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CHEUNG, SIU-KEUNG (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   106543


Changing life-world of a Chinese village: land, economic practice, and community change / Cheung, Siu-Keung   Journal Article
Cheung, Siu-Keung Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Research into traditional Chinese society engages Chinese villages as a legitimate field for investigation. By looking into the life-world of Da Shu, a village in the New Territories of Hong Kong SAR, this article challenges a research approach that views the Chinese village as a temporal other to the contemporary world. This article demonstrates how the life-world of a Chinese village interplays with the changing historical context. The study examines the economic life that revolves around land and the overall community practices at different times. The study suggests that the life-world of this Chinese village is a historical congeries that involves varying interplays of people with varying dominant rules of time. The subjectivity of people on the ground is always imbued with remarkable historical voices and practices.
Key Words Subjectivity  Habitus  New Territories  Chinese Village  History 
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2
ID:   141107


Reunification through water and food: the other battle for lives and bodies in China's Hong Kong policy / Cheung, Siu-Keung   Article
Cheung, Siu-Keung Article
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Summary/Abstract The People's Republic of China failed to win the hearts and minds of the Hong Kong Chinese people before its resumption of the city's sovereignty on 1 July 1997. This article attempts to account for this contradiction in China's pursuit of reunification. By shifting the focus to the alternative battle to control the lives and bodies of the local population, this article demonstrates how China exploited its water and food supplies to the colony in order to control Hong Kong before and after 1997. The study pinpoints the bio-political measures used by China to secure Chinese sovereignty over Hong Kong. It concludes with an analysis of the current situation in Hong Kong and the implications of China's control of water and food supplies for the relations between the ruling state and the people of Hong Kong.
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