This event is conducted in partnership with the Lien Fung's Colloquium
Synopsis
The contemporary
global context is one of intense wealth, income inequality and narrowing social
mobility. Class privilege or disadvantage and their reproduction shape people’s
wellbeing in profound ways. In this lecture, Teo You Yenn will look at how scholars
have studied the effects of class inequality on everyday lives, with particular
focus on how class matters in shaping the experience of work, family, and the
connections between the two.
Speaker Biography
Teo You Yenn is Associate Professor, Provost’s
Chair, and Head of Sociology at the Nanyang Technological University. Her
research focuses on poverty and inequality, governance and state-society
dynamics, gender, and class. She is the author of Neoliberal Morality in
Singapore: How Family Policies make State and Society (Routledge, 2011) and
This is What Inequality Looks Like (Ethos Books, 2018). Her current
research focuses on cross-class comparisons of work and family, basic needs and
minimum income standards.
Moderator Biography
Emily Soon
is a Lecturer of English Literature in the College of Integrative Studies and
School of Social Sciences at Singapore Management University. Her research
focuses on cross-cultural literary engagement between Asia and Europe in the
premodern and modern eras. Her work on cultural inclusivity and student
Shakespeare performances in late-colonial Singapore has appeared in Shakespeare
Survey. Her research on early modern literature has been published in England’s
Asian Renaissance and is forthcoming in Modern Philology. In
addition to Big Questions, she teaches the modules ‘Asia and World
Literature: Beyond Orientalism’ and ‘Imagining the Self: Literature,
Ethnicity and Gender in Asia’.
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