English majors in their final year of studies carry out independent research on a topic approved by the Department and supervised by a teacher. The project is centered on a topic related to literature or applied linguistics. The project includes critical reflection on the research process and builds on undergraduate learning in the major. The Department nominates and recommends at most four excellent capstone projects each term. These exemplary capstone projects demonstrate the excellent quality of undergraduate training offered by the Department.
The Hong Kong Metamorphoses: Stories of Transformation in Hong Kong Folklores
Supervisor: Prof. Eddie Tay
This project explores the theme of metamorphosis, specifically, women who undergo transformation. Two popular tales in Hong Kong folk stories, the story of the Seven Sisters and the story of Amah Rock, are discussed alongside Ovid’s Metamorphoses. This project is commendable because it applies insights gleaned from reading the epic poem to the Hong Kong context. The paper is broad-ranging, from discussions of the relationship between folklore and community-building to the use of mythology in the works of Neil Gaiman and Margaret Atwood. The significance of the transformation motif in Hong Kong folk stories is further explored in interviews with Hong Kong residents and visitors to Amah Rock. A work like this reflects a sensibility forged by deep literary immersion alongside a love of Hong Kong culture.
To What Extent Hong Kong English Is Acceptable Viewed by Its Young Users?
Supervisor: Prof. Rowan Mackay
Through his Capstone project, Marcus has provided us with a timely picture of the status and legitimacy of Hong Kong English (HKE) for its young users. Inspired by Hansen-Edwards’ 2016 study conducted after an earlier period of social and political unrest, this study, undertaken only months after the Anti Extradition Bill Movement of 2019-20, asked ‘to what extent Hong Kong English is acceptable, viewed by its young users’. Utilising Schneider’s (2003) model for (new) language categorisation, Marcus designed a very impressive study with which to interrogate the feelings young adult HKE users hold towards their language, focusing upon their reception to its grammatical and phonological features, as well as to its more general identity-related aspects. The project was very well-designed, well-executed, well-researched, and well-presented, reflecting Marcus’s quiet diligence and thoroughness. What made the paper stand out as exemplary was the author’s clear engagement not only with the academic part of the project, but with the personal and political implications of the subject matter. The discussion on the phenomenon of linguistic schizophrenia (Kachru, 1986) and its relevance to the HK situation, was brought to life by the discussion of Marcus’s evolving relationship to his own and others’ HKE usage. This paper provides an important analysis of the state of play at a crucial stage in the timeline of Hong Kong.
Analysing Evaluation in News Articles of the National Security Law
Supervisor: Prof. Ron Darvin
For her Capstone Project, Shirley Lee examined how news platforms used language to convey different stances regarding the implementation of the National Security Law. By conducting a discourse analysis that focused on evaluative parameters such as comprehensibility, emotivity, importance and evidentiality, she shared insight on how specific language can index various ideological positions and how readers need to develop critical literacy.
Truth and Falsehood in The Faerie Queene, Book I
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Ms. Rose Cheung’s capstone project is an admirable attempt by a diligent student to come to terms with English Renaissance (specifically Protestant) conceptions of the nature of ‘good’ and ‘evil,’ and ‘truth and falsehood.’ As Ms. Cheung points out, these concepts were particularly difficult for sixteenth-century Protestants to articulate since, according to the Protestant theory of ‘double predestination’ (not accepted by Catholics or even all Protestants), the ‘reprobate’ are chosen by God before birth and therefore not defined by sin. Moreover, the Protestant approach to human ‘psychology’ meant that all people, including the ‘elect,’ are defined by sinfulness, further reducing the gap between ‘good’ and ‘evil’ people. Thus the Protestants were placed in a position where they were utterly convinced of the infinite difference between ‘good’ and ‘evil’ (as seen by the distinction between God and Satan) at the same time as they were largely unable to distinguish them in practice.
