Singapore (Akhil Sharma, 2023) Kamau Brathwaite, Calypso Joshua Ip, Sonnets from the Singlish (Math Paper Press, 2012) Other Links LaSalle College of Arts, Master of Arts in Creative Writing American Women’s Association Writing Group Darryl Whetter

    29 min
  2. The Asian Bookshelf speaks with Sunaina Suri, Editor of Our Own Voices, A Collection of Singaporean Mental Health Journeys (Marshall  Cavendish 2024)

    08/04/2024

    The Asian Bookshelf speaks with Sunaina Suri, Editor of Our Own Voices, A Collection of Singaporean Mental Health Journeys (Marshall  Cavendish 2024)

    Presenter Devika Misra, and writer, Jon Gresham, talk to Sunaina Suri, Editor of Our Own Voices, A Collection of Singaporean Mental Health Journeys (Marshall Cavendish 2024) about the treatment of mental health in Singapore, the stigma around mental health, the need for community support, the importance of talking about mental health issues, how to write about mental health and the importance of each of us not being and not feeling alone. Trigger Warning: In this podcast we discuss events and experiences that may trigger trauma, distress or anxiety. We discuss mental health issues, suicide, verbal and physical abuse, social anxiety, depression, stress, and other sensitive issues. We note that we are not mental health professionals and that some parts of this book are confronting and harrowing, please do contact the suggested numbers and links below if you would like to talk to someone. Important Links Samaritans of Singapore - Provides a safe space when life gets to you Samaritans phone 1767 & Whatsapp 9151 1767 Resilience Collective - holds peer support groups amongst other services Caregivers Alliance - support for caregivers AWARE – Association of Women for Action & Research Women’s Helpline: 1800 777 5555 HOME - humanitarian organisation for migration economics, which champions the rights of migrant workers Migrant Worker Hotline +65 6341 5535 (WhatsApp & Landline) Domestic Worker Hotline 1800 7977 977 (WhatsApp & Landline) Oogachaga - a community-based, non-profit, professional organisation working with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, questioning and queer (LGBTQ+) individuals, couples and families MindSG Healthhub - ‘resources and services’, for emergency hotlines & to book and appointment with IMH (Institute of Mental Health) or a polyclinic Books mentioned Loss Adjustment, Linda Collins (Ethos Books 2019) The Story of SCH: A Mental Breakdown, A Life Journey, Danielle Lim (Ethos Books 2014) A Good Day to Die, Mahita Vas (Marshall Cavendish 2021) White: Behind Mental Health Stigma, Xiangyuan Lim (Klin Studio 2020) Other Links Michaela Coel

  3. The Asian Bookshelf discusses Jon Gresham’s debut novel Gus: The Life & Opinions of the Last Raffles’ Banded Langur (Epigram Books 2024).

    06/30/2024

    The Asian Bookshelf discusses Jon Gresham’s debut novel Gus: The Life & Opinions of the Last Raffles’ Banded Langur (Epigram Books 2024).

    Presenter Devika Misra, and writer, T.A. Morton, talk to Jon about his debut dystopian novel, Gus: The Life & Opinions of the Last Raffles’ Banded Langur, nature’s response to the world we have created, the role of the novel, social media, talking animals, the local and the universal, laughter, Grand Theft Auto set in Singapore with raging monkeys, and wildness in literature. Books mentioned Gus: The Life & Opinions of the Last Raffles’ Banded Langur, Jon Gresham (Epigram Books 2024) The Odyssey, Homer, Trans. Emily Wilson (Norton 2017) Ulysses by the Merlion, Edwin Thumboo (Heinemann 1979) Joseph Campbell’ Hero’s Journey, which Gus’s journey & the novel do not follow For critiques of the Campbell Monomyth see here, The Heroine's Journey: Woman's Quest for Wholeness, Maureen Murdock (Shambhala 1990), 45 Master Characters, Victoria Lynn Schmidt (Writer’s Digest Books 2001), here and here. There is a need for less individualistic, Eurocentric, heteronormative “hero’s journeys” in literature. Other links More about Gus on Jon’s website On animals talking: The Animals in That Country, Laura Jean McKay (Scribe 2020) Fox 8, George Saunders (Random House 2013) 26 Monkeys, Also the Abyss, Kij Johnson (Clarkesworld Issue 150 – March 2019) The Evolution of Trickster Stories Among the Dogs of North Park After the Change, Kij Johnson (Coyote Road: Trickster Tales 2007) Elmer, Gerry Alanguilan (Epigram Books 2011) Elizabeth Costello, JM Coetzee (Vintage 2004)

    22 min
  4. The Asian Bookshelf discusses "Others" Is Not a Race: Being Eurasian in Singapore and Malaysia

    05/05/2024

    The Asian Bookshelf discusses "Others" Is Not a Race: Being Eurasian in Singapore and Malaysia

    The Asian Bookshelf discusses Melissa De Silva’s Singapore Literature Prize Winning book ‘Others’ Is Not a Race: Being Eurasian in Singapore and Malaysia (Monsoon Books 2023). Presenter Devika Misra, and writers, T.A. Morton and Jon Gresham, explore what they love about the book, the Creative Non Fiction form, identity and privilege, and how community status and roles change over time. Books mentioned Melissa de Silva, ‘Others’ Is Not a Race: Being Eurasian in Singapore and Malaysia (Monsoon Books 2023) W Somerset Maugham, The Letter in the short story collection The Casuarina Tree (Heinemann 1926). See also Tan Twan Eng, The House of Doors (Bloomsbury 2023) For some other books by Eurasians in Singapore: Rex Shelley, The Shrimp People (1991) Kevin Martens Wong, Altered Straits (Epigram Books 2017) The Eurasian Association Bookshop Other links My Debal Diaries - Tracing The History of Singapore’s Eurasians, Channel News Asia Kodrah Kristang - The Initiative for the Revitalization of the Kristang Language in Singapore National Archives of Singapore Joseph Schooling The Eurasian Community in Singapore Infopedia Intersectionality explained on Wikipedia “Instead of asking what are people‘s roots, we ought to think about what are their routes, the different points by which they have come to be now; they are, in a sense, the sum of those differences. That, I think, is a different way of speaking than talking about multiple personalities or multiple identities as if they don‘t have any relation to one another or that they are purely intentional. These routes hold us in places, but what they don‘t do is hold us in the same place.” Cultural theorist Stuart Hall in The Journal of The International Institute, Vol 7, Issue 1, Fall 1999

    22 min

About

Home to words and voices from Asia today The Asian Bookshelf is a podcast delving into the world of Southeast Asian literature. It focusses on narratives, characters, and themes. It is co-hosted by acclaimed Asian-based writers T.A.Morton and Jon Gresham, and educator and presenter Devika Misra. It explores Southeast Asian fiction and nonfiction books: what works for readers and why; movie and streaming potential, emerging trends, and spotlights key industry figures. This show is for the discerning reader keen to take a deeper dive into the region’s exciting stories and emerging voices.