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  » Issue contents  2018-07-24 Anti-Communist films sponsored by the US Government in Singapore and Malaya: on the New York Sound Masters Inc.
Anti-Communist films sponsored by the US Government in Singapore and Malaya: on the New York Sound Masters Inc.

Wai-Siam HEE


ABSTRACT   This article examines anti-Communist films made by Hollywood in Cantonese and Malay in Singapore and Malaya in the Cold War context of the “Campaign of Truth” In the early 1950s, the United State Information Agency, an arm of the State Department, secretly commissioned and funded New York Sound Masters Inc. to produce and shoot several anti-Communist films in Singapore and Malaya. In 1953, cinemas across Malaya and Singapore screened Singapore Story and Kampong Sentosa, two Cold War products of the “Campaign of Truth.” In addition to analysing the ideology of these films, this article also combines declassified archive material from the US and Singaporean National Archives with primary materials from UK, US, Singaporean, and Malayan periodicals from the Cold War era in order to explore how these two films use Malay and Cantonese to narrate a Hollywood’s version of the Singaporean story. As these two films have been largely passed over in scholarship and the films and archives have not been regularly accessible, records of these films are absent from histories of film and television in the US, Singapore, and Malaya. This article aims to remedy this absence.


KEYWORDS: Cold War; Campaign of Truth; United State Information Agency; Anti-Communist films; Reeves Eason; New York Sound Masters Inc.; Singapore Story; Kampong Sentosa

Notes on contributor
Wai Siam HEE is Assistant Professor of Chinese and film at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He has written extensively on cinematic and gender issues, with articles in the Inter-Asia Cultural Studies, Journal of Chinese Cinemas and Queer Sinophone Cultures. He is the author of From Amorous Histories to Sexual Histories: Tongzhi Writings and the Construction of Masculinities in Late Qing and Modern China. He has co-edited two books, including Transnational Chinese Cinema: Corporeality, Desire and The Ethics of Failure and Memorandum: A Reader of Singapore Chinese Short Stories. He has recently completed two book manuscripts. The first of these is on accented style and the Sinophone in contemporary Malaysian Chinese-language Films; the second is entitled The Cultural Production of Early Chinese-language Cinema in Singapore and Malaya Before and During the Cold War.
 
 
    

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Notes for contributors

Vol 25.2

25.2 visual essay

Vol 1-10

Vol 11-20

Vol 21-

Vol 10-15 visual essay

Vol 16-20 visual essay

Vol 21- visual essay

IACS Society

Consortium of IACS Institutions

Related Publications

IACS Conferences

A Chronology