Why scroobal, you are worried about copyright infringement. Well then I'm sure Miss Catherine Lim won't mind my "partial" reproduction of her blog here.
http://catherinelim.sg/2009/03/23/whos-afraid-of-catherine-lim/#more-127


The relationship between Catherine Lim and the state in 1994 is, in this article, carefully reconstructed and analysed using close reading techniques. This analysis is set within an account of Singapore’s recent political history, specifically in the context of critical moments when ideological work was at its busiest. By drawing on psychoanalytical perspectives, some of the more significant political actions and behaviours during this moment of crisis will be explained as symptoms of repressed anxieties and insecurities. Insights into the gendered nature of the relationship between the state and Catherine Lim—and more generally between the state and civil society—will be drawn from contemporary feminist theory, especially the ideas of Luce Irigaray.
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The "Catherine Lim Affair"
In the first of her two political commentary pieces in 1994, Lim (3 September 1994) argued that a “great affective divide†had grown between Singaporeans and their government, with the people feeling increasingly alienated from their leaders, whose style had come to be regarded as “deficient in human sensitivity and feeling -'dictatorial', 'arrogant', 'impatient', 'unforgiving', 'vindictive'â€. Strategically, Lim began her article by stroking the state's ego - specifying in a markedly feminine voice the phallogocentric qualities that were vital to the state's self-definition, she praised the PAP government for its “amazing effectivenessâ€.
Clearly, such a purposeful, uncompromising commitment to the economic imperative calls for special qualities of mind and temperament. The PAP leaders are distinguished for their intelligence, single-mindedness, sternness of purpose and cool detachment. Their methods are logic, precision, meticulous analysis and hard-nosed calculation and quantification. Their style is impersonal, brisk, business-like, no-nonsense, pre-emptive.
Lim then deliberately held up a negative mirror---constructed out of feminine lack and otherness---to the government's narcissistic male ego, as she described the PAP leaders' "pet aversion [to] noisy, protracted debate that leads nowhere, emotional indulgence, frothy promises, theatrics and polemics in place of pragmatics”. In this seductive move, her feminine words came, in a Lacanian sense, to be the government’s extended phallus. Having affirmed the state’s manliness, Lim then gently introduced her criticism, explaining how a new generation of Singaporeans—more highly educated, affluent and exposed to western values—has come to be more concerned about “matters of the heart, soul and spirit. While idealism, charisma and image have a special appeal for the young, feeling in general is an essential element in everybody’s life, occurring at the deepest and most basic level of human need”. Lim suggested that, for this new generation, the government would need to learn that “lecturing and hectoring are sometimes less effective than a pat on the back, that mistakes may be just as instructive as success and are therefore forgivable, that efficiency and generosity of spirit are not mutually exclusive, that compassion is not necessarily a sign of effeteness”. Lim deliberately allowed herself to play up her role as “admiring wife” to the manly state; and then, in this role, articulated claims that the state would not appreciate but needed to hear, constructing a skilful argument that would make any assertions about hysterical women seem quite ridiculous.