Defying Big Brother
Kenneth Wong
I came across a Winston Smith, a clerk who erased “unpersons”
I came across a Winston Smith, a clerk who erased “unpersons”
The international defence counsel-cum-Khmer Rouge fellow traveller
All empires inevitably fade, including France’s in Southeast Asia
Cambodia’s first Khmer-language literary journal
Since this house was built, Cambodia’s name has changed half a dozen times
The difference between lived Buddhism and Buddhism of popular imagination
Nostalgia, destruction and unplanned reconstruction
Decades after Vietnam, Wayne Matthysse discovered why he was still alive
Steven Boswell talks about his book King Norodom’s Head
Where peoples, plants and animals are found nowhere else
The Last Reel and A Tomb for Khun Srun, for all their differences, share striking parallels
A huge step forward for Beijing-based Hong Kong novelist Chan Koonchung
Hanoi at the dawn of the new millennium
A long apology for Kissinger’s crimes
Putting the family ghost to rest
What happens when the musicality of Khmer literature is transposed to a new world order?
Oh my dear, how still you lie, spread-eagled in the white snow that’s stained with the scarlet pools of your blood …
The “protection” of fatherless métis children in Indochina
A poem by Scott Bywater
Michelle Vachon explores the “bad Frenchmen” of Indochina
The story behind the Concert for the People of Kampuchea
Material deemed unfit for the news pages found a home in “The Gecko”
The railway line that cost as many as 100,000 lives
Said a tourist, “I have to refute, That the durian should count as a fruit …”