Drawn to Satire: Sketches of Cartoonists in Singapore. CT Lim and Koh Hong Teng. Pause Narratives, 2023. 144 pages, $26.89.
If one uses a
metaphor of satire as the art of stabbing an issue to draw humor instead of
blood, so too does the biographical Drawn to Satire -- in ways
that are as inventive as they are at times infuriating. Therein
lies the double-edged sword of this lovingly produced book -- you
wish it could have done so much more, but paradoxically, so much less.
Written by CT
Lim and illustrated by Koh Hong Teng, Drawn to Satire sketches,
both literally and figuratively, the lives of
eight pioneering cartoonists, from well-known names like Morgan
Chua, to the relatively obscure Dai Yin Lang. While the chosen cartoonists
tend to be ethnically Chinese males, the book also includes one
Malay, Shamsuddin H. Akib, and one woman, Kwan Shan Mei – which begs the
question if they were added as token gestures. I will return to this question later.
Each chapter
begins with a quick overview of the cartoonist’s backstory and before you know
it, drives directly into his themes, motivations and, occasionally, hang-ups. Here, Lim, the go-to authority on comics in
Singapore, has obviously use
In keeping
with its subtitle that the book is nothing more than “sketches,” each
chapter (14-15 pages) reads rather, well, sketchily. It is akin to the experience
of speed-dating, but on the printed page; just as the reader gets into the
story – whoosh! – it is gone.
A case in
point: the opening chapter on Tchang Ju Chi, a political
cartoonist who was abducted by the Japanese military and presumably executed
during the Sook Ching massacre of 1942. He was only 38 years old at that
time. While the narrative tries to know the man, instead he comes across
as a type -- the Chinese émigré with apron strings still knotted
tight to the motherland, rather than a person in his own right. The in-your-face
thought bubbles do not help by merely telling, rather than showing why, that
despite having found his calling in Nanyang, Tchang still harkened back
to China and viewed Sino-Japanese tensions with growing unease.
Indeed,
if Drawn to Satire has a failing, it is how
it sacrifices depth for breadth. Instead
of featuring eight cartoonists
So, while
covering eight cartoonists might fulfill Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
required by funding bodies – the authors acknowledge support
from four institutions, such as the National Heritage Board, the Singapore
Chinese Cultural Centre, and Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts – the
book does itself a disservice when more could have been done with
less.
Still, Drawn
to Satire is a breezy read, helped, no doubt, by Koh’s unfussy art style, and
at the same time, pays homage to the cartoonists by reproducing their
works (and even two iconic Singapore paintings, Liu Kang’s “Artist and
Model” and Chua Mia Tee’s “Epic Poem of Malaya”).
What ultimately
sells the book for me is Lim’s unconventional storytelling, which takes a leaf
from the growing creative graphic biography field. Instead of writing
a Wikipedia-like chronology, Lim dips into each cartoonist’s
life and extracts specific incidents that define and shape him. More
interestingly, he introduces an interloper (or provocateur), a fictional
foil who flits in and out of the panels with time-travel ease and
with whom the cartoonists interact. This unnamed character (who sometimes
breaks the fourth wall) creates a Brechtian effect, a narrative device used
either for Lim to set the context of what you are reading,
or to slather asides and editorial comments.
In fact,
Lim even cheekily inserts himself into the narrative; after
all, he is as much part of the comics ecosystem in
Singapore as the cartoonists he writes about, but he does it in a way that
neither grates nor gloats. If anything, his self-referential
character borders on self-deprecating, particularly in a funny sequence
when he is depicted as a clueless emcee at the launch
of Koeh Sia Yong’s art exhibition in 2023. Indeed, as befitting
a book about satirical cartoons, humor is its chief calling
card; sequences such as Morgan Chua fleeing to Hong
Kong (to avoid the Singapore government’s crackdown on The
Singapore Herald, a newspaper it had deemed subversive) have a Looney
Tunes zaniness.
While it is not perfect, Drawn to Satire is what the comics scene in Singapore needs – it plugs a gap of scholarship and, in equal measure, is entertaining and enlightening.
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