香港的船民与海洋文物:渔光泉(渔灯村)上岸

IF 2 1区 社会学 0 HUMANITIES, MULTIDISCIPLINARY International Journal of Heritage Studies Pub Date : 2023-08-22 DOI:10.1080/13527258.2023.2244918
Lachlan B. Barber, Po-Yin Stephanie Chung
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引用次数: 0

摘要

香港的文化遗产和旅游产品包括一些来自周围水域的突出标志和遗产,包括龙舟比赛,天后海女神寺庙,以及在港口航行的标志性帆船。然而,在不断发展的香港遗产研究领域中,很少有工作涉及香港海上历史的这些方面和其他方面。本文解决了这一矛盾,即同时存在和不存在海洋遗产。它通过考虑住在香港岛南侧阿伯丁捕鱼中心船上的人们“上岸”的故事来做到这一点。在1960年代,他们中的许多人搬进了渔光村,这是一个早期的公共屋村,现在正在重建。通过档案研究和口述历史访谈,我们认为这个庄园的重要性是公共住房遗产的一个重要例子,它揭示了在华南被排斥了几个世纪的船民的地位,以及他们最终融入陆地社会。本文对香港在殖民统治下和殖民统治后的集体记忆和身份形成提供了新的见解。
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Boat dwellers and maritime heritage in Hong Kong: coming ashore to Yue Kwong Chuen (Fishing Lights Estate)
ABSTRACT Hong Kong’s cultural heritage and tourism offerings include several prominent symbols and legacies drawn from the waters that surround it, including dragon boat racing, Tin Hau temples honouring the Goddess of the sea, and iconic junk boats sailing on the harbour. Within the growing field of Hong Kong heritage studies, however, there has been little work addressing these and other aspects of its maritime past. This paper addresses this contradiction, of the simultaneous presence and absence of maritime heritage. It does so by considering the story of the ‘coming ashore’ (上岸) of people who lived on boats in the fishing centre of Aberdeen on the south side of Hong Kong Island. In the 1960s, many of them moved into Yue Kwong Chuen, an early public housing estate which is now being redeveloped. Drawing on archival research and oral history interviews, we consider the significance of the estate as an important example of the heritage of public housing that sheds light on the status of boat dwellers, excluded for centuries in South China, and their eventual incorporation into land-based society. The paper contributes new insights on collective memory and identity formation in Hong Kong under and after colonial rule.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
11.10%
发文量
56
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Heritage Studies ( IJHS ) is the interdisciplinary academic, refereed journal for scholars and practitioners with a common interest in heritage. The Journal encourages debate over the nature and meaning of heritage as well as its links to memory, identities and place. Articles may include issues emerging from Heritage Studies, Museum Studies, History, Tourism Studies, Sociology, Anthropology, Memory Studies, Cultural Geography, Law, Cultural Studies, and Interpretation and Design.
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