Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Flowers in the Sky (1981)
- II The Return (1981)
- III Rice Bowl (1984)
- IV A Candle or the Sun (1991)
- V The Shrimp People (1991)
- VI The Crocodile Fury (1992)
- VII Green is the Colour (1993)
- VIII The Road to Chandibole (1994)
- IX Abraham's Promise (1995)
- X Perhaps in Paradise (1997)
- XI Playing Madame Mao (2000)
- XII Shadow Theatre (2002)
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
I - Flowers in the Sky (1981)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- I Flowers in the Sky (1981)
- II The Return (1981)
- III Rice Bowl (1984)
- IV A Candle or the Sun (1991)
- V The Shrimp People (1991)
- VI The Crocodile Fury (1992)
- VII Green is the Colour (1993)
- VIII The Road to Chandibole (1994)
- IX Abraham's Promise (1995)
- X Perhaps in Paradise (1997)
- XI Playing Madame Mao (2000)
- XII Shadow Theatre (2002)
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author
Summary
In Lee Kok Liang' Flowers in the Sky (1981), the voice that the reader hears is one that remembers and reflects. It is through the search for spiritual solace while trapped in isolation, unable to communicate this profound longing that the two main characters in the novel — one a Jaffna Tamil, and the other a Chinese — both immigrants settled in Penang, are linked. The theme of sexuality and the quest for spirituality slowly emerge from the thoughts and reminiscences of these two characters, as Lee uses a non-linear construction to alternate between the two consciousness, one a monk' and the other a surgeon'. The narrative starts at 3 p.m. on a Wednesday and ends the following Monday at 10 a.m., when Hung, the monk, is discharged from a private hospital after Mr K., the surgeon, operates on him for a hernia.Within the space of six days, the reader hears a multiplicity of social voices which orchestrates the parallel themes of spirituality and sexuality with the theme of communication.
Allusions to the Buddhist sutras and Tantra play a significant role in creating a background for dramatizing these parallel themes. The epigraph that opens the novel, the Lotus Sutra, touches on a central Buddhist belief that the sin of fornication is subject to karmic retribution:
The Bhiksuni ‘fragrance of the precious lotus’, after receiving the rules of Bodhisattiva discipline, fornicated and pretended it was neither killing nor stealing and was, therefore, not subject to Karmic retribution. As a result, after her genital organ had been slowly scorched by the flame of passion, she fell into unintermittent hell.
Although this English translation from Sanskrit signals one of the concerns in the narrative, by juxtaposing the above epigraph with the following sutra,
Matangi (a low caste woman) succeeded, by means of Kapila magic, in drawing him close to her sensual body on the mat.
the writer conveys the complex nature of human desire. The reader feels it is influenced by factors beyond human control. This internal “dialogue”, between the two sutras enhances the dialogic quality in the novel. The search for spiritual satisfaction is complicated by human sexuality. The intertextuality that surrounds Venerable Hung, the main interiorized character whose thoughts are represented through vernacular transcription, relates to Buddhist scriptures.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Different VoicesThe Singaporean/Malaysian Novel, pp. 35 - 55Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2009