Dear Friends of HKSI,
As you will see below, much is happening in the world of Hong Kong studies in October. So do join us (or our friends or partners) for our events if you are able and interested.
Here we would like to draw your attention to the two HKSI events this month: our featured webinar (as part of our “City Reassembled” series) on the emergence and transformation of “Hong Kong People” as an identity by Prof. Gregory Lee of the University of St. Andrew; and a special roundtable for students interested in pursuing graduate studies in the humanities or social sciences.
Finally, we would like to give a special shout-out to our friends and colleagues over at the newly-founded Global Hong Kong Studies @ University of California. Please check out their upcoming events and activities.
With very best wishes,
Leo K. Shin 單國鉞
Associate Professor, History and Asian Studies
Convenor, Hong Kong Studies Initiative 共研香江
The University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Featured Webinar
Friday, 29 October 2021, 12:00–13:30 PDT
Late Colonialism: “Hong Kong People” and the Popular Re-imagining of an Instituting Imaginary
Prof. Gregory Lee, University of St. Andrews
via Zoom
A City Reassembled event
Registration: hksi.ubc.ca/events/event/webinar-late-colonialism/
After the 1967 Riots, the Federation of Hong Kong Industries, backed by the colonial government, organized a festival of variety shows, exhibitions, fashion parades, and a cavalcade. This initial effort was followed in 1969 by a more substantial “Festival of Hong Kong” 香港節, which sported the slogan “Hong Kong People use Hong Kong Goods.” The festivals were part of a government strategy to build a sense of unity among the inhabitants of the colony as well as to counteract the pro-PRC patriotic sentiment that had marked the riots. The strategy focussed on instituting a singular sense of “Hongkongness” by promoting the term “Hong Kong People” 香港人 over “Chinese people” 中國人. Over time, the “instituting imaginary,” as Castoriadis would put it, was détourné (recuperated, subverted, turned off course, transformed) by Hong Kong civil society and the local culture industry into a popular “instituted imaginary.” This moment may be defined as Late Colonialism (a hitherto unseen form of late twentieth-century colonialism conflated with a Jamesonian Late Capitalism), which promised the joys of consumerism and a path to democracy that never transpired. It was this half-realized Paradise that was taken over by the PRC in 1997, where the central authorities found themselves confronted by a community that over the succeeding twenty years would continue to express its uniqueness and, increasingly, its recalcitrance. In recent years, the local community has drawn on what we can term a Hong Kong Imaginarium both to express as well as shape its identity and to reject being absorbed into the patriotic mainland Imaginary. This talk will address the key terms and moments outlined above.
Gregory Lee is Founding Professor of Chinese Studies at the University of St. Andrews. An academic, writer, and broadcaster, he has lived and worked in France, the USA, mainland China, and Hong Kong. In addition to modern Chinese cultural studies, he has written widely on the representation of Chineseness, the Chinese diaspora, the transcultural, and intellectual decolonization. His most recent book is China Imagined: From European Fantasy to Spectacular Power (Hurst, 2018).
This webinar is co-sponsored by: Department of Asian Studies, Department of History, Centre for Chinese Research, Centre for Migration Studies, Asian Canadian and Asian Migration Studies, Public Humanities Hub, and the Interdisciplinary Histories Research Cluster.
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Thursday, 21 October 2021, 19:00–20:30 PDT
Pursuing Graduate Studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences
想讀就去讀:人文與社會科學的世界
Moderator: Dr. Benjamin Cheung, Department of Psychology, UBC
Panelists: Dr. Meingold Chan, Ryan Iu, Dr. Zoe Lam, and Karen Wong
via Zoom
In Cantonese (and English)
Registration: hksi.ubc.ca/events/event/roundtable-pursuing-graduate-studies/
Contemplating your post-UBC options? Considering graduate studies in the humanities or social sciences?
If so, we would like to invite you to an information and sharing session with a distinguished group of current graduate students/recent Ph.D. graduates based at UBC. We will cover topics including searching for suitable programs, the application process, funding, and, more generally, quality of life. And we will have ample time to answer your questions (please submit your questions in advance here: https://bit.ly/3omuyi9).
This conversation will be conducted in Cantonese (to be supplemented with English). Interested students need not have Hong Kong as their academic focus. Non-UBC students are also welcome.
