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ID091665
Title ProperNational custom
Other Title Informationdebating female servitude in late nineteenth-century Hong Kong
LanguageENG
AuthorCarroll, John M
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article frames the debate about mui-tsai (meizai, female bondservants) in late nineteenth-century Hong Kong within changing conceptions of the colony's political, geographical and cultural position. Whereas some colonial officials saw the mui-tsai system as a national shame that challenged Britain's commitment to ending slavery, others argued that it was an archaic custom that would eventually dissolve as China modernized. The debate also showed the rise of a class of Chinese elites who had accumulated enough power to defend the mui-tsai system as a time-honoured Chinese custom, even while acknowledging that in Hong Kong they lived beyond the boundaries of Chinese sovereignty. Challenging notions of the reach of the colonial state and showing how colonial policies often had unintended consequences, this debate also reveals the analytical and explanatory weakness of concepts such as 'colonial discourse' or 'the colonial mind'.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 43, No. 6; Nov 2009: p1463-1493
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol. 43, No. 6; Nov 2009: p1463-1493
Key WordsNational Custom ;  Female ;  Hong Kong