ABSTRACT

This book traces the influences that have shaped the secondary school history curriculum during Hong Kong's prolonged political transition between the 1960s and the early 21st century, focusing especially on the relationship between history teaching and identity formation. The author's experience as a local history teacher during the mid-1990s made him conscious of the peculiarities of the history curriculum at the time; in particular, the neglect of Hong Kong's own history in both syllabuses and textbooks, and the unique division between 'History' and the entirely separate subject of 'Chinese History'.

chapter |22 pages

Introduction

chapter |39 pages

History in Crisis

1982–1989

chapter |31 pages

1997–2002

New Hong Kong—New History?

chapter |25 pages

Conclusion