Reorienting Hong Kong's resistance : leftism, decoloniality, and internationalism

e-böcker
Springer Singapore Pte. Limited
2022
EISBN 9789811646591
Intro.
Foreword.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Locating the Decolonial Left.
Contents.
Notes on Contributors.
List of Figures.
List of Tables.
Grounding the Movement.
This Is Not Restoration: Notes on a Protest Slogan.
Preface.
AÂ Brief History.
Meanings of the Slogan.
The Ideological Retreat of the Local Left.
Local Plight, Global Phenomenon.
References.
Self-Determination Through Struggle.
Between Independent Politics and the Early Pro-democracy Movement.
Localism's Contradictions.
Self-Determination Through Coalition.
References.
How to Abolish the Hong Kong Police.
The Hong Kong Police's Job Is to Protect the Establishment.
Abolition Means Democracy.
Internationalist Abolitionism-Learning from Each Other.
Challenging Assumptions of Prosecutorial Justice.
Making Abolition Possible.
From Activism to Abolition.
Abolition in Hong Kong Is Now.
References.
The Dilemma of the New Union Movement.
The Birth of the New Union Movement.
New Union Movement: Its Challenges.
The Potential of Linking Economic and "Political" Grievances.
What Should Be the Strategies Going Forward?.
References.
Decolonizing Protest Suicide: Performing Life in Hong Kong.
A Liminal State Between Life and Death.
Death Against Laam Chau.
Decolonizing the Necropolitics of Suicide.
References.
Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation: Hong Kong's Unfinished Struggle.
Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation.
Hong Kong After 1997: Decolonization Lite.
Toward Practices of Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation.
References.
Material Life.
Between Liberalism and Nationalism: Hong Kong's Anti-ELAB Protests and the Right to the City.
Neoliberal Financialization of Hong Kong's Urban Space.
The Right to Hong Kong.
An Anti-Capitalist Identity?.
References.
Policing Territory: The Yet-to-be Unsettled Space of the Property-Sovereignty Nexus.
The Making of the Nexus in the Colonial Context.
Entrenching and Enacting the Nexus in Hong Kong Under Chinese Sovereignty.
Defense.
Discrimination.
Differentiation.
Coda: Buying Bricks? Throwing Bricks?.
References.
To Become Something More: Decolonial and Pedagogical Village Encounters.
The Grammar of Coloniality.
Convivial Resistance Amidst Eviction.
Connecting Land Resistance Movements.
References.
Decolonizing Hong Kong Television: Decolonial Vernaculars and the History of RTHK.
De-westernizing and Decolonizing Television History.
The Colonial Roots of RTHK and Decolonial Vernaculars.
Colonial Censorship and Decolonial Reflection in Ann Hui's Bridge (1978).
TV Parody and Headliner (1989-2020).
Conclusion: The Afterlives of Decolonial Vernaculars.
References.
Awakening Christianity as a Decolonial Ally: Church Resistance in the 2019 Anti-extradition Bill Protests.
The Concept of Decoloniality.
The Contractual Relationship Between the Church and State.
Christianity, Decoloniality, and the Future of Hong Kong.
References.
Midnight Blue: Notes on Sex Work in Hong Kong.
Introduction.
The Predicament of Local Sex Workers in Hong Kong.
The Circumstances of Migrant Sex Workers.
Tensions Between Local and Migrant Sex Workers.
Sex Workers and Hong Kong's Political Environment.
Hopes for a Sex Work Equality Movement in Hong Kong.
References.
migrants solidarity committee, autonomous 8a: Notes on Migrant Domestic Care Work in the Age of COVID-19.
Editor's Preface by JN Chien.
Care Work Interview Series During the Pandemic.
Part 1: Stories of Carers' Lives.
Hands Scalded Working for a Wealthy Family.
Po Po: The Authority of Housekeeping.
Another Daughter.
Part 2: Mobilizing Care Work.
Written from the Perspective of a misocom member.
Twenty Years Working in Hong Kong.
Community Organizing in the Time of an Epidemic.
References.
Internationalism from Below.
The "Hong Kong Card": Against the New Cold War.