These are the conditions that Ms. Cheung articulates as characteristic of Protestants in the late sixteenth century. Ms. Cheung sensibly focuses her efforts on one particular text -- the first book of Edmund Spenser’s challenging epic, The Faerie Queene -- in order to show how these premises function in Spenser’s narrative of the Red Cross Knight. This is a figure, as Ms. Cheung explains, who believes himself to be living in a ‘medieval’ universe of knights and ladies, dragons and monsters, where good and evil are more easily distinguished. Yet the ‘allegorical’ mode of medieval literature, as Spenser conceives it, is inadequate to provide Redcrosse with meaningful learning experiences. He kills monsters, such as “Error,” but continues to make mistakes. At every stage, Ms. Cheung articulates the tremendous challenges faced by people, such as Redcrosse, who strive to be ‘ethical’ in a Protestant world. They are simply incapable of fighting the lies and deceptions of evil people, who are far more cunning than they are.
While, at times, Ms. Cheung’s analysis reiterates some older critical commonplaces about ‘good’ and ‘evil’ (about, for instance, the need for divine inspiration to distinguish the two), by approaching the issue by the means of ‘truth’ and ‘falsehood,’ she opens up more room for discussion of these topics. Perhaps Ms. Cheung’s most complex idea is that truth, for Spenser and other Protestants, cannot be discerned except by contrast to falsehood. This makes truth and falsehood two parts of the same whole and gives ‘falsehood’ value in forming that whole. Ms. Cheung also provides careful, detailed analysis of how the ethical norms of both ‘good’ and ‘evil’ characters are practically indistinguishable in this section of Spenser’s epic.
Ms. Cheung proceeds with her capstone project with the same diligence that she approaches all her scholarly work. There are relevant digressions into numerous other texts, including Hamlet and Paradise Lost, both of which Ms. Cheung has studied in her other coursework. Ms. Cheung’s ability to integrate such material is additional testimony to her ‘whole person’ development and her developing knowledge of early modern Western culture.
Supervisor: Prof. Jookyoung Jung
In her Capstone project, Minda Fan demonstrated an excellent research ability, in regards to (a) performing purposeful participant recruitment (i.e., advanced vs intermediate English speakers), (b) conducting a thorough review of relevant literature, (b) developing a structured and systematic survey, (c) conducting semi-structured interviews, and (d) using and interpreting inferential statistical analysis (i.e., ANOVA). I was deeply impressed by her inquisitive mind, commitment to her research project, time management skills, and independence as the leader of her own research project. Minda Fan, in her Capstone project, explored how L1 Cantonese speakers comprehend and appreciate English language-based jokes. She further investigated if the type of English jokes (i.e., lexical, morphological, syntactic, and phonological) and the participants’ L2 English proficiency would play as moderating factors. Based on the results from survey responses, interview protocols, and statistical analysis, Minda found that lexical and morphological jokes are easier to understand than syntactic or phonological jokes, and advanced English speakers were significantly better at understanding the jokes. Interestingly, she further found that there was no significant difference in the humour ratings (i.e., how funny they found the jokes) between the two English proficiency groups. Based on the findings, Minda draws meaningful pedagogical implications as to the need to incorporate English humour in language classrooms to enhance L2 learners’ English communicative competence. I am sure that her project can be developed into a larger-scale research project, and I can confidently say that she deserves the Exemplary Capstone Award.
Writing Migrant Domestic Workers of Hong Kong (English) Literature
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O'Sullivan
Hazel’s capstone project on the representation of domestic helpers in Hong Kong and on work written by domestic helpers in Hong Kong shines a light on one of the most pressing social issues in Hong Kong. Hazel’s project is exemplary not only because of its originality and its pressing social importance. It is also an exemplary project because of the methods employed to gain an insight into the issue, i.e. interviews and fieldwork.
Reading George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four from an Althusserian Perspective
Supervisor: Prof. Grant Hamilton
The capstone project stands as an opportunity for our students to demonstrate just how affecting the study of English language and literature can be. I don't think I have read another project submitted under this code which illustrates this fact so clearly as the piece of writing presented by Kirsten. Following a poignant self-reflection on the significance of the study of literature, Kirsten puts together a well-thought out, well-structured, and well-written extended essay on George Orwell's Nineteen Eighty-Four that does much to enrich our understanding of the novel. After focusing on a critique of the operation of the Althusserian sites of the Ideological State Apparatus and Repressive State Apparatus in Orwell's novel, Kirsten concludes by stressing the continuing importance of reading such literature today.
