Dr. Katon LEE of the College of International Education, Hong Kong Baptist University, was invited by the Department to deliver a lecture entitled “Transnational Hong Kong: Fashioning Human, Cultural and Material Flows, 1950-1970” on 19 November 2020.
Dr. LEE started the seminar by defining 3 groups of workers in the Hong Kong tailoring industry: Cantonese tailors, Shanghainese tailors and Hong Kong businessmen who owned tailor shops. Tailors did craftworks at workshops, while businessmen took care of sales and customer services at tailor shops. In early post-war Hong Kong, Chinese tailors established its tailoring communities called “Kaibu” and “Hangjia”. Because of their higher income compared with the workers of other industries, tailors were regarded as an undiscovered profession. In 1959, the first Hong Kong tailor, Mr. James LAU, entered the American market by running his first tailor shop in New York and changed the commercial practice of tailoring industry. Given the growing popularity of Hong Kong craftsmanship in the West, more Hong Kong tailors were attracted to America. Tailor shops became a transnational contact zone for Chinese tailors in America to meet and interact, and connect with Chinese diasporic communities under the title of “Hong Kong tailors”. This zone facilitated flows of people, culture, and materiality across the political borders. Dr. LEE’s study explores the role of Hong Kong in engaging with the outside world and re-understanding colonial Hong Kong from a transnational lens. At last, Dr. LEE ended the seminar with the theme of “Looking into Hong Kong, and beyond.”
Prof. CHING May Bo of the Department of Chinese and History, City University of Hong Kong, was invited by the Department to deliver a lecture entitled “Reading Trivialities: What Working Notes and Language Books Could Tell Us about China’s Long Eighteenth Century” on 20 November 2020.
Prof. PUK Wing Kin delivered a lecture entitled “Institution, History, Game: The Secret of Shengguantu” on 21 November 2020. Prof. PUK introduced the historical origin, evolution, and game rules of “Shengguantu” (the Table of Bureaucratic Promotion), an ancient Chinese board game, and its role in Sino-Western cultural exchanges. Before the end of the lecture, Prof. PUK played “Shengguantu” with audiences and answered the related questions.
Presenter | Topic | Language |
ZOU Yuqi | 漢代銅鏡區域流通與生產:以關中和古荊州為中心 | Putonghua |
GUO Yejia | 「苦女」成「典範」:政治動員與風俗改良下的惠安女性 (1930s-1960s) | Putonghua |
ZHAN Jingyu | 新生活的同調:廣東政府的女性塑造 | Putonghua |
CHEUNG Shin Yee | 從出土絲織文物看兩漢絲織業 | Cantonese |
WU Yixuan | 出土文獻所見秦漢的巫術知識與巫術儀式 | Putonghua |
LAU Tsz Kwan | 文武殊塗:漢末三國的文武之爭 | Cantonese |
LEE Wai Ho | 荊州西陵——江陵軍區與軍鎮督 | Cantonese |
For enquiry, please call 3943 7448.
Date: | 4 December 2020 (Friday) |
Time: | 4:30pm-6:15pm |
Venue: | Conducted online via Zoom |
Topic: | The Early Globalization of Iron and the Spread of Iron Technology in Ancient East Asia |
Speaker: | Prof. LAM Weng Cheong |
Language: | English |
Registration: | Pre-registration is required, please email to hisdiv@cuhk.edu.hk |
Enquiry: | 3943 8541 |
Orgainsers: Department of History, CUHK; M.A. Programme in Comparative and Public History, Department of History, CUHK
For teachers and students who have information to share with the Department,
please email your articles in both Chinese and English to chanfiona@cuhk.edu.hk by 4:00pm every Monday.