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GOMES, CATHERINE (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   106360


Maid-in-Singapore: representing and consuming foreign domestic workers in Singapore cinema / Gomes, Catherine   Journal Article
Gomes, Catherine Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The Maid, a Singapore-made horror film featuring a foreign domestic worker as its protagonist, was released in 2005 to very favourable reviews in the local press. The critical audience generally used the film to praise the development of the local film industry while ignoring the social commentary of the foreign domestic worker experience in Singapore. This paper aims to address this lack of commentary on the issues and circumstances surrounding foreign domestic service in The Maid. Doing so reveals a multilayered representation of order in Singapore based firmly on ethnicity and class, where the images of foreign maids are dramatised, reconstructed and consumed in various discursive forms by various social agents.
Key Words Ethnicity  Singapore  Class  Foreign Domestic Workers  Film Reception  Film Critic 
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2
ID:   127645


Xenophobia online: unmasking Singaporean attitudes towards 'foreign talent' migrants / Gomes, Catherine   Journal Article
Gomes, Catherine Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract In recent years, Singaporeans have become highly anxious about the future of their country and their own personal livelihood due to the influx of educated and professional migrants known as 'foreign talent' and express their ire at the presence of these migrants through xenophobic posts online. This article suggests that such comments, however, are indicative of the feelings of disillusionment and abandonment Singaporeans have towards the People's Action Party - the only government Singaporeans have ever known. While Singaporeans have been critical of their government on economic issues that impact their lifestyle and existence, it is the presence of foreign talent migrants that have pushed Singaporeans into using the migrant situation to emotively express their opinions of disappointment in the government and its policies online like no other issue, functioning as the unlikely glue that has galvanised and united an ethnically disparate Singaporean population.
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