Supervisor: Dr. Suzanne Wong
Based on her own experience, her observations as well as the knowledge she gained as an English major, Ceci embarked on a project to look at the use of L1 gloss versus L2 context in vocabulary teaching in second language classrooms in Hong Kong. She gained a good grasp of the topic and articulated challenging and worthwhile research questions. She designed her materials meticulously and analyzed the data in a thorough and thoughtful way to yield nuanced conclusions and pedagogical suggestions that are worth our attention.
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Amanda Chan Seen Man’s capstone project as an English major is exemplary in content, purpose, and background. Amanda has been writing poetry for many years, largely “micropoetry,” with accompanying drawings. The words and images shed light on each other in unexpected ways, and producing such extremely short poems requires special skill. Amanda has published two collections of her work, Skins and Thoughts and Broken and Breathing. She is, moreover, always writing, aiming even to supplement her shorter verse with a considerable number of longer poems. For this project, Amanda and I selected some of what we felt were her best poems from the two collections and those written since; that many of these poems were written recently stresses the ongoing attentiveness Amanda is giving to her writing. Amanda’s capstone also contains an essay by her, Words and Spaces, in which Amanda discusses her poetic approaches and some writers who have influenced her. This capstone represents what Arts Faculty students can do as they move from University life into the life of the working world: namely, retain their commitment to the Arts and do their best to become ever-better artists, even under challenging social conditions.
Supervisor: Prof. Grant Hamilton
Charlotte's capstone project was a tour de force of critical thinking. Introduced to French Feminism and the difficult idea of phallogocentricism in our meetings, Charlotte was able to use the time granted to her for this independent research project to read, understand, and think dystopian literature in profoundly new ways. Her sophisticated management of such complex material surely leaves no reader in doubt that they have in their hands a truly extraordinary piece of writing.
Native Son -- A Black Murderer’s Journey to Becoming White
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O'Sullivan
I would add that the work demonstrated great innovation and originality in researching critical work on Richard Wright’s novel Native Son. Kenneth also applied his reading of racism in the novel to the situation in his own society.
Disorientating the Readers: Challenge to Our Limits of Empathy in Kazuo Ishiguro’s Never Let Me Go
Supervisor: Prof. David Huddart
Hazel started out with one idea about the relevance of the panopticon to a novel by Kazuo Ishiguro (and also, perhaps, to local society). She tested her hypothesis to its limits, adapted to the problems she faced, and ended up producing a very interesting paper which is relevant to reading novels more generally. It moves from close reading of the novel to more abstract ideas, and in both is sophisticated and engaging.
From Ancient China to Modern West: Cross-dressing in Disney's Mulan
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Ms. Choi's capstone project on the cultural significance of cross-dressing was an excellent piece of work. Using the famous Chinese tale of "Mulan," along with its adaptation into English as a film from the Walt Disney Hollywood production company, Ms. Choi first researched the nature of cross-dressing as a world-wide phenomenon in relation to both long-term and short-term practice, and in relation to male and female cross-dressing. Her general conclusions are persuasive: that short-term cross dressing is seen (for instance in Shakespeare's comedies) as an acceptable strategy, on the part of both genders, to accomplish a short-term goal; and that, in terms of long-term cross dressing, females wearing male attire [for instance in the workplace] are clearly more acceptable than the other way around. Ms. Choi took her work further by focusing it on the figure of Mulan, whose depiction reinforces the conclusions noted above, and who, in her Disney configuration, is used to make the USA nation seem superior to ancient (and by extension modern) China, which is depicted as 'backwards' in its limited range of female role model options. As Ms. Choi argues, this justifies Mulan's cross-dressing in relation to the film's presentation of China, while at the same stressing its inappropriateness in the modern USA where women can retain their 'femininity' and still succeed.
Idealism and Cynicism in Superheroes
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O'Sullivan
While it won’t be everyone’s cup of tea, Alison believes strongly in the inclusion of comics and graphic novels and superhero movies in the literature canon for English departments and I think she presents a good case in the thesis.
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Ms. Ngai's capstone project on two famous 19th century American slave narratives by Frederick Douglass and Harriet Jacobs managed to make original contributions to the study of this often-investigated genre. Ms. Ngai's larger agenda, which involved the nature of 'self-assertion' in slave narratives, covered sensible subtopics relating to the acquisition of literacy and the efforts to control one's body. The project reached a level of higher excellence by stressing the gendered distinctions between these two approaches, emphasizing to some degree, the even greater obstacles placed upon female American slaves in their efforts to achieve some level of autonomy in their lives.