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Q&A with Directors
Thursday, 7 October 2021, 20:00–21:30 PDT
Memories to Choke On, Drinks to Wash Them Down (2019)
夜香・鴛鴦・深水埗
Online
Join HKSI Associate Dr. Helena Wu and directors Leung Ming-kai and Kate Reilly for this online screening and conversation hosted by the newly-founded Global Hong Kong Studies @ University of California. Hearty congratulations to our friends and colleagues at UC!
Online screening:
6–7 October 2021 PDT
Trailer:
https://youtu.be/vI9WUuc0G1Q
Details:
https://www.globalhks-uc.org/memories-to-choke-on
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Wednesday, 6 October 2021, 20:00 EDT
Looking Back at Hong Kong:
A Reading & Convo with Writers of/from Hong Kong
—with Nicolette Wong, Xu Xi, Sharon Yam, Yeung Chak Yan, and Q. M. Zhang
Online
“Amidst the reshaping of Hong Kong’s social, cultural, political and ideological landscapes, how do we re-envisage a city that exists in our memories? For those who have left their hometown—or the place they once called home—the question, “What does it mean to be a Hongkonger?” marks a constant shift between conflicting realities, identities, and perceptions. Beyond the act of remembering, how do we re-imagine our relationship with Hong Kong in the present and the future?
To mark the launch of the forthcoming book, Looking Back at Hong Kong: An Anthology of Writing and Art (Cart Noodles Press, 2021), writers who have called Hong Kong home will come together to read from their work and reflect on the profound changes and subtle transitions that have transpired in Hong Kong, both in recent times and over the past decades.”
Details:
eventbrite.com/e/looking-back-at-hong-kong-a-reading-convo-with-writers-offrom-hong-kong-tickets-172825815667
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Thursday, 7 October 2021, 14:30–15:30 EDT
Voice after Exit: Perspectives from the Hong Kong Diaspora
—with Glacier Kwong, Maggie Shum, and Kennedy Wong
Online
“In the aftermath of the 2019 anti-authoritarian movement in Hong Kong, the Chinese government abruptly implemented the National Security Law, which criminalizes dissents and protests against the government. Since then, the Hong Kong government has been engaged in mass arrests and the ongoing persecution of pro-democracy activists, lawmakers, and journalists. As a result of these crackdowns, many activists have gone into exile, seeking asylum in countries such as the US, UK, Australia, Canada, and Germany. As the National Security Law further clamps down on the freedom of speech and other civil liberties in Hong Kong, many Hongkongers have also opted to emigrate. This panel responses to the current wave of exile and emigration from Hong Kong. Moderated by Dr. Emily Bacchus (Political Science, International Studies, University of Kentucky), this panel event brings together three activist-researchers from the Hong Kong diaspora who will discuss how diasporic Hongkongers construct a collective identity, engage in advocacy, and exercise their political agency in a transnational context despite the constant threat of state persecution.”
Details: cwb.as.uky.edu/voice-after-exit-perspectives-hong-kong-diaspora
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Friday, 8 October 2021, 12:30–13:30 PDT
After Meng Wanzhou: Roundtable on Canada/US-China Relations
—with Dr. Kai Ostwald, Dr. Pitman Potter, Dr. Kristen Hopewell, Susan Gregson, and Senator Yuen Pau Woo
Online
// Join the roundtable hosted by UBC’s Centre for Chinese Research and School of Public Policy and Global Affairs. The event “After Meng Wanzhou: Roundtable on Canada/US-China Relations” will feature discussions from China studies and public policy specialists. We will investigate questions regarding the Meng Wanzhou case and its implications on Canada-US-China relations. What have we learned, what has changed, what can we expect (or fear) in the future? //
Details:
ccr.ubc.ca/events/event/roundtable-after-meng-wanzhou-roundtable-on-canada-us-china-relations/
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Saturday, 9 October 2021, 14:30–16:30 PDT
Speaking From the Heart: Translating Xinjiang's Diverse Voices
—with Guldana Salimjan, Elise Anderson, Kaster Bakyt, Darren Byler,
and Sonya Pritzker
Morris J. Wosk Centre for Dialogue
580 West Hastings Street, Vancouver
“Language can serve as an important tool in decolonization; and in the creation of international solidarity and equity. For many, there is a language barrier when it comes to learning more about Xinjiang and its many cultures and current struggles. On the one hand, many victim testimonies collected by grass-roots agencies are only available online in Uyghur and Kazakh languages, and key policy papers and leaked documents in Chinese remain untranslated into English; on the other hand, English-language reporting and academic research are seldom translated into Chinese language. This event, featuring five researchers’ work involving translation testimonies and knowledge to the public, looks at creating an opportunity to include everyone in the conversation, regardless of language ability. We discuss here the importance of empathy and cross-cultural communication in translating the diverse languages and experiences of Xinjiang. This event will make sense of the Xinjiang crisis and discuss the politics and urgency in translation, empathy, and cross-cultural communication.”
