Securing Hong Kong’s identity in the colonial past: strategic essentialism and the umbrella movement

John Lowe*, Eileen Yuk-Ha Tsang

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

Abstract

The Umbrella Movement in Hong Kong is the most radical political movement to have taken place in the former British colony since 1967 anti-colonial demonstrations. Using empirical evidence obtained from activists who participated in the Umbrella Movement, this paper explains how Hong Kong’s youth are looking simultaneously to both the past and future to secure their identity in the colonial past even as some hope to achieve ultimate secession from Mainland rule. Racism and anti-Mainland hostilities in Hong Kong are the result of nostalgia and the insurrectionary impulse akin to the millenarianism of social movements founded on suffering and loss that continually seek the recovery of pasts of which they are now deprived. We illuminate how, to young activists, the Umbrella Movement presents hope for a future embedded in the past that remains one the territory and former colony may still aspire toward.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)556-571
JournalCritical Asian Studies
Volume50
Issue number4
Online published21 Aug 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018

Research Keywords

  • China
  • Hong Kong
  • millenarianism
  • nostalgia
  • umbrella movement

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