Wir verwenden Cookies und Analyse-Tools, um die Nutzerfreundlichkeit der Internet-Seite zu verbessern und für Marketingzwecke. Wenn Sie fortfahren, diese Seite zu verwenden, nehmen wir an, dass Sie damit einverstanden sind. Zur Datenschutzerklärung.
Reorienting Hong Kong's Resistance
Details
This book brings together writing from activists and scholars that examine leftist and decolonial forms of resistance that have emerged from Hong Kong's contemporary era of protests. Practices such as labor unionism, police abolition, land justice struggles, and other radical expressions of self-governance may not explicitly operate under the banners of leftism and decoloniality. Nevertheless, examining them within these frameworks uncovers historical, transnational, and prefigurative sightlines that can help to contextualize and interpret their impact for Hong Kong's political future. This collection offers insights not only into Hong Kong's local struggles, but their interconnectedness with global movements as the city remains on the frontlines of international politics.
Offers a unique vision of Hong Kong's future Allows outsiders a unique perspective into the radical politics of Hong Kong's protest year Brings together the issues, from environmentalism to housing to rule of law, that unite Hong Kong's new activists
Autorentext
Wen Liu is assistant research fellow at the Institute of Ethnology, Academia Sinica, in Taiwan. She received her Ph.D. from Critical Social Psychology at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Broadly interested in issues of race, sexuality, and affect, she has published in journals such as American Quarterly, Feminism & Psychology, Journal of Asian American Studies, and Subjectivity.
JN Chien is a Ph.D. candidate in American Studies and Ethnicity at the University of Southern California researching US-Hong Kong integration in the Cold War transpacific through economic history, labor, migration, and detention in the shadow of multiple imperialisms. His writing has been published in Hong Kong Studies, The Nation, Jacobin, and Lausan. Christina Chung is a Ph.D. candidate researching the intersections of decolonial feminism and Hong Kong contemporary art at the University of Washington, Seattle. Her writing has been published by Asia Art Archive, College Arts Association Reviews, and in the anthology: Creating Across Cultures: Women in the Arts from China, Hong Kong, Macau and Taiwan (East Slope Publishing, 2017).
Ellie Tse is a Ph.D. student in Cultural and Comparative Studies at the Department of Asian Languages & Cultures at the University of California, Los Angeles. Her research addresses the aftermath of inter-imperial encounters via visual, spatial and architectural practices across the Sinophone Pacific with a focus on Hong Kong.
Inhalt
Part I. Hong Kong Internationalism.- Part II. Strategies Toward and Against the State.- Part III. Hongkongers.
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09789811646584
- Editor Wen Liu, Ellie Tse, Christina Chung, Jn Chien
- Sprache Englisch
- Auflage 1st edition 2022
- Genre Political Science
- Größe H216mm x B153mm x T23mm
- Jahr 2022
- EAN 9789811646584
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 9811646589
- Veröffentlichung 28.01.2022
- Titel Reorienting Hong Kong's Resistance
- Untertitel Leftism, Decoloniality, and Internationalism
- Gewicht 538g
- Herausgeber Springer Nature Singapore
- Anzahl Seiten 328
- Lesemotiv Verstehen