(Post)Colonial governance in Hong Kong and Macau: a tale of two cities and regimes

Allen Chun*

*此作品的通信作者

研究成果: Article同行評審

6 引文 斯高帕斯(Scopus)

摘要

The notion of colonial governmentality is the product of two intersecting themes, one being a deep product of Foucauldian reflections on the evolution of modern welfare states and the other being its political appropriation in a colonial context. David Scott’s essay on colonial governmentality was in this regard an attempt to bridge Michel Foucault’s notion and Partha Chatterjee’s critique of Eurocentric constructions of nationhood by showing how colonialism transformed as a result of its application upon the body social and away from the economy. Taken literally as a framework of rule, many things can be said about the abstract nature of colonial governance. This article is an exploration of comparative colonialisms in Hong Kong and Macau viewed as the historical evolution (in cultural practice) of ‘British’ and ‘Portuguese’ regimes of rule. In addition to significant historical and political differences, their postcolonial fate in the aftermath of their return to Chinese sovereignty opens up other areas of debate. In short, I argue that epistemologies of ‘order’, ‘governance’, ‘difference’ and ‘statism’ are largely products of a late-Victorian British empire ‘mentality’ (imagination) gone global, which can be used constructively in comparative (post)colonialisms.

原文American English
頁(從 - 到)413-427
頁數15
期刊Postcolonial Studies
22
發行號4
DOIs
出版狀態Published - 12月 2019

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