The Neologism Trend in the Korean Context: Attitudes towards "Konglish"
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
Jacqueline Pok's capstone research focuses on attitudes towards Korean English (Konglish). To investigate attitudes, Jacqueline employed a mixed-method research methodology, with interviews, survey questions, and online data analysis. She is deserving of the exemplary capstone award for a number of reasons: Her literature review was thorough and expansive, and her discussion of the literature demonstrates her solid understanding of her research topic; her research questions addressed issues that have not previously been well researched; and Jacqueline’s research provides additional insights into the acceptability of new Englishes and therefore makes a good contribution to the field.
Language and Bloodline in Sarah Howe's Loop of Jade
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O'Sullivan
Angie gave a really great reading of the poet Sarah Howe. It is one of the most sensitive readings of Howe by a Hong Kong scholar that I have read. Alison also produced a good thesis on the superheroes and Marvel genre.
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
Chan Wing Ki’s Capstone project focuses on Japanese English; unlike most research on varieties of English, Chan’s focuses on more than one aspect of Japanese English – she conducts interviews, a phonological analysis of 5 speech samples, and a thorough background research on educational practices in Japan. As such, the project is ambitious but Chan is able to link the various research findings into a coherent and engaging discussion about the status of Japanese English in Japan today. As such, the project is exemplary, as the topic not only is demanding and comprehensive, but also requires a high level analytical (including phonological analysis) ability in order to pull together the various strands of research into a cogent and articulate argument. Chan has been able to do this, and therefore deserves the Exemplary Capstone Award for this project.
Hedging Devices in Negatively-polite Spoken Discourse of Hong Kong Secondary School Students
Supervisor: Dr. Suzanne Wong
The project examines the use of hedging devices (such as “I guess,” “well” and “I am afraid that”) in the oral discourse of Hong Kong secondary school students and demonstrates that explicit instruction is effective in increasing the use of hedging devices to enhance pragmatic competence.
The student has shown a solid grasp of the subject-matter and has identified a worthwhile research gap in the field to fill. The research questions are clearly articulated, and the teaching intervention was conducted professionally. The methodology is sound, and the data collected is analyzed meticulously. The report not only sheds light on the underuse of hedging devices in Hong Kong secondary school students’ oral output but also argues convincingly for the effectiveness of pedagogical intervention in heightening students’ awareness and application of hedging devices for negative politeness.
Supervisor: Prof. Evelyn Chan
Stephanie Leung's capstone project examines the idea of the "uncanny" in the Hong Kong writer Quanan Shum's collection of short stories, showing how the notion maps onto the physical, historical, social, and political landscape of Hong Kong in Shum's works. Both the topic of the capstone project and Stephanie's approach are original, combining Stephanie's knowledge of the particular context of Hong Kong, effective use of reference material on Hong Kong's socioeconomics, and in-depth literary analysis. Stephanie's competent close reading of the texts, the high level of critical analysis she conducts, and the keen and subtle insights she derives, make this capstone project exemplary.
Exploring Medieval Female Archetypes in Game of Thrones
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Candy Ho’s capstone project on Medieval influences on the representation of women in the popular TV show, Game of Thrones, provides a useful model of what undergraduate English majors can achieve when exploring literary history. Ms. Ho takes, for her paper topic, three archetypes of women in the Middle Ages (the warrior woman, the evil queen/mother, and the ‘female rebel’) and explores how each type is presented in Game of Thrones. More impressively, Ms. Ho charts the history of each archetype with a great deal of specificity, citing numerous examples from antiquity to the Middle Ages and into the European Renaissance. The scope of the project is well-suited to a 25-30 page essay and the overall presentation, in terms of writing and organization, is exemplary. The overall effect of the project is to convey a strong sense of continuity in literary history, as well as gesturing towards new representations of women in contemporary media.
