Archive 2021
     
             
     

THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY
AND THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF HISTORY
PRESENT

An Anthropological Talk by Wai-man Tang

Teaching Kabaddi for Understanding: Intercultural Education in Hong Kong

Friday 20 August 2021, 7:00pm
Hong Kong Museum of History
Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 100 Chatham Road, Tsim Sha Tsui

Teaching Games for Understanding (TGfU) is a pedagogical model with the objective of promoting learning in sport, including the development of social values. This study discusses the impact of a sports program that involves a South Asian sport, kabaddi, on intercultural competence. The program adopted the approach of TGfU and was conducted in a multicultural setting in secondary schools and social communities with participants of different ethnic backgrounds. These participants include students, school teachers, and kabaddi coaches. The findings of the study reveal that the program can enhance the intercultural competence of both Chinese and South Asian students. They gain new knowledge about heritage/minority cultures and learn to appreciate them and develop bonding and bridging social capital, which is across gender and ethnicity. The implications of this study validate the feasibility and merit of integrating intercultural education into physical education. However, it is important to identify the ethnic composition and relations of the participants and devise a suitable pedagogy and curriculum when implementing the program for optimal results.

Wai-man Tang is a lecturer in Anthropology at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His research interests include migration, sports, and South Asian cultures. He is currently researching a South Asian sport, kabaddi with a focus on its educative value for intercultural education in Hong Kong.


THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY
AND THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF HISTORY
PRESENT

An Anthropological Talk by Reijiro Aoyama

Silent Conversation: Writing as a mode of face-to-face interaction in early modern East Asia

Friday 23 July 2021, 7:00pm
Hong Kong Museum of History
Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 100 Chatham Road, Tsim Sha Tsui

Sharing no spoken language, diplomats and educated individuals from China, Korea, Japan, and Vietnam often resorted to 'brush talk' - written exchanges in literary Chinese - in transnational encounters throughout history. Utilizing brush talk as a lingua franca, East Asian literati synchronously yet 'silently' negotiated conflicts, exchanged inner thoughts and created a convivial atmosphere, all of which were essential ingredients of the region's cross-border interactions that transcended the purely linguistic functions of Chinese. Aoyama uses silent conversations conducted by Sun Yat-sen, Liang Qichao, Ōkuma Shigenobu and Phan Bội Châu to explore socio-cultural functions of Chinese writing in order to analyze this (unique) cultural practice from an anthropological perspective. He problematizes the meaning of literacy in translinguistic settings and questions Lévi-Strauss's proposition that the primary function of written communication is to facilitate slavery.

Reijiro Aoyama is a Research Assistant Professor at the Hong Kong Polytechnic University. His research has focused on transnationalism and migrant communities in East Asia.


THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY
AND THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF HISTORY
PRESENT

An Anthropological Talk by Lynn Sun

The Happiness Impasse: Exploring Middle-class Women's Pursuits of Marital Happiness in Urban China and Japan

Friday 25 June 2021, 7:00pm
Hong Kong Museum of History
Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 100 Chatham Road, Tsim Sha Tsui

"Why on earth do we marry nowadays if not for a happier life?" Many "middle-class" young women living in Tokyo and Shanghai today, whom this talk is centered, entered marriage expecting that there exists something called "marital happiness". However, what does this "marital happiness" actually mean? More curiously, in the two years of fieldwork to find the answer to this question, what was heard and observed the most was marital unhappiness. Then why did most informants enter wedlock expecting happiness, yet their narratives often reveal quite the opposite? This talk thus seeks, through an ethnographic lens, to capture the simultaneous aspiration and anxiety "marital happiness" casts upon its pursuers in Shanghai and Tokyo. Instead of asking what marital happiness is and offering yet another fixed definition or code of it as many other works have done, the primary question this talk addresses is: What does "marital happiness" do?

Lynn Sun received her Ph.D. in anthropology from the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 2021. Her research interests include psychological anthropology, anthropology of ethics, happiness, and intimate relationships in China and Japan. She is currently teaching courses on gender, intimacy, marriage, and family at the Centre for China Studies and the Department of Anthropology at CUHK.


THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY
AND THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF HISTORY
PRESENT

An Anthropological Talk by David Palmer and Martin Tse

Guanyin's Limbo: Personhood, Magic and Deity Statues in Hong Kong

Friday 21 May 2021, 7:00pm
Hong Kong Museum of History
Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 100 Chatham Road, Tsim Sha Tsui

How do objects and humans relationally constitute one another? In this talk, we will examine statues of Guanyin, the bodhisattva of compassion, in Hong Kong to illuminate the forms of personhood and agency that arise through human-icon relations in a modern metropolis. We follow the life course of Guanyin statues, investigating their production, circulation, animation, and disposal - teasing out worshippers' contradictory discourses on whether the deity is present in the statue or in the mind of the worshipper. These ethnographic observations lead us to consider how anthropological debates about the nature of cultural objects as representations or as agents, parallel Guanyin practices and discourses in Hong Kong. We will consider what insights this case can bring to the application of anthropological theories of personhood and magic to icons.

David A. Palmer (Ph.D, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, Paris) is a Professor of anthropology jointly appointed by the Hong Kong Institute for the Humanities and Social Sciences and the Department of Sociology of the University of Hong Kong.

Martin M.H. Tse is a Ph.D. candidate recently admitted by the Hong Kong Institute of the Humanities and Social Sciences at HKU. He is co-author with Chip Colwell and David A. Palmer of the article "Guanyin's Limbo: Icons as Demi-Persons and Dividuating Objects," American Anthropologist 121:4 (2019).


THE HONG KONG ANTHROPOLOGICAL SOCIETY
AND THE HONG KONG MUSEUM OF HISTORY
PRESENT

An Anthropological Talk by Andrew Kipnis

Ghosts, Urbanization, and Strangers in China & Hong Kong

Friday 23 April 2021, 7:00pm
Hong Kong Museum of History
Lecture Hall, Ground Floor, 100 Chatham Road, Tsim Sha Tsui

Belief in ghosts is often thought of as a thing of the past - an outmoded belief linked to the traditional cultures of rural China. But ghost stories are commonplace in Hong Kong and other large Chinese cities and evidence of the fear of ghosts can be found in the ways that modern urban people treat death, funeral homes, and cemeteries. This talk analyzes belief in ghosts as a facet of modern, urban living. Kipnes suggests that traditional Chinese beliefs about ghosts have transformed rather than diminished as China has urbanized, and modern urbanites may harbor more fear of ghosts than anyone did in the past.

Andrew B. Kipnis is a professor of anthropology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong and co-editor of Hau: Journal of Ethnographic Theory. His last book is From Village to City: Social Transformation in a Chinese County Seat (U. of California Press, 2016). His talk draws from his forthcoming book, The Funeral of Mr. Wang: Life, Death, and Ghosts in Urbanizing China (U. of California Press, 2021).

 
       
   
       

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