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Book

Hybrid Hong Kong

Book

Hybrid Hong Kong

DOI link for Hybrid Hong Kong

Hybrid Hong Kong book

Hybrid Hong Kong

DOI link for Hybrid Hong Kong

Hybrid Hong Kong book

Edited ByKwok-bun Chan
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 7 March 2012
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203723296
Pages 10
eBook ISBN 9780203723296
Subjects Area Studies, Humanities
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Chan, K.-B. (Ed.). (2012). Hybrid Hong Kong (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203723296

ABSTRACT

Hybrid Hong Kong attempts to attract and excite the intellectual, cultural, economic and political elites as well as the intelligent laymen of Hong Kong - hopefully enough for them to take a closer look at their society - while engendering a public discourse on the city's identity, its past, present and future. Hong Kong is at its crossroads. With a colonial past and having been handed over, and back, to China in 1997, the city has since been going through a process of re-sinification and re-integration (not entirely wanted) into the Pearl River Delta region of mainland China, all of which have far-reaching consequences for identity politics, culture, loyalty and attachment, and everyday livelihood.

The hybridity concept offers an in-between space, and time, to narrate, describe and make sense of the many layers of entanglement of cultural, anthropological, economic and political forces that impinge, impact, sometimes confuse, even disturb, the everyday lives of the Hongkongers who have decided to call the city home. The book probes a range of sites and locales of a Hongkonger's natural habitat, including film and television, ethnicity, popular music videos, gay identities, fashion, art, theatre, Cantopop electronic dance music, museum, visual arts, the Muslim youth, food and cuisine, and Chinese and western medicines. Based on ethnography, fieldwork and participant observation, Hybrid Hong Kong intends to display and explain hybridity as it is performed in the public as well as private spheres of city life.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Visual Anthropology.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|26 pages

Introduction: Hybridity and the Politics of Desertion

Edited ByKwok-bun Chan

chapter 2|22 pages

The Constitutive Rift: Hong Kong and its Politics of Hybridity

ByChan Nin and Chan Kwok-bun

chapter 3|28 pages

Home But Not Home: Four Vignettes of Return Migrants in Hong Kong

ByChan Wai-wan and Chan Kwok-bun

chapter 4|18 pages

Blowing in the China Wind: Engagements with Chineseness in Hong Kong’s Zhongguofeng Music Videos

ByYiu Fai Chow and Jeroen

chapter 5|13 pages

Brand Hong Kong: Asia’s World City as Method?

ByStephen Yiu-wai Chu

chapter 6|13 pages

Structural Hybridization in Film and Television Production in Hong Kong

ByJoseph M. Chan and Anthony Y.-H. Fung

chapter 7|16 pages

Hybridization in the Visual Arts: Now You See Me, Now You Don’t

Edited ByKwok-bun Chan

chapter 8|16 pages

A Museum of Hybridity: The History of the Display of Art in the Public Museum of Hong Kong, and Its Implications for Cultural Identities

ByEva Kit-Wah Man

chapter 9|18 pages

From “Made in Hong Kong” to “Designed in Hong Kong”: Searching for an Identity in Fashion

Edited ByKwok-bun Chan

chapter 10|15 pages

Danny Yung In Search of Hybrid Matter and Mind: His Experimental Xiqu for Zuni Icosahedron

ByJessica Yeung

chapter 11|13 pages

Hybridity, Empowerment and Subversiveness in Cantopop Electronic Dance Music

ByMatthew M. Chew

chapter 12|19 pages

Hybridization and the Emergence of “Gay” Identities in Hong Kong and in China

ByDay Wong

chapter 13|18 pages

Traditionality and Hybridity: A Village Cuisine in Metropolitan Hong Kong

ByChan Kwok Shing

chapter 14|14 pages

Mix of Medicines

ByDerrick Kit-Sing Au

chapter 15|23 pages

Everyday Hybridity and Hong Kong’s Muslim Youth

ByPaul O’Connor
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