Incidental L2 Vocabulary Acquisition in Poem Comprehension by Hong Kong Advanced Learners of English
Supervisor: Prof. Helen Zhao
I recommend Ms Leung Tsz Ching Candy for the Exemplary Capstone Project award. Candy addresses a classic topic in second language acquisition research, i.e., how learners acquire new words. She approaches this question from a unique angle: how learners acquire new words in poems. Almost all of our undergraduates in the Department, who take various English literature courses, have to deal with this linguistic problem at some point as a second language reader of English literary texts. In her capstone project, Candy used the think-aloud technique, a commonly adopted instrument in applied linguistics research, and asked her participants to verbalise their ongoing thoughts while reading a carefully selected poem written by an Irish poet and playwright Oscar Wilde. She did detailed qualitative analyses of the types of knowledge and strategies that learners made use of during think-aloud interpretations of target unknown words in the poem. The depth of the data analyses is rarely seen among undergraduate work. The research is innovative and revealing. It is truly a wonderful synthesis of Candy’s undergraduate studies of English literature and applied linguistics in the Department.
Supervisor: Prof. Eddie Tay
This is a socio-literary project on Hong Kong identity. It looks at how Hong Kong's history continues to influence the identity of Hong Kong people. It also examines literary works by Leung Ping-kwan, Louise Ho, Tammy Ho and Xu Xi, looking at moments when the writing engages with the question of identity. It also describes how the different generations of Hong Kong people think about their identity. The final argument, that the complexity (and inevitable conflicts that result) of Hong Kong's multiple identities should be celebrated is an authentic and heartfelt reaction to the polarized contemporary political landscape.
Investigation into speech performances of Hong Kong ESL learners at tertiary education level
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
I would like to nominate Yin Chong Pang for the Exemplary Capstone award. His project, Investigation into Speech Performances of Hong Kong ESL Learners at Tertiary Education Level was excellent both in research design as well as analysis and interpretation of results. What sets the project apart from others is the careful and insightful analysis and interpretation of the data in light of current research on speech processing. Ying Chong Pang’s work is on par with that expected of MA/MPhil students in applied linguistics. He is very deserving of this award.
Unveiling the Music in Irish Poetry
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O’Sullivan
The essay is entitled “Unveiling the Music in Irish Poetry”. It is highly original, interdisciplinary and also one of the best capstone projects I have read. The writing is graduate level and the research is wide-ranging. In all honesty, I believe the essay would very easily make a very worthwhile MA or even Mphil thesis topic. The idea to relate literature to music at the level of verse and poetic structure is also an important one for the department.
Melancholy across the Eras of Romanticism and Modernism: the Cases of John Keats and Franz Kafka
Supervisor: Prof. Li Ou
This is an original research project on two apparently very different writers, Keats and Kafka, brought together by the idea of melancholy. The project traces the history of the idea of melancholy and considers the relevance of melancholy to the two authors, in their personal lives and writings. The project analyses the sources of the two authors’ melancholy, their different responses to it, and finally enquires whether they have managed to transcend it, especially through creative writing. The conclusion on Keats’s embrace of melancholy and Kafka’s vain grappling with it then broadens up to the different tenors of the Romantic and Modernist age, which gives the project a further scope. The reading of the text is keenly insightful and the critical analysis dexterous. The whole project stands out in its originality, in-depth reading, and the daring scope it attempts at.
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
I’d like to nominate Alison Ng, for her project ‘A comparison of early English consonant development between North American and British children.’ Alison’s project had a unique focus, one that has been underexplored in the literature on child phonological acquisition. Her study is therefore both original and significant. Alison carried out her project through a careful phonological analysis of a large amount of child language, which both requires expertise and precision. It is also extremely time-consuming. Her careful and considered analysis of the data provided Alison with interesting findings, which she interpreted against the available literature. In all tasks – project development, data collection and analysis, and project write up – Alison displayed great maturity in her research engagement. Her work is excellent.
History and Class Consciousness in Post-colonial Hong Kong writings in English
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O’Sullivan
I feel that Canis’s presentation and essay are hugely important for Hong Kong Studies. The essay essentially questions why very little Hong Kong literature in English examines the issue of class in Hong Kong. Class is an important element and theme in writing in the UK, Ireland and the US, however, writing in English in Hong Kong, according to Canis, does not cover class, what she feels should be an important concern for writers in Hong Kong especially when social inequality is on the rise in Hong Kong. Canis also makes very use of Marxist scholars such as Lukacs and Eagleton in her paper and I feel this is quite an original use of these critics in relation to Hong Kong writing in English. I also think that the interview material that Canis chose to use in the essay is very original and shows that literature students are also very eager to incorporate other forms of research into their work.
