ID | 178509 |
Title Proper | Hokkiens in early modern Hoi An, Batavia, and Manila |
Other Title Information | Political agendas and selective adaptations |
Language | ENG |
Author | Chen, Boyi |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article focuses on how political agendas and existing societal circumstances in three Southeast Asian regions impacted the early history of immigrant Hokkiens, one of the most prominent Chinese ethnic groups. The article argues that different Hokkien actions and their outcomes were shaped or highly influenced by the prevailing agenda and political struggles of local rulers and/or colonial powers, resulting in selective adaptive behaviour as ‘challengers’ or ‘cooperators’. There were prominent immigrant Hokkien challengers to the status quo in Manila and elsewhere in the Philippine Islands, but both cooperators with the prevailing status quo and challengers to it were common in Hoi An, Vietnam. By contrast, cooperators were conspicuous in Batavia and in the colonial Dutch East Indies.
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`In' analytical Note | Journal of South East Asian Studies Vol. 52, No.1; Mar 2021: p.67 - 89 |
Journal Source | Journal of South East Asian Studies 2021-03 52, 1 |
Key Words | Manila ; Hokkien |