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Author Cheah, Hwei-Fe'n.

Title Phoenix rising : narratives in Nyonya beadwork from the Straits Settlements / Hwei-Fe'n Cheah
Published Singapore : NUS Press, 2010

Copies

Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  745.58208995 Che/Prn  AVAILABLE
Description pages cm
Contents Machine generated contents note: ch. 1 Approaching Nyonya Beadwork -- pt. I Nyonya Beadwork as Object and Activity -- ch. 2 The Changing Shape of Peranakan Society -- ch. 3 Domesticated Daughters, Dutiful Wives: The Social Role of Nyonya Beadwork -- pt. II Beadwork and the Negotiation of Peranakan Identity -- ch. 4 Towards a Chronology of Nyonya Beadwork -- ch. 5 Embroidering Culture: Early Nyonya Beadwork from 1870 to 1900 -- ch. 6 Crafting Identities: Tensions and Tradition in Nyonya Beadwork from 1900 to the 1970s -- pt. III Nyonya Beadwork in Contemporary Society -- ch. 7 Tradition and the Peranakan Present
Summary As an activity, beadwork was once an important part of a Peranakan Chinese girl's set of skills. As an object, carefully crafted Nyonya beadwork was used at weddings and other celebratory occasions, touching the lives of Peranakan men and women, young and old. In this way, Nyonya beadwork became entwined within the wider relationships of gender, generation, and social hierarchy in Peranakan society. The Peranakans also incorporated into their beadwork styles and motifs that reflected their changing ideals, aspirations, and lifestyles. Inscribed into the history of Nyonya beadwork is a narrative of the Peranakan Chinese community's cultural transformations. --Book Jacket
Generously illustrated and drawing from a variety of sources, Phoenix Rising provides a richly textured history of Nyonya beadwork, an integral part of the shared artistic traditions of Malaysia and Singapore. It is a valuable contribution to our understanding of the multi-cultural heritage of these two countries, a heritage of which I am proud. Tengku Tan Sri Dato' Seri Ahmad Rithauddeen Tengku Sri Mara Raja, Kelantan President, United Nations Association Malaysia Former Foreign Minister of Malaysia --
Intricate, meticulously crafted, and visually distinctive, Nyonya beadwork occupies a significant role in the cultural imaginary of the Peranakan Chinese, the acculturated descendants of Chinese migrants to the Malay Peninsula and the Indonesian archipelago. --
Phoenix Rising: Narratives in Nyonya Beadwork from the Straits Settlements is an exciting and original contribution to our understanding and appreciation of the diversity of Southeast Asian art. Decorative textiles are arguably the region's greatest existing art tradition, yet relatively little has been published on the brilliant beadwork of the Peranakan Chinese communities of Singapore and Malaysia. In this fascinating study based on recent research, art historian Hwei-Fe'n Cheah provides a lively and accessible account of the subtle nuances in the evolution of designs, materials and textile forms against a history of social change in the lives of their makers, the Nyonya women of the Straits Settlements. A visual feast, Phoenix Rising is richly illustrated with superb and rare examples of Nyonya beadwork from great international and local Southeast Asian public and private collections. Robyn Maxwell Senior Curator of Asian Art, National Gallery of Australia, Canberra --
Using Nyonya beadwork as both a lens and an object of study, Hwei-Fe'n Cheah explores historical, social and cultural transformations in the Peranakan Chinese community. Phoenix Rising provides social scientists with tangible tools for examining concepts of modernity and tradition. For gender theorists, Phoenix Rising exemplifies the way time was used for beadwork and embroidery, thus crafting notions of Nyonya culture and identity. The reader is simultaneously taken on two journeys, the one pictorial, the other analytic, to learn about the changing ways in which meaning intersects with items of material culture---historically and currently. The combination is a visually and intellectually exciting example of multi-disciplinary research that is also aesthetically stunning. Barbara Leigh Adjunct Professor, University of Technology Sydney --
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Bead embroidery -- Straits Settlements.
Beadwork -- Straits Settlements.
Beadwork, Peranakan -- Malaysia -- Malacca (State) -- History.
Beadwork, Peranakan -- Singapore -- History.
Beadwork, Peranakan -- Straits Settlements -- History.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Material culture -- Malaysia -- Malacca (State) -- History.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Material culture -- Singapore -- History.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Material culture -- Straits Settlements -- History.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Malaysia -- Malacca (State) -- Social life and customs.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Singapore -- Social life and customs.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Straits Settlements -- Social life and customs.
Peranakan (Asian people) -- Straits Settlements.
LC no. 2010353170
ISBN 9789971694685 (paperback)
9789971695163
9971694689 (paperback)
9971695162