Supervisor: Prof. Michael O’Sullivan
The essay by Heather on feminism and identity in Woolf and on Xi Xi’s “Mourning Over the Breast” was, I felt, a deeply moving and important essay. It is written in a style that demonstrates for me that Heather has clearly taken on board the teachings and writings of feminist writers. I also feel it is well –written and that it demonstrates well how our students can learn to relate important ways of reading texts to events in their own lives.
“of which…” vs. “(which)… of.” – A Corpus-based Study of Pied-piping Usage in Hong Kong English
Supervisor: Prof. Gerald Nelson
This research project addresses a fairly arcane topic in English grammar, namely, the pied-piping construction (eg. the job for which I applied), in contrast with the stranded preposition construction (the job I applied for). The methodology, too, is unusual at undergraduate level, since it uses corpus data and methods to examine the use of these constructions among Hong Kong speakers, across a variety of spoken and written genres. Although Milton has had no formal training in corpus-based methods, the resulting research is quite exceptional at every level. Milton analysed a very large amount of language data with meticulous care, and he applied some very sophisticated statistical measures to the analysis of the results. The discussion of those results shows an unusual level of awareness of the many variables that affect language performance. I was particularly impressed when Milton – without any prompting from me – clearly distinguished between the pied-piping construction and another construction that looks superficially similar to it (eg. the land, some of which was sold). Milton refers to this is as ‘pseudo-pied-piping’, and he quite correctly excluded it from his analysis. That level of discrimination among grammatical forms is vanishingly rare at undergraduate level. The final research report is by far the best I have supervised, and is far better than many of the reports I receive from students taking our MA course in Corpus Linguistics. Indeed, I have seen some published reports of corpus-based research that show none of the sophistication of Milton’s work.
A Queer Writing in Crevasse: Spectrality, Subjectivation, Subversiveness
Supervisor: Prof. Julian Lamb
Felix Lo’s capstone essay offered a very sophisticated analysis of Nicholas Wong’s recent collection of poems, Crevasse. Wong is a gay Hong Kong poet, and though the collection is not explicitly gay, its themes and formal experimentation are sensitively analysed by Felix, whose approach was heavily influenced by queer theory. Felix argued that queerness is always inevitably spectral and elusive, and to define Wong’s collection as “queer” not only potentially curtails its relevance, but is fundamentally to misunderstand what queerness is.
Supervisor: Prof.Jane Jackson
I would like to recommend Sally Leung Yuen Sze for the capstone award. She worked very well throughout the semester (enthusiastically!) and throughout her project she engaged in critical reflection on past, present, and future elements. Her project, which is entitled ‘Language Identity Exploration through my Study Abroad Poems: An introspective, critical account of my year abroad’, fits with the aims of the capstone course. During the semester, she experienced significant personal growth as she reflected on her self-identities, coursework, and international experience. Her study incorporates creative literary works (poems she wrote that illustrate her study abroad experience and unique developmental trajectory/identity expansion) and applied linguistics analysis (a critical investigation of language and identity elements in relation to relevant theories). Her report is both descriptive and analytical and demonstrates growth in self-awareness and deep reflection. In particular, she reflected on the impact of her UG studies/study abroad experience on her future career as an English language teacher and identified personal strengths as well as gaps in her preparation. Sally has applied to join the postgraduate Diploma in Education (PGDE) after graduation and her reflective work has helped prepare her for this. In sum, she was actively engaged in this project throughout the semester and she produced very good work (presentation and written report).
Supervisor: Prof. Eli Park Sorensen
Ashley wrote a sophisticated capstone thesis on the complexities of Chinese-American identity, creating a subtle theoretical framework around Maxine Hong Kingston’s The Woman Warrior and Gish Jen’s Mona in the Promised Land. Working through a wide range of identity-related concepts — such as hybridity, mimicry, the liminal, double-consciousness and performativity — Ashley managed to combine this bold theoretical approach with an authoritative and passionate reading of the literary texts. Her discussion of the delicate balance between socio-cultural influence and individual creativity linked particularly well with the chosen texts. Lastly, Ashley brought her ideas into a broader discussion of diversity and identity-formation in today’s society, thus stressing the ongoing relevance of literary thought.
