'The typical Chinese woman is lightly built, her hips are narrow, the breasts very flat, and the pubic hair scanty, or even entirely absent. She is, therefore, by nature quite in keeping with the present day fashion of slimming.' This was how Richard Tottenham, an Irish obstetrician and the first Professor of Obstetrics (1924-35) at the University of Hong Kong (HKU), described his patients in interwar Hong Kong. To give his readers a clearer idea, he continued, 'Although the Chinese women have flat breasts, there is usually plenty of milk for the infant; which suggests that the large flabby breasts, seen typically in the women of Southern European races have little advantage from a nursing point of view.' This lengthy quote, ladled in a dos...
Background: The nursing profession in Canada has been historically rooted in exclusive elements of ...
China's nation-building agenda in the early twentieth century embraced the causes of women's rights ...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
In the late nineteenth century, the level of Chinese infant mortality in Hong Kong became a matter ...
Conference Theme: Social Pathologies and the New Politics of HealthSession 2This paper situates pros...
Taking into account of the colonial nature of modern Hong Kong, this author is to examine how the TW...
From the mid-1700s through the late 1830s, Britons in China were confined to a tiny section of the c...
Fear for the survival of the British constitution was the main concern of British medical practition...
This thesis comparatively assesses the nature of health, space, and culture in colonial Hong Kong an...
i860. The first Chinese child was born in Canada in 1861. These are some of the his-torical statisti...
Even though Hong Kong remained under British control from 1842 to 1997, denizens were not modernized...
© 1994 Gaik Hoon NgThe persistent image of the uncontextualised 'Chinese woman' in much writing abou...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
This paper looks at portrayals of European life in Hong Kong during the late nineteenth and early t...
Identifying the family of Sir Robert Ho Tung (1862-1956) as a distinct entrepreneurial family in Hon...
Background: The nursing profession in Canada has been historically rooted in exclusive elements of ...
China's nation-building agenda in the early twentieth century embraced the causes of women's rights ...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...
In the late nineteenth century, the level of Chinese infant mortality in Hong Kong became a matter ...
Conference Theme: Social Pathologies and the New Politics of HealthSession 2This paper situates pros...
Taking into account of the colonial nature of modern Hong Kong, this author is to examine how the TW...
From the mid-1700s through the late 1830s, Britons in China were confined to a tiny section of the c...
Fear for the survival of the British constitution was the main concern of British medical practition...
This thesis comparatively assesses the nature of health, space, and culture in colonial Hong Kong an...
i860. The first Chinese child was born in Canada in 1861. These are some of the his-torical statisti...
Even though Hong Kong remained under British control from 1842 to 1997, denizens were not modernized...
© 1994 Gaik Hoon NgThe persistent image of the uncontextualised 'Chinese woman' in much writing abou...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis explores the relationship between colonial gover...
This paper looks at portrayals of European life in Hong Kong during the late nineteenth and early t...
Identifying the family of Sir Robert Ho Tung (1862-1956) as a distinct entrepreneurial family in Hon...
Background: The nursing profession in Canada has been historically rooted in exclusive elements of ...
China's nation-building agenda in the early twentieth century embraced the causes of women's rights ...
This dissertation contrasts Hong Kong’s and the International Settlement’s management of malaria and...