0人評分過此書

Meiji Graves in Happy Valley:Stories of Early Japanese Residents in Hong Kong

出版社
出版日期
2024/11/15
閱讀格式
PDF
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9789888876853

本館館藏

借閱規則
當前可使用人數 30
借閱天數 14
線上看 0
借閱中 0
選擇分享方式

推薦本館採購書籍

您可以將喜歡的電子書推薦給圖書館,圖書館會參考讀者意見進行採購

讀者資料
圖書館
* 姓名
* 身分
系所
* E-mail
※ 我們會寄送一份副本至您填寫的Email中
電話
※ 電話格式為 區碼+電話號碼(ex. 0229235151)/ 手機格式為 0900111111
* 請輸入驗證碼
The Hong Kong Cemetery in Happy Valley is home to over 470 graves connected to the city’s Japanese population. Most of these graves belong to individuals who died during the Meiji era (1868–1912), a remarkable period of modernisation and opening up of Japan that saw thousands of its inhabitants travel to other parts of the world to study, work, and settle. Who were these people? What were they doing in Hong Kong? And why were unbaptised Japanese buried in what was called at one time the ‘Protestant Cemetery’?Hong Kong’s Meiji-era Japanese community was one of two halves. Company executives sat atop the social ladder and karayuki-san, or prostitutes, occupied the lower echelons, with tradespeople and professionals somewhere in between. By revealing the personal journeys of these mostly forgotten Japanese, the authors aim to add to transnational perspectives on Hong Kong and Japan during the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as well as increase recognition of this fragmented community’s place in the development of this diverse city.
  • List of Illustrations
  • List of Tables
  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Note on Romanisation
  • Chapter 1. A Community of Two Halves
  • Chapter 2. The Karayuki-san
  • Chapter 3. Boarding House and Restaurant Operators
  • Chapter 4. A Japanese Ship in Victoria Harbour
  • Chapter 5. A Developing International Business Elite
  • Chapter 6. Tradespeople and Professionals
  • Chapter 7. Conclusion
  • Brief Timeline
  • Annex: List of Japanese-Related Graves
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

評分與評論

請登入後再留言與評分
幫助
您好,請問需要甚麼幫助呢?
使用指南

客服專線:0800-000-747

服務時間:週一至週五 AM 09:00~PM 06:00

loading