Unstructuring Chinese society : the fictions of colonial practice and the changing realities of "land" in the new territories of Hong Kong

Author(s)

    • Chun, Allen

Bibliographic Information

Unstructuring Chinese society : the fictions of colonial practice and the changing realities of "land" in the new territories of Hong Kong

Allen Chun

(Studies in anthropology and history, 27)

Routledge, 2002

  • : pbk

Available at  / 8 libraries

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Note

First published: Australia : Harwood Academic publishers , c2000

Bibliography: p. 317-342

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Unstructuring Chinese Society is a culmination of long term field work and archival research that challenges existing theories of social organisation and cultural change. The book makes new sense of historical contradictions, political conflicts and deep seated social transformations that have underlined the experience of colonial rule and the practices of local institutions in Hong Kong over the past century. By focusing on the ongoing interactions of discourse, practices and global-local relations in cultural terms, Unstructuring Chinese Society puts forth a fresh perspective in the field of historical anthropology, while addressing ongoing critical concerns in postcolonial theory and our understanding of tradition and modernity.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Field of History in the Field 1. Earthbound Anthropologies in 'Structure' of Chinese Society 2. The Changing Meaning of Colonial Policy on Land in the New Territories of Hong Kong 3. The Changing Meaning of Land in Colonial Hong Kong 4. The Meaning of Tradition in a Progressive Society 5. Culture's Colonialism: The Future of Method

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