The Pedagogical Potential of Code Switching in ESL Classrooms
Supervisor: Prof.Derek Chan
Renee Lee studied how alternating language use, or code switching (CS), could benefit or hinder English language education in local secondary classrooms. Although CS seems inevitable in many language contact situations, as psycho- and socio-linguistic studies have robustly attested, the Education Bureau discourages or even prohibits CS in the official Medium of Instruction (MOI) policy. Seeing the contested issues involved, Renee strategically triangulated classroom observation and survey data to gain a deeper insight into the myths and realities surrounding CS. The entire capstone project was meticulously designed and implemented. Renee even completed her target milestones ahead of schedule. I was impressed, once and again, when Renee shared her interesting novel findings. CS is a well-received pedagogical tool, especially in domains of grammar acquisition and meaning negotiation, by learners and teachers alike. Teachers especially welcome CS, seeing it as an affective bridge between teachers and learners who share the same language background. Renee called for more research into this untapped potential of CS, which has far-reaching implications to pedagogy and policy. Renee’s performance in this capstone project, from beginning to end, is stellar.
Paradoxes and Contradictions in Byron’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage
Supervisor: Prof. Simon Haines
Helen’s capstone essay was an intelligent synthesis of two very different kinds of thinking. She had to tackle the complex logical categories of paradox and contradiction, and show she understood them, before applying them to the unlikely material of two of the most famous and influential (and long) Romantic poems: Byron’s Childe Harold’s Pilgrimage and Don Juan. The result is really a most original approach to tone and personality in poetry. One wouldn’t normally think of Byron’s poetry as containing tensions of quite this kind, and yet Helen was able to show that they are to be found in many places, including quite unlikely ones. She also shows that there may be more continuity than is commonly thought between the two works, famously seen as representing completely different modes of self. I would not usually expect writing of such intellectual sophistication from a student at this level. Finally, Helen has been able to reflect thoughtfully on her work and on the significance of poetry in general.
Pro-American Values in Hollywood Movie Musicals
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Jamie Lam’s capstone project accomplishes the goals of this activity well. Focusing on four popular American musicals, three of them set in foreign nations (The Sound of Music, Evita, and Les Misérables) and one set in the USA (Annie), this project explores the ways that American identity is forged through popular art. This project demonstrated a rich knowledge of twentieth-century American and European history (American ‘democracy’ versus Nazism, communism, and oligarchy) and, even more impressively, a knowledge of the sorts of character traits that American popular culture encourages in the people – such as a yearning for upward mobility, an obedience yet suspicion of the law, and a distaste for aristocracy and demagoguery. In addition, Jamie’s project conveyed her wide-ranging affection for American musicals and her expertise in the genre; the complex ideas are integrated with expressive, detailed depictions of the way musical scenes are presented in films to subtly convey ideological values.
Acquisition of Present Perfect by Advanced Cantonese Learners of English
Supervisor: Prof. Derek H. L. Chan
Joanna Siu examined the usage patterns of English present perfect — a grammar focus that poses immense theoretical and pedagogical challenges within the domain of tense and aspect — among advanced English learners from Hong Kong. Joanna’s ingenuity in coming up with simple and effective tasks, namely translation and narrative story telling with a psycholinguistic twist, far exceeded my expectation. This endeavour would have required a solid understanding of the vast literature, which may take years to develop. Yet Joanna mastered it within a span of three months. The transformation, from a complete novice to a budding expert, is illuminating. Her project, though small in scale, yields new findings that hold important theoretical and practical implications to second language acquisition at large. Her co-authored abstract has been accepted by a leading international conference on tense, aspect, and modality in L2, scheduled to take place at the University of York, UK, on 20th and 21st June 2016. This is due recognition of Joanna’s sharp intellectual insights and commitment to applied language issues.
