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Conference Paper: The Child in Recent Anthologies of Hong Kong Literature

TitleThe Child in Recent Anthologies of Hong Kong Literature
Authors
Issue Date2020
PublisherChinese University Press.
Citation
Hong Kong & Elsewhere: A Hong Kong Studies Symposium, 2-3 July 2020 How to Cite?
AbstractChildhood and children provide poignant metaphors for Hong Kong’s existence and future, not least since the colony’s “return” to mainland China and a law of the father, in which its “young” residents lacked a say. What if we suspend a child’s relation to its parent, and instead elaborate a child’s desires in a playground of peer-like objects? In a recent prose anthology addressed to children, 給孩子的港臺散文 [Hong Kong and Taiwan Prose for Children, 2019], the editors Joseph S. M. Lau and Leung Shuk Man position Hong Kong as a site of “naive” literary history through which Hong Kong residents or sojourners write about the city-state. The “child” provides a new optic to read famous and lesser known literary texts, which I examine via object relations theory in psychoanalysis and developmental narratives in modern sinophone literary history. My examples include a child’s precocious mastery of classics (Ah Nong); an adult’s feeling of loss expressed in toys and ordinary objects (Xi Xi); a student’s language acquisition within the history of AngloChinese education and translation (Dong Qiao); riddle-like tales that include abstract paintings (Yank Wong); and a stream-of-consciousness use of classical, vernacular, and Cantonese idioms (三及第) to capture fragmented self-image (Wong Bik Wan). A Hong Kong-based theory of the child, I argue, has its own phylogenetic tree of reading and desire, apart from its evolutionary narrative within modern China’s civilizational struggle (Andrew Jones).
Persistent Identifierhttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/317650

 

DC FieldValueLanguage
dc.contributor.authorWong, YHN-
dc.date.accessioned2022-10-07T10:24:25Z-
dc.date.available2022-10-07T10:24:25Z-
dc.date.issued2020-
dc.identifier.citationHong Kong & Elsewhere: A Hong Kong Studies Symposium, 2-3 July 2020-
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10722/317650-
dc.description.abstractChildhood and children provide poignant metaphors for Hong Kong’s existence and future, not least since the colony’s “return” to mainland China and a law of the father, in which its “young” residents lacked a say. What if we suspend a child’s relation to its parent, and instead elaborate a child’s desires in a playground of peer-like objects? In a recent prose anthology addressed to children, 給孩子的港臺散文 [Hong Kong and Taiwan Prose for Children, 2019], the editors Joseph S. M. Lau and Leung Shuk Man position Hong Kong as a site of “naive” literary history through which Hong Kong residents or sojourners write about the city-state. The “child” provides a new optic to read famous and lesser known literary texts, which I examine via object relations theory in psychoanalysis and developmental narratives in modern sinophone literary history. My examples include a child’s precocious mastery of classics (Ah Nong); an adult’s feeling of loss expressed in toys and ordinary objects (Xi Xi); a student’s language acquisition within the history of AngloChinese education and translation (Dong Qiao); riddle-like tales that include abstract paintings (Yank Wong); and a stream-of-consciousness use of classical, vernacular, and Cantonese idioms (三及第) to capture fragmented self-image (Wong Bik Wan). A Hong Kong-based theory of the child, I argue, has its own phylogenetic tree of reading and desire, apart from its evolutionary narrative within modern China’s civilizational struggle (Andrew Jones).-
dc.languageeng-
dc.publisherChinese University Press.-
dc.relation.ispartof'Hong Kong & Elsewhere' Symposium, Hong Kong Studies-
dc.titleThe Child in Recent Anthologies of Hong Kong Literature-
dc.typeConference_Paper-
dc.identifier.emailWong, YHN: nyhwong@hku.hk-
dc.identifier.authorityWong, YHN=rp02883-
dc.identifier.hkuros338051-
dc.publisher.placeChina-

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