Hongkongers' Fight for Freedom: Voices from the 2019 Anti-extradition Movement.

Author:   Nam Kiu Tsing
Publisher:   Haymarket Books
ISBN:  

9798888902394


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   11 June 2024
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Hongkongers' Fight for Freedom: Voices from the 2019 Anti-extradition Movement.


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Overview

Hongkongers' Fight for Freedom: Voices from the 2019 Anti-extradition Movement documents this momentous episode in the history of Hong Kong through the voices of its participants. Drawing on the interviews of 56 participants, this book portrays how normally acquiescent Hongkongers joined the Movement en masse, driven by government intransigence, police brutality and flagrant injustice. It also conveys the deep emotions and strong sense of commitment and identity which evolved in the process. The Movement was a courageous effort by its citizens to defend their freedoms, but sadly, it also marked the beginning of the city's sharp descent into Chinese tyranny. While a curtain of silence now enshrouds Hong Kong, it is imperative that these voices of resistance be preserved and heard.

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Author:   Nam Kiu Tsing
Publisher:   Haymarket Books
Imprint:   Haymarket Books
ISBN:  

9798888902394


Pages:   160
Publication Date:   11 June 2024
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

Table of Contents

Preface Acknowledgements Author Statement List of Figures 1 The Prelude 1 A Story of the Secondary School Student Part 1 The Study 2 Motivations for Participation 1 To Stop the Amendments 2 Anger and Shock Mobilised Actions 3 The Movement of No Return 1 The Tragic Night of 7.21: No Rioters without a Tyrannical Regime 2 To Resist by Any Means Necessary 4 Be Water: Dying For the Political Demands 1 “No Central Stage”: Each Finds His or Her Own Role in the Movement 2 Be Water: Ever-Changing Positions 5 Radiating the Movement: Multiple Roles of Backup Support 1 We Provide Supplies to Save Our Children 2 We Are Drivers Covering the Young People to Leave the Scene 3 Using Social Media for Advocating: We Are People’s Reporters 4 We Are Here to Accompany the Young People 5 We Provide Legal Assistance and Do Fundraising 6 “Hong Kong” vs “Mainland China”: Identity and Resistance 1 Foundation of Identity: Political and Social Values 2 Rejecting Immigrants and Tourists from China and Objecting to Profit Transfer to China 3 Between Chinese and Hong Kong Identity 4 “Today’s Xinjiang, Tomorrow’s Hong Kong” 7 What It Means 1 Political Motivation 2 Radicalisation of the Movement and Changes in Participants’ Roles 3 Emotions and Feelings Driving the Movement 4 Lest We Forget Part 2 The Stories 8 Brick, a University Graduate: “Since Then, the Fights Defined Me” 9 Streambreaker at His Seventeen: “If You Ask Me What Has Been Sacrificed … It’s Probably My Future” 10 Loafer and His Brother Were Arrested: “From That Day On, We Became a Family of ‘Martyrs’” 11 Henry: as a Hongkonger, I Did “What I Had To Do” 12 Elsa: “How a Guardian for Kids Ended Up in Handcuffs” 1 Before All This Came About 2 It All Began With Protecting Our Kids 3 First Successful Mediation 4 Building Team Spirit and Rapport 5 The Single ‘Pig-Mouth’ Upgraded 6 Tears on the Battlefield 7 The Battle of the Chinese University 8 The Battle of the Polytechnic University 9 Walking Together to the End 13 Lessons from Hong Kong 1 The Changed Face of Hong Kong 1.1 The Judicial System 1.2 The Media and Freedom of Expression 1.3 The Shrinking of Civil Society 1.4 Censorship and ccp Propaganda 2 The Iron Fist Closing on a Recalcitrant “New, Young Nation” 2.1 “Society of Social Movements” (Lee, 2021, p. 1) 2.2 Localism in the Protest Culture 2.3 “Hong Kong” vs “Chinese” 3 The 2019 Hong Kong Protests and the Changing World Order 4 Actors or Pawns in History? References Index

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Author Information

Nam Kiu Tsing is Retired Associate Professor of Mathematics at the University of Hong Kong. Besides publishing research articles in mathematics, he also authored a book on civil disobedience, which was taken down from public libraries by the Hong Kong Government after installation of the National Security Law.

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