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  • Published: 3 April 2024
  • ISBN: 9789815127126
  • Imprint: PRH SEA
  • Format: Paperback
  • RRP: $29.99

Little Drops

Cherished Children of Singapore’s Past




Stories of hope, love and compassion from a bygone era of Singapore's history

Little Drops: Cherished Children of Singapore’s Past is a compilation of biographies based on historical fact about the pain of separation and the lure of love, and how these themes constantly collide. These never-before-told stories chronicle how fourteen adoptees from the 1930s to the early 1970s in Singapore found a forever home when their own biological parents could not raise them. These stories recount the plight of families of that era; the strength of friendships and informal social networks; Singapore’s migrant heritage; how lives were thrown into turmoil during the Japanese Occupation; and the struggles individuals had borne during that period leading up to Singapore’s independence. Unfolding in these stories are the recurrent subthemes of poverty, superstition, how girl children were valued amongst the Chinese, how a family illness or death was culturally construed, and the magnanimous spirit of families taking in these abandoned children. What is most striking about many of these children is that they were sometimes not legally given away, seeming odd since children could be passed around so easily. And yet these children would almost always end up in safe, loving and caring homes of another culture. Grappling with who they are in terms of their ethnic identity is very much a common experience amongst all these adoptees. But rather than struggling between two cultural worlds, these adoptees almost always have a firm sense of longing and belonging to their families of adoption instead of their families of origin.

  • Published: 3 April 2024
  • ISBN: 9789815127126
  • Imprint: PRH SEA
  • Format: Paperback
  • RRP: $29.99

About the author

Theresa Devasahayam

Dr Theresa Devasahayam is a family and gender anthropologist. Her interest in the sociology of the family has included child adoption in Singapore; in particular, the incorporation of children from a cultural group different from that of the adoptive family. In her career pathway, she developed an interest in how the Internet has come to dominate everyday lives—a door she stepped through around three years ago for a research project on sex trafficking of women and children in the Greater Mekong Subregion. The research examined the role of the Internet in sex trafficking to the extent that it speeds up human connection and at the same time allows traffickers to conceal their identity so as to enable perpetrators to engage in criminal activities. Holding a PhD in anthropology from Syracuse University, Theresa has nine edited books and one co-authored book to her credit, mostly academic and concerned with women’s issues—all having one connecting thread in that they ask fundamental questions around inequality, oppression and exploitation between the sexes.

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