Hong Kong, China - Learning to Belong to a Nation by Gordon Mathews, Eric Kit-wai Ma, 呂大樂 Tai-lok Lui

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出版社 Publisher:
Routledge
作者 Author:
Gordon Mathews, Eric Kit-wai Ma, 呂大樂 Tai-lok Lui
版次 Edition:
第一版 1st Edition
出版年份 Publication year:
2008
國際書號 ISBN:
0-415-48013-2
頁數 Pages:
224
語言 Language:
英文 English
書籍分享者 Book Sharer:
匿名 Anonymous
借書期 Book Borrowing Period:
一個月 One month
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The idea of ’national identity’ is an ambiguous one for Hong Kong. Returned to the national embrace of China on 1 July 1997 after 150 years as a British colony, the concept of national identity and what it means to "belong to a nation" is a matter of great tension and contestation in Hong Kong.

Written by three academic specialists on Hong Kong cultural identity, social history, and mass media, this book explores the processes through which the people of Hong Kong are "learning to belong to a nation" by examining their relationship with the Chinese nation and state in the recent past, present, and future. It considers the complex meanings of and debates over national identity in Hong Kong over the past fifty years and especially during the last decade following Hong Kong’s return to China. It also places these arguments within a larger, global perspective, to ask what Hong Kong can teach us about national identity and its potential transformations.

Multidisciplinary in its approach, Hong Kong and China explores national identity in terms of theory, mass media, survey date, ethnography and history, and will appeal to students and scholars of Chinese history, cultural studies, and nationalism.

Contents

1 The significance of Hong Kong
2 Fleeing the nation, creating a local home, 1949–1983
3 Rejoining the nation: Hong Kong, 1983–2006
4 Representing the nation in the Hong Kong mass media
5 Hong Kong schools and the teaching of national identity
6 Hong Kong people’s changing comprehensions of national identity
7 How American, Chinese, and Hong Kong university students understand “belonging to a nation”
8 Hong Kong people encountering the nation in south China
9 Hong Kong’s market-based national identity: harbinger of a global future?

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