The making of Hong Kong society : three studies of class formation in early Hong Kong

Bibliographic Information

The making of Hong Kong society : three studies of class formation in early Hong Kong

Chan Wai Kwan

Clarendon Press , Oxford University Press, c1991

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Note

"陳偉群"--T.p.

Revision of author's thesis (Ph. D.)

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

In this book, W.K.Chan studies the formation into classes of the British merchants, the Chinese merchants and the Chinese labourers of Hong Kong between 1841 and 1922. During this period Hong Kong developed from a "barren rock" into a complex society. Making use of historical archives, the author examines how British merchants became the first dominant class, sharing identical economic interests, superior political power and a cultural identity. Their exclusivity led the Chinese to seek social status and political power elsewhere: Dr Chan investigates how, through the establishment of voluntary religious and charitable organizations, Chinese merchants emerged as leaders of the Chinese community and powerful rivals of the British. Finally, he charts the development of the Chinese labourers into a recognizable social class with interests opposed to those of the merchant classes: this was a conflict finally brought into the open by the great seamen's strike of 1922. While recognizing the influence of China and Britain on events in Hong Kong, Dr Chan emphasizes the importance of treating Hong Kong as a society with its own integrity. By intermeshing historical and sociological analysis he seeks not only to describe what happened but to analyze the social and economic relationship of the various historical actors involved in a vital episode of Hong Kong's economic history.

Table of Contents

  • Jardine, Matheson and Company, and the making of the British merchant class
  • the emergence of leadership among the Chinese population and the Tung Wah hospital
  • the Chinese merchant class
  • the labouring class and the seamen's strike in Hong Kong
  • implications for Hong Kong studies.

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