Overview
- Authors:
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Kin-Ling Tang
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The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
- Goes beyond institutional concerns and provides an understanding of globalisation at the micro, everyday level
- Features first-hand data on contemporary developments in a changing community over a decade
- Offers an unconventional approach to everyday life and its implications for development
- Raises sensitivity towards hidden power relations in social interactions
- Offers insights on how space-time perceptions can affect the development of a given place
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-viii
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About this book
This book proposes an alternative approach to understanding development and discusses the possibilities of alternative development in the age of global capitalism from a socio-cultural perspective. Tracing the development of Mui Wo, a rural town on the outskirts of Hong Kong, for more than a decade, it explores the factors that have allowed it to stand apart from the metropolis and follow a path of development that is distinct from the rest of Hong Kong. It also discusses how a place and its people, with their own time-space conceptions, respond to the changes prompted by the exigencies of global capitalism. The book goes beyond institutional concerns and focuses on the daily life of ordinary people. It identifies the forces underlying globalisation, addresses what happens when such forces interact with local ones, and explores the resultant diversions and diversifications. The book is an invitation to all those who are interested in reflecting on heterogeneity and diversity amidst the impulses of globalisation.
Authors and Affiliations
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The Education University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
Kin-Ling Tang
About the author
Kin-Ling Tang received her Doctor of Philosophy degree in Cultural Studies from The Chinese University of Hong Kong. This book originated from her dissertation, which was based on a six-year research in the rural town of Mui Wo situated on Lantau, the biggest outlying island of Hong Kong. Prior to her PhD, Tang obtained a master’s degree from Institut d’Etudes Politiques de Paris in France, and a master’s degree in Translation and Interpretation from City University of Hong Kong. Triliterate in Chinese (Putonghua and Cantonese), English and French, she is an experienced writer, editor and translator. She is currently Lecturer at the Department of Linguistics and Modern Language Studies of The Education University of Hong Kong. Her research interests lie in cultural studies, development, globalisation and politics of translation. Her latest project investigates how the Chinese translation of Benedict Anderson’s Imagined Communities contributes to localism discourses in Hong Kong.