Seeing Beyond the Binary.
Global Capitalist Competition-Collaboration.
The "China Card".
From Catastrophe to Rapprochement.
The Beginning of US-Hong Kong Integration.
References.
From the Heartland to Hong Kong: The Case for Global Abolition.
Cut from the Same Cloth.
Protecting Whose Peace Today?.
Our Need for Internationalism.
Abolition Unfinished, Across Borders.
References.
Moving Beyond Projection: Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the China Factor.
Today Hong Kong, Tomorrow Taiwan?.
Yesterday's Taiwan, Today's Hong Kong?.
Space as an Obstacle to Building Power Between Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Post-COVID Futures for Solidarity Between Taiwan and Hong Kong.
A New Era of Repression, New Avenues for Connection.
References.
Solidarity with Filipino Domestic Workers Across the Fissures of Empire.
Hong Kong's Call for International Support.
The Political Dismissal of Migrant Domestic Workers.
Economic Troubles in the Philippines.
The Delusion of Democracy.
The Emergence of Migrant Workers.
Migrant Workers Face a No-Win Situation in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong's International Responsibilities.
References.
An Island's Dignity in Struggle: Jeju Island and Hong Kong in Dialogue.
Reignite Press Preface.
From Opposing the Naval Base to Challenging Regional Military Expansion.
The Strategic Location of South Korea and the Responsibility of "Small States".
How Our Suffering Is Interconnected.
The Limits of Nationalism.
The Irony of Siding with Those in Power.
References.
Index.
This book brings together writing from activists and scholars that examine leftist and decolonial forms of resistance that have emerged from Hong Kong's contemporary era of protests. Practices such as labor unionism, police abolition, land justice struggles, and other radical expressions of self-governance may not explicitly operate under the banners of leftism and decoloniality. Nevertheless, examining them within these frameworks uncovers historical, transnational, and prefigurative sightlines that can help to contextualize and interpret their impact for Hong Kong's political future. This collection offers insights not only into Hong Kong's local struggles, but their interconnectedness with global movements as the city remains on the frontlines of international politics--
Foreword.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Locating the Decolonial Left.
Contents.
Notes on Contributors.
List of Figures.
List of Tables.
Grounding the Movement.
This Is Not Restoration: Notes on a Protest Slogan.
Preface.
AÂ Brief History.
Meanings of the Slogan.
The Ideological Retreat of the Local Left.
Local Plight, Global Phenomenon.
References.
Self-Determination Through Struggle.
Between Independent Politics and the Early Pro-democracy Movement.
Localism's Contradictions.
Self-Determination Through Coalition.
References.
How to Abolish the Hong Kong Police.
The Hong Kong Police's Job Is to Protect the Establishment.
Abolition Means Democracy.
Internationalist Abolitionism-Learning from Each Other.
Challenging Assumptions of Prosecutorial Justice.
Making Abolition Possible.
From Activism to Abolition.
Abolition in Hong Kong Is Now.
References.
The Dilemma of the New Union Movement.
The Birth of the New Union Movement.
New Union Movement: Its Challenges.
The Potential of Linking Economic and "Political" Grievances.
What Should Be the Strategies Going Forward?.
References.
Decolonizing Protest Suicide: Performing Life in Hong Kong.
A Liminal State Between Life and Death.
Death Against Laam Chau.
Decolonizing the Necropolitics of Suicide.
References.
Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation: Hong Kong's Unfinished Struggle.
Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation.
Hong Kong After 1997: Decolonization Lite.
Toward Practices of Decolonization as Egalitarian Transformation.
References.
Material Life.
Between Liberalism and Nationalism: Hong Kong's Anti-ELAB Protests and the Right to the City.
Neoliberal Financialization of Hong Kong's Urban Space.
The Right to Hong Kong.
An Anti-Capitalist Identity?.
References.
Policing Territory: The Yet-to-be Unsettled Space of the Property-Sovereignty Nexus.
The Making of the Nexus in the Colonial Context.
Entrenching and Enacting the Nexus in Hong Kong Under Chinese Sovereignty.
Defense.
