Reflect on your experiences on a personal level, based on your own understanding of Japan in early times, during the war and currently. Think about how your own positionality, age, gender, social status etc. could have affected your observations and understanding.
How have the two field visits (Japanese Cemetery Park and war exhibit) helped you learn or discover something that you had not thought of before?
How has the war exhibit help you see war experiences differently, if any?
In general, how have the two field visits made you reflect on the pre-1945 presence of the Japanese in Singapore, its implications for the future, and the memory of it today?
Blackburn and Lim
OLd Karayuki's wooden markers were made into tombstones, by the Kyosaikai (Muttual Self-Help Society). There are markers for them, 'Erected by the Kyosaikai'.
Some of the newer tombstones only have gender, age, address, and far from 'the western end' (Bhuddist Pure Land of the West), and karayuki-san are usually only identified by young age and address being the red light district (15 Malay Street (near Middle Road)).
Part I: Prologue
Insert some fancy panning around keyboards
https://www.behance.net/gallery/104192017/Ghost-Keyboards , 0:12-0:30
Part II: Bullshit Inspirational Spiel
Would be good if the presenter could wear a black turtleneck (like Steve Jobs), and be a psychopathic prick (like Steve Jobs)
Let's face it. We all know you don't have money, and I definitely don't have the money for a mechanical keyboard. For years, people like us have only dreamt of that crunchy clicky sound that escapes our grasp. Until now.
ltzehan changed 4 years agoEdit mode Like Bookmark