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The architectural thesis often acts as a vehicle for a student to take aim at dominant ideology, policy, and hierarchies. In doing so, the student must grapple with how they inhabit the position of the other. This conversation surfaces the stories of several students who have lived the thesis – how they have immersed themselves within roles, enlisted in the groups they speak for, and returned to tell the tale.<\/p>\n
Guest Speakers:<\/span><\/p>\nDr. Lilian Chee <\/strong>(Associate Professor + Co-Leader, Research by Design Cluster, Department of Architecture, NUS)<\/span><\/p>\nMarianna Janowicz<\/strong> (Editor, Edit Collective)<\/span><\/p>\nStudent Presenters:<\/span><\/p>\nAhmad Nazaruddin<\/strong> (Pleasure Fields: Negotiating Queer Space and Time<\/em>) <\/span><\/p>\nGabrielle Wong <\/strong>(City Playbook<\/em>) <\/span><\/p>\nRachel Sim<\/strong> (Electoral Politics in Singapore: Helping Opposition Parties<\/em>) <\/span><\/p>\nWong Chi Khay<\/strong> (Transiency & Liminality: A Coexistence Approach to rethinking Foreign Worker Dormitories in Singapore<\/em>)<\/span><\/p>\n<\/p>\n <\/div>\n\n <\/div>\n\n \n