This interdisciplinary volume provides a multifaceted exploration of the kaleidoscopic transformation of Hong Kong. It examines the region's diverse historical developments, the challenges of digital surveillance, the impact of Orientalism, the power of individual agency, minor literature, films, popular culture, and the trajectories of creative writing programs.
Featuring contributors from various disciplines, including history, literature, and media studies, this volume offers scholarly insights into the dynamic relationships among domestic helpers, immigrants, refugees, and Hongkongers. It presents an essential overview of the complex evolution of Hong Kong as a continually changing Special Administrative Region of China.
Magdalen Ki, Ph.D., University of Edinburgh, is Associate Professor of English Literature at the Hong Kong Baptist University. She is the author of
Jane Austen and the Dialectic of Misrecognition (Peter Lang, 2005) and
Jane Austen and Altruism (Routledge, 2020).
Wayne Wen-chun Liang, Ph.D., Newcastle University, U.K., is Associate Professor of Translation at Soochow University (Taiwan). He has published many articles in Translation Studies, including “What has machine translation ‘mis-translated’ COVID-19?” (2023), Images in the hands of translators: A case study of the English translations of Pu Songling’s
Liaozhaizhiyi (2020), and “Translators’ Behaviors from a Sociological Perspective” (2016).
Acknowledgment
List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Introduction
part 1: Hong Kong and the Evolving Political Compass
1 The Rise of Hong Kong and the Problem of Alignment
Wayne Wen-chun Liang and Magdalen Ki
2 Digital Hong Kong and Surveillance Capitalism
Magdalen Ki
3 Mass Transit Rail, Mass Transit Discourse: Multimodal Critical Discourse Analysis of MTR Posters
Jennifer Eagleton
4 TV Special: Finding a Hong Kong Story
Vinton Poon
5 De-territorialization and Re-territorialization: the “Cramped Space” in Contemporary Hong Kong Literature
Emily Shun Man Chow-Quesada
part 2: Hong Kong Dream and the Culture Compass
6 Positive and Negative Orientalism: “China as a Career”
Chi Sum Garfield Lau
7 Ann Hui on the Shores of the South China Sea
Jim Cocola
8 Vampires vs Hopping Vampires: Mr Vampire Series and Hong Kong Vampire Hunters
Magdalen Ki
9 Contradictions of Visibilities in Oliver Chan’s
Still Human Miguel Antonio N. Lizada
10 Institutional and Communal Creativity: Local Discourse and English-Language Creative Writing in Hong Kong
Antony Huen and Jason Eng Hun Lee
Index
This volume is intended for scholars and students in tertiary institutions interested in Asian Studies, particularly Hong Kong Studies.