Details:
ccr.ubc.ca/events/event/upcoming-event-highlighting-the-diverse-indigenous-languages-of-xinjiang/
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Screening and dialogue
Wednesday, 6 October 2021, 18:00 PDT
British Columbia: An Untold History
Harbour Centre
515 West Hastings St., Vancouver
// The retelling of “British Columbia” from the diverse people, families, rebels and dreamers who shaped the province. //
Join HKSI Associate Dr. Henry Yu and fellow panelists for a dialogue following the premiere of this four-part series presented by the Knowledge Network.
Trailer:
https://youtu.be/55FQPVToMv0
Details:
eventbrite.ca/e/british-columbia-an-untold-history-screening-panel-dialogue-tickets-180493590187
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Exhibition
9 October–20 November 2021
Autumn Lights
Hotam Press
218 East 4th Avenue, Vancouver
“Autumn Lights brings together a selection of works from Chan's last 30 years of practice, relating his long-time exploration of light as a concept.
Born in 1940 in wartime China, Kai Chan’s childhood experience has been a significant foundation in building his work, namely looking for stability and peace. He moved with his family to Hong Kong in 1949, and, in 1966 immigrated to Canada. This changing of locations and countries has informed him in his art practice, the passage from the East to West regularly appeared in his work. Based in Toronto, Kai Chan has exhibited his work across Canada, the United States, Japan, Australia and Europe.”
Details: bookshopgallery.hotampress.com/
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Thursday, 14 October 2021
Dialogue: Immigrant Writers from Hong Kong
香港移民作家對話
—with William Chan, Laifong Leung, and Nelson Tsui
Online | in Mandarin
“Join the conversation as we ask three writers who have immigrated from Hong Kong about the challenges and opportunities they have faced living in Canada.”
Details: vpl.bibliocommons.com/events/611e859c60df4e2f00ffba2a
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Friday, 5 November 2021, 19:00–20:30 PDT
The Battle of Hong Kong in 1941: A Spatial History Project
Dr. KWONG Chi Man, Hong Kong Baptist University
via Zoom
Details: hksi.ubc.ca/events/event/webinar-battle-of-hong-kong-in-1941/
This talk introduces the spatial history project “Hong Kong 1941,” which uses geographic information systems (GIS) to build an interactive web map about the Battle of Hong Kong and a database of British military installations in Hong Kong during the Second World War. It offers an easy-to-use historical database for educators, tourists, and conservation professionals. There have been numerous studies on the Battle of Hong Kong in 1941; in recent years, more primary sources are available in the form of the memoirs of those who had experienced it. However, it has been a challenge for researchers to show the spatial and temporal dimensions of the battle and their relationship with the events, the people’s experience, and the war ruins that still exist in Hong Kong. The spatial history project “Hong Kong 1941” tries to tackle such a challenge and aims to bridge the gaps that existed between the British and Japanese accounts to offer a clearer view of the battle and to show the diverse experiences of the combatants and the civilians during the eighteen days of fighting. It also serves as a platform where stories often overlooked by war narratives are exhibited in conjunction with the major events.
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October 1: Noted scholar and commentator Prof. Y. Joseph Lian 練乙錚 shared his thoughts on the predicament of the Chinese and Hong Kong diasporas in this inaugural webinar for the City Reassembled series (webcast | slides).
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Please kindly consider a tax-deductible donation to HKSI (hksi.ubc.ca/support-us). Thank you, as always, for your support of the UBC Hong Kong Studies Initiative.
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