


The [Other] / [Same Different] Vegetable
- Description
-
[Side A] The Other Vegetable
The way fruits and vegetables have been named is much like how people categorise and perceive one another. We take note of places of origin, distinctive appearances and make comparisons with what we know. While we may be more discreet about doing that to people, most donāt think twice about calling a gourd āhairyā or emphasising that a bawang (onion) is from āBombayā.Many fruit and vegetable names indicate the outsiders from or through whom they originate, as seen from the speakers of the respective languages. These names also communicate feelings and ideas that communities have or had of one another. And since Singaporeans inherited these names from colonisers and ancestors from other lands, some of these perceptions, often biased, are not even our own.
[Side B] The Same Different Vegetable
Are āJapanese tomatoesā grown in Thailand still āJapaneseā? Is āpremiumā better than āspecialityā? Is a sweet corn labelled āsweet cornā sweeter than a sweet corn simply labelled ācornā? I added vegetable labelling language into plant taxonomy to critique the scientific and commercial classification systems. Despite how they seem, both create value through distinction and are therefore compatible.
Original: $17.21
-70%$17.21
$5.16Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
- Description
-
[Side A] The Other Vegetable
The way fruits and vegetables have been named is much like how people categorise and perceive one another. We take note of places of origin, distinctive appearances and make comparisons with what we know. While we may be more discreet about doing that to people, most donāt think twice about calling a gourd āhairyā or emphasising that a bawang (onion) is from āBombayā.Many fruit and vegetable names indicate the outsiders from or through whom they originate, as seen from the speakers of the respective languages. These names also communicate feelings and ideas that communities have or had of one another. And since Singaporeans inherited these names from colonisers and ancestors from other lands, some of these perceptions, often biased, are not even our own.
[Side B] The Same Different Vegetable
Are āJapanese tomatoesā grown in Thailand still āJapaneseā? Is āpremiumā better than āspecialityā? Is a sweet corn labelled āsweet cornā sweeter than a sweet corn simply labelled ācornā? I added vegetable labelling language into plant taxonomy to critique the scientific and commercial classification systems. Despite how they seem, both create value through distinction and are therefore compatible.












