This book examines the period leading up to the Hong Kong
handover in 1997 - the 'countdown of time', and by using iconic
cultural symbols such as the countdown clock, the Hong Kong Museum
exhibitions and cultural heritage sites, argues that China has
undergone a transition to neoliberal state, in part through its
reunification with Hong Kong.
The problem of synchronization with the world, a Chinese phrase
that epitomizes China's engagement with modern capitalism since the
first Opium War, was characterized throughout the 20th century as a
'humiliation', 'weakness', 'tragedy' and 'disaster', with China in
the role of the victim of capitalist globalization. During the
reunification with Hong Kong, these conventional expressions were
replaced by new ones such as 'de-humiliation', 'return',
'self-esteem' and 'revival'. Hai Ren gives an ethnographic and
historical analysis of this cultural and political transformation
of China's globalization experience by looking closely at public
history practices in mainland China and Hong Kong and how the
reconfiguration of everyday life and cultural norms led to the
development of this neoliberal China.
As a book which straddles Chinese and Hong Kong, history,
politics, cultural heritage and museum studies more generally, it
can be regarded as a work of cultural political economy which will
appeal to students and scholars of all of the above.
General
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