Pavan Mano
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Three faces of the straight nation
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Chapter 2 identifies three major sites of heteronormativity in Singapore – housing, family, and the military. It explores their interaction and commingling in the postcolonial nation-building project and how they produce a subject position in relation to each other. Singapore’s independence was marked by currents of strife, vulnerability, and crisis. The military and compulsory conscription play a key psychic role in assuaging the affects of vulnerability and relies on citizens’ willingness to potentially lay their lives on the line defending Singapore. Rather than relying on the abstract concept of the nation, however, persuasion here rests on a more material logic that uses home ownership as an affect that turns one’s home into a scalar substitute for the nation such that citizens have something material to protect; defend; and, if necessary, kill for. Access to public housing, however, is premised on heterosexual marriage and family formation where women are charged with the expectations of reproducing the nation, whereas men are designated the duty of protecting the nation via compulsory conscription. In this way, the triad of defence, domesticity, and the heterosexual nuclear family rests on a set of heteronormative and gendered logics that animate the nation. Queerness poses a problem because it becomes mutually exclusive to these logics.

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Straight nation

Heteronormativity and other exigencies of postcolonial nationalism

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