Discrimination.
Differentiation.
Coda: Buying Bricks? Throwing Bricks?.
References.
To Become Something More: Decolonial and Pedagogical Village Encounters.
The Grammar of Coloniality.
Convivial Resistance Amidst Eviction.
Connecting Land Resistance Movements.
References.
Decolonizing Hong Kong Television: Decolonial Vernaculars and the History of RTHK.
De-westernizing and Decolonizing Television History.
The Colonial Roots of RTHK and Decolonial Vernaculars.
Colonial Censorship and Decolonial Reflection in Ann Hui's Bridge (1978).
TV Parody and Headliner (1989-2020).
Conclusion: The Afterlives of Decolonial Vernaculars.
References.
Awakening Christianity as a Decolonial Ally: Church Resistance in the 2019 Anti-extradition Bill Protests.
The Concept of Decoloniality.
The Contractual Relationship Between the Church and State.
Christianity, Decoloniality, and the Future of Hong Kong.
References.
Midnight Blue: Notes on Sex Work in Hong Kong.
Introduction.
The Predicament of Local Sex Workers in Hong Kong.
The Circumstances of Migrant Sex Workers.
Tensions Between Local and Migrant Sex Workers.
Sex Workers and Hong Kong's Political Environment.
Hopes for a Sex Work Equality Movement in Hong Kong.
References.
migrants solidarity committee, autonomous 8a: Notes on Migrant Domestic Care Work in the Age of COVID-19.
Editor's Preface by JN Chien.
Care Work Interview Series During the Pandemic.
Part 1: Stories of Carers' Lives.
Hands Scalded Working for a Wealthy Family.
Po Po: The Authority of Housekeeping.
Another Daughter.
Part 2: Mobilizing Care Work.
Written from the Perspective of a misocom member.
Twenty Years Working in Hong Kong.
Community Organizing in the Time of an Epidemic.
References.
Internationalism from Below.
The "Hong Kong Card": Against the New Cold War.
Seeing Beyond the Binary.
Global Capitalist Competition-Collaboration.
The "China Card".
From Catastrophe to Rapprochement.
The Beginning of US-Hong Kong Integration.
References.
From the Heartland to Hong Kong: The Case for Global Abolition.
Cut from the Same Cloth.
Protecting Whose Peace Today?.
Our Need for Internationalism.
Abolition Unfinished, Across Borders.
References.
Moving Beyond Projection: Hong Kong, Taiwan, and the China Factor.
Today Hong Kong, Tomorrow Taiwan?.
Yesterday's Taiwan, Today's Hong Kong?.
Space as an Obstacle to Building Power Between Taiwan and Hong Kong.
Post-COVID Futures for Solidarity Between Taiwan and Hong Kong.
A New Era of Repression, New Avenues for Connection.
References.
Solidarity with Filipino Domestic Workers Across the Fissures of Empire.
Hong Kong's Call for International Support.
The Political Dismissal of Migrant Domestic Workers.
Economic Troubles in the Philippines.
The Delusion of Democracy.
The Emergence of Migrant Workers.
Migrant Workers Face a No-Win Situation in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong's International Responsibilities.
References.
An Island's Dignity in Struggle: Jeju Island and Hong Kong in Dialogue.
Reignite Press Preface.
From Opposing the Naval Base to Challenging Regional Military Expansion.
The Strategic Location of South Korea and the Responsibility of "Small States".
How Our Suffering Is Interconnected.
The Limits of Nationalism.
The Irony of Siding with Those in Power.
References.
Index.
This book brings together writing from activists and scholars that examine leftist and decolonial forms of resistance that have emerged from Hong Kong's contemporary era of protests. Practices such as labor unionism, police abolition, land justice struggles, and other radical expressions of self-governance may not explicitly operate under the banners of leftism and decoloniality. Nevertheless, examining them within these frameworks uncovers historical, transnational, and prefigurative sightlines that can help to contextualize and interpret their impact for Hong Kong's political future. This collection offers insights not only into Hong Kong's local struggles, but their interconnectedness with global movements as the city remains on the frontlines of international politics--