The Phonological Aspect of Hong Kong English and Intelligibility
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
Jane’s capstone topic – the intelligibility of Hong Kong English – is to some extent quite difficult. Despite this, she was able to read critically and analyze, summarize, and synthesize the findings of a number of journal articles about Hong Kong English. She used them to construct a data collection survey that she gave to ten teachers of English at varying levels (primary, secondary, tertiary). After collecting her own data, she in turn compared her data against the synthesis from her readings, in order to better understand which features of HKE should be focused on in terms of instruction at the three levels of English education in Hong Kong. Her project was also linked directly to her own vocational goal of becoming a speech therapist in Hong Kong. A very impressive project for an undergraduate student!
Supervisor: Prof. Eddie Tay
SUM Acca Penelope Kwai Ching’s creative project is very successful in the way it puts together its theoretical, critical, activist and poetic agenda. It was inspired by _The Vagina Monologues_ by Eve Ensler, a play consisting of monologues that explore what it means to be a woman. This project which consists of poems likewise uses the vagina as a symbol, allowing for the exploration of the female self. The accompanying essay is especially insightful because it discusses the creative process and at the same time, engage with what it means for a poet with an activist agenda to speak on behalf of others.
Acquisition of Formulaic Expressions in English Legal Contracts and Agreements
Supervisor: Prof. Helen Zhao
Meya chose to work on a very unique topic for her capstone project: second language acquisition of formulaic language in English legal contracts. It’s a particularly meaningful topic for many extremely advanced learners of English in Hong Kong who aspire to become a lawyer for their future career. Legal contracts and agreements are an important genre of legal documents. There are many formulaic chunks that are unique to contracts, such as “in witness whereof” and “remain in full force and effect”, which seldom appear in daily communication outside the legal register. These formulaic expressions define the genre-specific features of contracts, and in some way, the identity of this particular speech community. It’s already a challenge for native speakers to acquire these social conventions. For second language learners, the demand is huge. The biggest contribution of Meya’s capstone project was to identify these unique formulaic expressions by using methods of corpus linguistics. It was impressive for an undergraduate student to implement this corpus-based study. It can easily be developed into a study of a much larger scale that has important values for students who wish to join the law society.
The Corporation in Joseph Conrad’s Nostromo
Supervisor: Prof. Jason Gleckman
Cherry Ma’s ENGE4700 final project is an extensive (27 page) exploration of Joseph Conrad’s 1904 novel, Nostromo. Cherry’s focus is on the concept of the ‘corporation,’ which she sees as the dominant model used by the European-influenced elite of Conrad’s fictitious South American nation of Costaguana in their efforts to improve the economic and political conditions of an emerging regional power. Cherry’s analysis of the novel shows how its leading characters all view the process of political change in an optimistic manner, privileging ideas of ‘science,’ ‘progress,’ and ‘materialism’ which will ultimately generate investment, economic growth, and stable political institutions. Cherry’s most exciting idea is how this model of national growth is premised not only on a view of the nation as a ‘corporation’ – a well-organized administrative bureaucracy dedicated to economic expansion – but on a view of the corporate nation as a ‘person,’ a legal fiction that has its origin in the middle ages and continues, even today, to exert a great influence in determining the legal rights and duties of large and powerful institutions. In Cherry’s analysis, the efforts in the novel on the part of the Costaguanans, and their European financers, to construct the nation using a corporate model, are unsuccessful for the same reasons that envisioning a corporation as a person are problematic in the modern world. Instead of making a corporation more responsible and ‘human’ in its aims, the idea of ‘corporate personhood’ instead functions as an ideological mystification, providing corporations with the ‘rights’ of a person but without any spiritual component. As a result, the desperate efforts of the corporate ‘stakeholders’ to identify their values with an abstraction to which they have assigned human identity, can only result in failure – a process that Cherry meticulously analyzes in the course of her first-rate capstone project.
Supervisor: Prof. Jette Hansen Edwards
Katrina went above and beyond the expectations of an undergraduate level capstone project in both the depth and range of her understanding of her research area, construction and operationalization of her research questions into an appropriate methodology, and analysis and interpretation of her data. Her final project was MPhil level work and far exceeded the other projects presented on the evening of her final capstone presentation. An extremely high caliber effort, deserving not only of the A that it was awarded, but also of an award of ‘Exemplary Capstone Project.’