The Dao of Unrepresentative British Chinese Experience: (Butterfly Dream)
By (Author) Daniel York Loh
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
17th July 2024
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Modern and contemporary plays (c 1900 onwards)
Narrative theme: Identity / belonging
822.92
Paperback
112
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Im not even properly Chinese Im only half and half so that makes me feel all wrong and I just want to blend out and fit in and not stand out and with you I stand out We Stand Out Theres no safety in numbers Sorry The British Chinese. So often regarded as a model minority. Quiet, high-achieving, polite, invisible But when someone who is British Chinese spends their life taking drugs, getting thrown out of school, claiming benefits, being chased in stolen cars, getting locked up, then rehabilitating onto the stage, where do they fit in Oh, and theyre not quite Chinese enough anyway. Semi-autobiographical, free-form and explosive, Daniel York Lohs psychedelic gig-theatrical punk pop rap rock riff The Dao of Unrepresentative British Chinese Experience (Butterfly Dream) asks what path to choose, which identity politics to embrace or whether its just easier to follow the Dao of ancient Chinese philosopher Zhuangzi and dream youre a butterfly. Or, be a butterfly dreaming of being Chinese. This edition was published to coincide with the world premiere Kakilang production at London's Soho Theatre in June 2024.
Daniel York Loh is a mixed-race British East Asian actor, writer, filmmaker and musician. His first full-length play, The Fu Manchu Complex, ran at Ovalhouse in 2013. Along with composer Craig Adams, he won the 2016 Perfect Pitch award to create an original stage musical, Sinking Water, based on events around the 2004 Morecambe Bay Chinese cockle-picker tragedy, which is currently being developed under commission by Theatre Royal Stratford East. He is one of 21 writers of colour featured in the collection of essays, The Good Immigrant, which won the 2016 Books Are My Bag Readers Choice award. He has served on the Equity Minority Ethnic Members Committee, is a founder member of British East Asian Artists and has worked with Act For Change to promote diversity in UK media.