This article frames the debate about mui-tsai (meizai, female bondservants) in late nineteenth-century Hong Kong within changing conceptions of the colony's political, geographical and cultural position. Whereas some colonial officials saw the mui-tsai system as a national shame that challenged Britain's commitment to ending slavery, others argued that it was an archaic custom that would eventually dissolve as China modernized. The debate also showed the rise of a class of Chinese elites who had accumulated enough power to defend the mui-tsai system as a time-honoured Chinese custom, even while acknowledging that in Hong Kong they lived beyond the boundaries of Chinese sovereignty. Challenging notions of the reach of the colonial state and ...
In this brief article, we attempt to demonstrate how a historic compromise between British colonial ...
This article examines how interest groups in Hong Kong have politicised national history, an unpopul...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Even though Hong Kong remained under British control from 1842 to 1997, denizens were not modernized...
Debates between colonial administrators and anti-slavery British reformers during the interwar years...
Conference Theme: Social Pathologies and the New Politics of HealthSession 2This paper situates pros...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
While ‘good government’ has long been hailed as a defining feature of colonial Hong Kong, this paper...
The Mui Tsai system has been described as domestic servitude, a form of slavery, and in the same bre...
The (male) indigenous inhabitants of New Territories, Hong Kong, always claim that small house polic...
This paper focuses on the changing status of women in a village community in the colonial and post-c...
The 1874 and 1898 Siming gongsuo riots were two violent conflicts that occurred between a local comm...
Drawing upon different source materials, this paper examines the significance of the plague of Hong ...
This paper examines the nature and socio-political functions of Hong Kong's 'Chinese history curricu...
This article re-examines the, well documented, campaign that took place, in the nineteen twenties an...
In this brief article, we attempt to demonstrate how a historic compromise between British colonial ...
This article examines how interest groups in Hong Kong have politicised national history, an unpopul...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
Even though Hong Kong remained under British control from 1842 to 1997, denizens were not modernized...
Debates between colonial administrators and anti-slavery British reformers during the interwar years...
Conference Theme: Social Pathologies and the New Politics of HealthSession 2This paper situates pros...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
While ‘good government’ has long been hailed as a defining feature of colonial Hong Kong, this paper...
The Mui Tsai system has been described as domestic servitude, a form of slavery, and in the same bre...
The (male) indigenous inhabitants of New Territories, Hong Kong, always claim that small house polic...
This paper focuses on the changing status of women in a village community in the colonial and post-c...
The 1874 and 1898 Siming gongsuo riots were two violent conflicts that occurred between a local comm...
Drawing upon different source materials, this paper examines the significance of the plague of Hong ...
This paper examines the nature and socio-political functions of Hong Kong's 'Chinese history curricu...
This article re-examines the, well documented, campaign that took place, in the nineteen twenties an...
In this brief article, we attempt to demonstrate how a historic compromise between British colonial ...
This article examines how interest groups in Hong Kong have politicised national history, an unpopul...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...