RASHKB Journal 皇家亞洲學會香港分會學刊 | RAS-1999 https://digitalrepository.lib.hku.hk/catalog/s178b887x 170 place, with a hearty lack of nostalgic longings for ancestral roots - yet the sentimental or strategic nostalgia of overseas Chinese for their ancestral homes in China has also been well documented and described.1 Nostalgia is of course now commodified, fragmented and eclectic, as befits a late capitalist era in which global capital determines shifting allocations of labour. Nostalgia, and pastiche of the past, is almost commonplace, and through what was called the 'post-modern' eclectically mixes emblems of diverse eras of the past to provoke a momentary pang. The irony of Flagstaff House's transformation from a military site to a tea museum, noted by Abbas (1997), is a good example of this post-modern bricolage of meanings and historical ironies typified by Charles Moore's Piazza d'Italia in New Orleans (Harvey 1989), which we can find too in the toothless attendants and bright paints of restored Colonial Williamsburg (Lowenthal 1985), or the imaginary nostalgia of Disneyland disguising the unreality of America itself (Baudrillard 1994). But here I should like to draw attention to the importance of nostalgia as, if you like, a strategic resource for knitting together communities which have become dispersed and fragmented. While nostalgia adopts a temporal form (nostalgia for the past), it essentially implies the sense of belonging to a place (nostalgia for a place), as in its etymological roots. Can there be nostalgia for a taste, a face, an experience of abandon, a vanished emotion or capacity? Of course there can, but these experiences are all associated with a particular locus, a particular time and place (in the past). That place may never have existed, as writers from Lowenthal and Lovell to Mitchell remark, or not have existed for those who pine for it; the remembered, longed-for experience may be purely fictive and imaginative. Then again, it may have been very much a reality the loss of which is regretted; it was a real, living community we mourn the passage of. In any case, through the power of memory and recollection, that experience, that community, that place, can hardly be recollected exactly as it was, so that there is an inevitably imaginative, fictive quality to the faculty or power of nostalgia. In one sense, it may not matter very much whether the lost object was, or was not, a reality, since that reality will have been transformed through the nostalgic recollection of it. Yet, in another sense, it does matter that not all nostalgia is necessarily imaginary; that real separations, real partings, may be what are being mourned. ================================================================================ RASHKB Journal 皇家亞洲學會香港分會學刊 | RAS-2001 https://digitalrepository.lib.hku.hk/catalog/zg651950g 224 Is that they're not the sort To ever be thought of as frantic. 13 Diana and Charles This group of ours includes all manner Of people. There's one who's a spanner. There's no end of ditches He's spanned with his bridges. His wife's quite nice too - that's Diana. 15 Giovanna C'è anche una bella signora Da Padova in Italia, allora. She 'as a bag-a, più grande. She say: 'Is a-very ‘andy, Whenever I go on a tour-a.' 17 Jenny Shopping, and more shopping yet. She'll be at it tomorrow, I'll bet. With her hats and her scarves She don't do things by halves. But remember, it's a very small jet. 19 Christopher A classical scholar, a star, He's been high and low, near and far. He's come quite a journey, This pukka attorney. He'd go anywhere if called to the bar. 21 Brian On account of her glasses, But what does she say? 'No thank 'ee.' 14 Alan There is one other engineer, From whom every day you will hear: 'It's better by far With the KCR.' But not in Bhutan, I fear. 16 Helen and Ian Australia has regulations. It's one of those fussier nations. But he wants to take back The tail end of a yak. Says she: "This will strain our relations." 18 Rupert There is one geographical gent Who has quite a musical bent. He gets his horn off the shelf And plays with himself. NO - BY himself, that's what I meant. 20 Felicity The style of this lady is simplicity. So calm, yet so much tenacity. She has to be so. It's her husband, y'know You all know her name - it's Felicity! 22 Robert I've been up I didn't have time to do me. half the night, y'see. There is one chap who's made our lives hell, For he's constantly ringing his bell. But his job's been quite tough With a group that's so rough. Napoleon - we all think you're swell! But I suppose if I must I could... maybe... just. Leave it with me a while and we'll see. ================================================================================